Saturday, October 17, 2020

Christians in Public Discourse

 

Often these days I have noticed a lot of misrepresentation of Christianity and the role of faith in public discourse, rather through ignorance or maliciousness these attacks create a very dangerous precedent. As a Christian who is also a patriot and involved in the political process I would like to address a few of those misrepresentations. The first falsehood being bandied about is that political conservatism and Bible Based Christianity are one and the same. Among protestant Christians there is no papal authority to determine doctrinal purity or to give authoritative guidance on matters of public debate. As a result there is in the protestant church a great deal of diversity of thought. (Unlike Joe Biden’s view of the black community) .   The Churches are organized according to their own designs and are free to interpret the Scripture according to their own conscience. I would point to two main philosophies in how to properly interpret the Bible. Accepting the Bible as absolute truth and interpreting the events of the day against its doctrines, or using the events of the day to determine how the Bible should be interpreted. . Churches in the latter group tend to lean more to a progressive view. Christians like me who are in the former category tend to lean to a politically conservative viewpoint, because at the heart of that philosophy of governance is a Judeo-Christian worldview.  Psalms tells us that God made us in the womb, the 10 commandments tell us that murder is wrong, Jesus  tells us it’s better to be drowned with a millstone upon our necks than to harm a child, for these reasons we are passionately prolife.  Many in the conservative right are not Christians, many are not religious though if pressed on a multiple choice survey they might check “Christian” as opposed to “Muslim” or “Atheist” but there are conservative atheists, conservative Muslims, gay conservatives, et.al. Conservatism is bound together by a broad commitment to a set of ideals not coerced fidelity to a strict but ever changing leftist dogma. The origin of conservatism is found in the great works of the enlightenment, in Burke and de Tocqueville, in Thomas Payne and Patrick Henry, expressed in the Declaration codified in the Constitution. It is a philosophy of the sovereignty of the individual and the idea of natural law, and natural rights assigned and assured by “Nature’s God”. Christians are drawn to conservatism because these ideals reflect the ideals of, in fact are directly descended from, our own reformation. Conservatism allows for the differences of the individual but maintains the core truth that there are moral absolutes undergirding the civilization. That brings me to the second misconception:  that Christians seek to enforce their beliefs through the power of the court or legislature.

                To be honest Christians learned the hard way that forced compliance is counterproductive in spreading the Gospel. Through the inquisition and religious wars of the Middle Ages the Church largely abandoned the Great Commission and instead used the name of Christ to further their own ambitions of political power. While shamefully Muslims Jews and Pagans were targeted the primary victims of this age’s abuses were Christians.  The one common thread of all these miscreant regimes was to keep the scriptures out of the hands of the people. Protestant and Catholic alike these pseudo religious tyrants knew that if God’s word was given to the congregation and they could disseminate it for themselves that the lies of the elite would be exposed. Our desire as a group is the preservation of the 1st amendment of the US constitution “Congress shall make no law regarding the establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.” This is the reason for Christian Patriotism and it is very rare in the annuls of human history, that a people have been guaranteed by law to worship as they choose. Christians are zealous on this matter, we want no group to establish a particular denomination as a state church and we insist that the second half of that amendment be enforced. There is a rub here for us, as both Christians and conservatives do recognize the existence of natural law, we believe in morality, in the nuclear family, in private property rights, in the value of work, in honesty and integrity, and in self-reliance.  For the Christian to be self-reliant is to trust God in our day to day life. There is generally a libertarian view when it comes to how to relate to others, as a rule we do not seek to outlaw behavior we find immoral, unless it is also dangerous, we prefer to offer love and truth and lead sinners to salvation through word and deed, but we will not be compelled to accept behavior that violates our conscience.

                Finally there is the misconception that Christians do not want to help poor people, starving children etc. because we oppose socialism or out of control government welfare programs. This is not really a misconception it is an intentional misrepresentation dating back to the Great Society. The center of the community in the US, for social interaction, for Faith and learning and for help in the times of need has always been the religious institutions. In some communities that may be mosque or synagogue but in most of the country it is the church.  The equation of Christian charity with government welfare has been part of an insidious undermining of the American culture and the influence of faith and sadly many Christians have been duped. Let us judge these works by their fruit, where government programs have been most marshalled in the “war on poverty” has the poverty rate gone up or down? Are families stronger or weaker in those communities? Is crime higher or lower? Government assistance creates a permanent dependency that could be called a generational cycle of bondage, and we are lacking in compassion because we oppose this? Private charity is required to give account of how their funds are used but government programs including welfare are steeped in waste fraud and abuse to the point it is expected and accepted. If a private charity proprietor should embezzle a thousand dollars to buy his kid a birthday present he would face prosecution and jail. Government bureaucracy is somehow given a pass on the misappropriation of billions of dollars annually, yet we are told it is wise to entrust the helping of the needy to government.  Every church that I know of has a benevolence fund, and or a food bank. Many have clothing closets where clothes are either given away or sold for pennies. If I give my pastor a hundred dollars to anonymously help a struggling family in our church that family gets $100 of assistance. Add to this the Rescue Missions the Salvation Army, foreign missionaries many of whom are also health care workers, prison ministries, ministries to the children of prisoners, support for oppressed people and the persecuted church worldwide and the strong effort to make sure that persecution doesn’t come to our shores. Organizations like Samaritan’s Purse dedicated to easing poverty everywhere. These groups seldom make headlines but they make a difference, all without confiscatory taxation that stifles economic progress and suppresses the incentive of the citizen to work and achieve.

                I will never be ashamed of being a Christian, I will always be proud to stand for the flag and our founding principles as a conservative. The two are not the same thing but one clearly informs the other. God Bless.