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Election Year Musings

by Philip Yancey

| 47 Comments

Election Year Musings

Last year I granted an interview to the Church of Ireland Gazette, a magazine that was trying to interpret US politics for its Irish readers. In view of the coming election, I have revisited that interview, editing the discussion for American readers.

The world seems to be becoming increasingly polarized and divided. We are living in a more uncertain world. Is there anything you think the Church needs to say or to be, in order to act with integrity in that increasingly polarized world?

Pope John Paul II wrote a book called Sign of Contradiction. I believe the Church should always be a sign of contradiction, regardless of the surrounding society.

One of the UK prime ministers, John Major, was trying to understand evangelicals, so he called in the head of the Evangelical Alliance. “I can’t figure out these evangelicals,” he said. “Are they liberal or conservative on political issues?”

Election Year MusingsThe response: “They’re both.” Christians may well support certain policies that represent both sides of the political spectrum.

I once heard a sermon from Tim Keller in which he cited a list of what early Christians in the Roman Empire insisted on. Some examples:

  • There is only one way to God. We oppose pre-marital sex, and also abortion. Those would usually be considered conservative positions.
  • Christians should not serve in the armed forces. We support programs for the poor, and also gender equality. Those would usually be considered liberal positions.

Keller was making the point that people who are trying to follow Jesus can’t be compartmentalized into a binary political platform.

I hope the Church can help tear down the moats and the silos we have constructed around each other. In my lifetime, some Republicans opposed the Vietnam war and some Republicans supported it. There were Democrats who were anti-abortion and Democrats who were pro-abortion. Now, politics has become so polarized that it is almost impossible for a Democrat to be pro-life and almost impossible for Republicans to oppose the administration’s foreign policy. That is very unfortunate.

We are not called to report to a political party. We should look to Jesus for our guidelines on living. Of course, Christians will disagree on specifics, but the bottom line isn’t a party’s political platform. The bottom line is for us to carefully and prayerfully try to discern God’s will in each situation.

Christians accept a basic standard of morality, starting with the Ten Commandments. You can’t always legislate that kind of morality. For example, in the Ten Commandments there are commandments against coveting, adultery, and lying. A few countries have laws against adultery, but I don’t know any country that has a law against coveting or lying. We follow God’s moral law, not just the list of dos and don’ts that a political party holds up as important.

   Living with silos: in the Church we have profound differences on big and small issues. How should we deal with situations, and with each other, when we profoundly differ on what we believe are absolutely core issues?

Jesus always honored the person behind the issues, even among those who must have been offensive to him in some ways. He associated with people viewed as moral outcasts. He engaged with occupying soldiers and also tax collectors who served the occupying government. Yet he always treated those people with dignity, respect, and compassion.

Election Year MusingsIn our time, immigration presents a major challenge. It is certainly legitimate for Christians to disagree on how restrictive immigration should be. But it is illegitimate for us to demonize immigrants or to treat them as subhuman or to deprive them of basic human rights. We don’t have that option. When a politician wants to do that, Jesus-followers must oppose it.

I wrote a book titled What’s So Amazing About Grace. As I was writing, it struck me that it does not take much grace to be around someone who is just like you, who thinks like you, acts like you, votes like you. Grace is put to the test when you’re around somebody who is different from you, and who in fact may be offensive to you.

We don’t have the option of treating that contrary person as an outcast. In fact, Jesus had the opposite paradigm. He said, I came for the sick, not the well, and for sinners, not the righteous.

Sometimes the Church falls into the same trap as the Pharisees, where we start viewing ourselves as morally superior and we want people to be like us. Instead, we are called to reach out to others no matter where they are. Even if they are in bad straits because of their destructive choices, we still should respond with mercy, compassion, and healing—as Jesus did. He reached out to the poor, and stood for justice. So must we.

   Are you hopeful for the future?

Not really. A lot of people in the US, especially evangelicals, are hanging on to a political agenda, even when people leading that political movement are not demonstrating the qualities of Jesus.

Historically, when the Church gets tempted by those who are in power, it bears the consequences for generations. A year ago I was in Spain, where in the last century the Church had allied itself with a strongman, Francisco Franco. Now, several generations later, many Spaniards will have nothing to do with the Church, because when they hear the word “Church” they immediately think repression and violence.

