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Fighting for that City on a Hill
By Joe Murray
It is written in Proverbs that "When the righteous increase, the people rejoice,
but when a wicked man rules, people groan." In a day where unborn children are
reduced to a personal choice and images of a crucifix dipped in urine substitute
as art, many Christians have hung their heads in shame -- shameful of the nation
we have become. Their groans can be heard from miles away. In response to
America's slide towards Sodom and Gomorrah, Christians have fallen to their
knees to pray for our nation; so that men and women elected to positions of
power would follow a biblical compass. These Christians, rightfully so,
understand the command of Paul in 1 Timothy, when Paul proclaimed, "first of all
... I urge that entreaties and prayers, petitions and thanksgivings, be made on
behalf of all men, for kings and all who are in authority, so that we may lead a
tranquil and quiet life in all godliness and dignity." Thus, for a faithful
Christian, prayer is integral in attempting to rescue a government that been
placed on the slippery slope to the sewer. It is clear that Paul understood
prayer was always the first step for a Christian seeking to confront the demons
that plague his earthly life, whether they are public or private.
But does a Christian's responsibility in creating a government that reflects
natural and biblical law stop at prayer? Is it enough for a Christian to pray for
a Godly government and then go about his business? Put simply, is it acceptable
to have prayer without action? Not a chance.
While it is true that Christians are called to a prayerful life, they are also
called to engage the culture in which they live. Prayer is the beginning of a Christian's
role in public life, it is not the end. Christians do not have the luxury of sitting
on the sidelines of history and watching the cultural conflicts that ensue. Christians
cannot retreat into subculture sects where the right to live under a Godly government
is surrendered to a political movement that knows no God and undermines, if not
rewrites, the natural laws which all men are bound. Christians are called to actively,
not passively, engage those that surround them.
Make no
mistake, Christians and church leaders are called by God to be
active in civic life.
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This author has talked to many Christians in 2000, 2004 and 2006, and when the
topic of politics arose, many of these Christians took on the face of a person who
has just ingested a gallon of sour milk. To many Christians, politics is a product
of this world; thus it is stained with sin, compromise and scandal. In other words,
they run from it like Paramount Pictures ran from Tom Cruise.
Because of the nature of the political beast, these folks are scared -- scared
that if they become to involved in politics, the fate that almost befell Lot when
he got to close to Sodom, will befall them. Due to this fear, many Christians, specifically
pastors, have adopted the mindset that the battle for the soul will be reserved
for the sanctuary, and the battle for the mind will be reserved to the marketplace
of ideas -- a marketplace, thanks to our Supreme Court, conducted outside the purview
of the Church. In other words, give the Church her role and secular society its
role. The only problem with this strategy… It is doomed to failure.
The Church does not exist in a societal bubble; it is connected to our government,
our schools, our museums, and our media outlets. While many on the other side have
gone to great lengths to separate the Church's ties to these institutions, the fact
remains that the ties are present. As written by Pat Buchanan, "morality is the
basis for all religion and religion is the foundation for the law." The Church cannot
remove itself from a society it is so intimately connected with.
Make no mistake, Christians and church leaders are called by God to be active
in civic life. They are called to vote in elections and educate the public. It is
an abomination to God for a Christian to surrender his civic duty out of fear that
he will be tainted or no one will listen. It is wrong; it is cowardly. "Son of man,"
proclaimed God, "I have made you a watchman for the house of Israel; so hear the
word I speak and give them warning from me" (Ezekiel 3:17). God continued: "When
I say to a wicked man, 'You will surely die,' and you do not warn him or speak out
to dissuade him from his evil ways in order to save his life, that wicked man will
die for his sin, and I will hold you accountable for his blood. But if you do warn
the wicked man and he does not turn from his wickedness or from his evil ways, he
will die for his sin; but you will have saved yourself."
God's charge is a simple one -- a person of faith has a responsibility to reach
out to those who do not know Jesus Christ, lest the blood of the wicked be on his
hands. Among the ways of reaching out to the wicked is active participation in civic
life through voter education and registration. This author understands that Christians
have many reasons to be weary of civic/political activism. Christians have been
burnt by many a political party and candidate; they have been wooed by the siren
song of the "Christian" message and after Election Day has come and gone, traditional
Christians wake up to a one-night stand with a political leader who has since forgotten
their names.
While this is discouraging, it is not an excuse to raise a white flag. As dirty
as politics is, it provides a perfect venue to warn the wicked of the errors of
their ways. By actively engaging in politics and voting, Christians can use the
public soapbox to inform America of the ghastly realities of partial-birth abortion,
the toxic implications of pornography, and the need to protect all life from the moment of conception until the last days
of death.
Politics, warts and all, provides a venue for Christians to express their ideas,
spread the Gospel message of Christ's love, and fulfill their role as the watchman.
It provides Christians an opportunity to vote their values and elect men and women
who will lead by principle, not polls.
And when those men go south on the issues, as so many do, Christians must not
run into the corner and hide their heads. They must turn around, give that politician
a pink slip, and work to find a suitable replacement, being careful not to have
party loyalty blind a Christian from biblical principle. Thus bringing us to the
moral of this article -- Christians only lose in politics when they voluntarily
remove themselves from the political process and ignore God's charge in Ezekiel.
In 1974, a soon to be President Ronald Reagan told a story over 300 years old. Reagan
explained: "Standing on the tiny deck of the Arabella in 1630 off the Massachusetts
coast, John Winthrop said, 'We will be as a city upon a hill. The eyes of all people
are upon us, so that if we deal falsely with our God in this work we have undertaken
and so cause Him to withdraw His present help from us, we shall be made a story
and a byword throughout the world.'"
Today our charge is pretty much the same -- we must fight for America, fight
for our freedoms, and fight to save the misinformed from the clutches of hell. Christians
are the last bastion of hope for our nation, and if we resign our charge to influence
and impact the culture in which we live, we will, as Winthrop stated have dealt
falsely with our God.
Joe Murray (jrm1835@gmail.com) is a civil rights attorney residing in New Jersey.
Murray is a former staff attorney for the American Family Association and has also
served as national director of correspondence for Patrick J. Buchanan's 2000 presidential
bid. Murray has been a guest on numerous radio and television talk shows,
CG
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