I’m afraid the same thing can happen in the US. We need Christians to act as the “sign of contradiction,” even if it costs us access to power. We were not put on earth to be part of the power structure. We were put on earth to demonstrate how God wants us to live. If people judge us, or we are persecuted for our stance—well, that too is the Jesus way. He was persecuted, indeed he was executed for not kowtowing to the religious or governmental authorities.

   What does a sign of hope look like?

Wherever I travel—say, in Africa, South America, even Communist China—I see beautiful signs of God’s kingdom doing exactly what it should be doing: standing firm against the culture, which may be corrupt, self-serving, even oppressive.

The US seems to be going through a period much like western Europe went through: first, a cozy relationship between Church and state, and then the inevitable backlash in which people reject the Church because the state has proven to lack the integrity—the “sign of contradiction”— that should distinguish the Church.

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Discussion

  1. Rhianfa Avatar
    Rhianfa

    This is very timely. Last night, a leader from the church i grew up in libeled two Christians on my facebook wall by posting false information about their beliefs in order to support a political argument he was making. He was called out, admitted it was not true, and brushed it off to continue arguing. I am devastated. Although its been decades since we worshipped together, he was a man that was an elder in the church i grew up in, he was one of my sunday school teachers, he was there when i was baptized, when i was married, when my husband was baptized, when my kids were dedicated. Now all i see is a liar. Someone who would besmirch the name of Christ for a political argument. We arent even American! He gains nothing from winning his argument and contributes to the hatred of Christians! Why??? What should i do? What is my responsibility in this case? If it is to gently rebuke his sin, how do i do that in a way that honors God and that he will hear?

    1. Philip Yancey Avatar
      Philip Yancey

      I don’t think you should attempt this alone, as he could misrepresent you too. I suggest you find a trusted church leader to work with you in deciding the best response. You need to talk through the details it wouldn’t be appropriate to publish on Facebook.

  2. Lynda Doty Avatar
    Lynda Doty

    We are a divided nation. But we are a divided church too. I am praying and reading the word and standing on what I understand we are taught to strive for with God as our guide thru the Holy Spirit. I fall short often but by His grace I see it much quicker than I use!! We are a privileged people with self at the helm. I have met the enemy and it is me. I have my hands full in my own skin. We will reap what we are sowing. It is not is God on our side but are we on God’s side.

  3. Martin Bowie Avatar

    We should pray for our government as it is stated in James 3:17,18: Phillips Version “The wisdom that comes from above is first pure, then peace-loving, gentle, approachable, full of merciful thoughts and kindly actions, straightforward, with no hint of hypocrisy. And the peacemakers go on quietly sowing for a harvest of righteousness.” Great article, Phillip!

  4. Janet Barnes Avatar
    Janet Barnes

    I agree! How then does a Christian vote? Here in Australia it is compulsory to vote and I’ve got concerns for all party policies here. There are policies in each which I fully endorse as being in line with God’s law – and then many which are not. Our Prime Minister is Christian but I do not agree with his policies concerning the treatment of people in mandatory detention and the environment. Of course we can prayerfully support all of our leaders – and we should. However, how to vote on Election Day is a dilemma.

  5. Barbara Larson Avatar
    Barbara Larson

    Philip,
    It makes me sad to hear you repeating the tired secularist canards about conservative evangelicals as if they were valid. As a conservative evangelical, I bristle when critics use false dichotomies, such as if you favor legal immigration, you are against immigration of any kind or that you hate illegal immigrants and want to make their lives miserable. Or if you are against premarital sex and abortion, it is reasonable to infer that you are against gender equality and programs to help the poor. You know those are false characterizations of most conservative evangelicals, yet you don’t use your position as a well-known Christian apologist to set the record straight. It’s so unfair, and frankly, cowardly, to let a lie stand in the interest of preserving your neutrality. You say that Jesus is your model–and I don’t doubt for a second that He’s not–but you seem to ignore the fact that He is full of grace AND truth. Liberal churches tend to promote the fallacy that if you are for truth, then you are against grace. That is flat out wrong, which I’m pretty sure you know. Any lover of the Bible knows that growing in grace and truth is God’s wish for His children. Granted, when God says the greatest of these is love, He seems to be emphasizing grace over truth. Yet He never says that truth is inconsequential or opposed to grace. Why can’t conservative Christians be given the benefit of the doubt as intelligent, sincere followers of Jesus who revere both grace and truth, justice and mercy? And as far as voting is concerned, do you believe Christians should vote? If so, we are not given a variety of nuanced choices in the upcoming presidential election. It is an either/or situation. What better way to base your vote than on how your values align with one or the other party’s platform? After all, whoever wins will be enacting that platform. Christians must ask themselves what our country will look like under the direction of one or the other party. Then we must pick one, only one. If that’s polarizing, so be it. It’s the way our government has operated since its founding and it’s all we’ve got. If and when our method of electing a president is changed–legally, I would hope–we must accept our bifurcated system and exercise our hard-won right to vote.

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47 thoughts on “Election Year Musings”

  1. This is very timely. Last night, a leader from the church i grew up in libeled two Christians on my facebook wall by posting false information about their beliefs in order to support a political argument he was making. He was called out, admitted it was not true, and brushed it off to continue arguing. I am devastated. Although its been decades since we worshipped together, he was a man that was an elder in the church i grew up in, he was one of my sunday school teachers, he was there when i was baptized, when i was married, when my husband was baptized, when my kids were dedicated. Now all i see is a liar. Someone who would besmirch the name of Christ for a political argument. We arent even American! He gains nothing from winning his argument and contributes to the hatred of Christians! Why??? What should i do? What is my responsibility in this case? If it is to gently rebuke his sin, how do i do that in a way that honors God and that he will hear?

    Reply
    • I don’t think you should attempt this alone, as he could misrepresent you too. I suggest you find a trusted church leader to work with you in deciding the best response. You need to talk through the details it wouldn’t be appropriate to publish on Facebook.

      Reply
  2. We are a divided nation. But we are a divided church too. I am praying and reading the word and standing on what I understand we are taught to strive for with God as our guide thru the Holy Spirit. I fall short often but by His grace I see it much quicker than I use!! We are a privileged people with self at the helm. I have met the enemy and it is me. I have my hands full in my own skin. We will reap what we are sowing. It is not is God on our side but are we on God’s side.

    Reply
  3. We should pray for our government as it is stated in James 3:17,18: Phillips Version “The wisdom that comes from above is first pure, then peace-loving, gentle, approachable, full of merciful thoughts and kindly actions, straightforward, with no hint of hypocrisy. And the peacemakers go on quietly sowing for a harvest of righteousness.” Great article, Phillip!

    Reply
  4. I agree! How then does a Christian vote? Here in Australia it is compulsory to vote and I’ve got concerns for all party policies here. There are policies in each which I fully endorse as being in line with God’s law – and then many which are not. Our Prime Minister is Christian but I do not agree with his policies concerning the treatment of people in mandatory detention and the environment. Of course we can prayerfully support all of our leaders – and we should. However, how to vote on Election Day is a dilemma.

    Reply
  5. Philip,
    It makes me sad to hear you repeating the tired secularist canards about conservative evangelicals as if they were valid. As a conservative evangelical, I bristle when critics use false dichotomies, such as if you favor legal immigration, you are against immigration of any kind or that you hate illegal immigrants and want to make their lives miserable. Or if you are against premarital sex and abortion, it is reasonable to infer that you are against gender equality and programs to help the poor. You know those are false characterizations of most conservative evangelicals, yet you don’t use your position as a well-known Christian apologist to set the record straight. It’s so unfair, and frankly, cowardly, to let a lie stand in the interest of preserving your neutrality. You say that Jesus is your model–and I don’t doubt for a second that He’s not–but you seem to ignore the fact that He is full of grace AND truth. Liberal churches tend to promote the fallacy that if you are for truth, then you are against grace. That is flat out wrong, which I’m pretty sure you know. Any lover of the Bible knows that growing in grace and truth is God’s wish for His children. Granted, when God says the greatest of these is love, He seems to be emphasizing grace over truth. Yet He never says that truth is inconsequential or opposed to grace. Why can’t conservative Christians be given the benefit of the doubt as intelligent, sincere followers of Jesus who revere both grace and truth, justice and mercy? And as far as voting is concerned, do you believe Christians should vote? If so, we are not given a variety of nuanced choices in the upcoming presidential election. It is an either/or situation. What better way to base your vote than on how your values align with one or the other party’s platform? After all, whoever wins will be enacting that platform. Christians must ask themselves what our country will look like under the direction of one or the other party. Then we must pick one, only one. If that’s polarizing, so be it. It’s the way our government has operated since its founding and it’s all we’ve got. If and when our method of electing a president is changed–legally, I would hope–we must accept our bifurcated system and exercise our hard-won right to vote.

    Reply

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