Friday, February 18, 2011

Religion and Politics

I've been told "you just don't talk about religion and politics". Sorry, today I'll talk briefly about both. No, I'm not going to take a stance one way or the other in Walker's budget reform bill, so if you're looking for that, you'll have to go elsewhere. I do have an opinion, as does everyone, but because my main purpose is to help as many as possible grow closer to Christ, we'll pass on that.

The purpose of this post is to speak to an issue that rears its head on every major political debate. The issue is the incredible amount of misleading or incorrect "facts" and "truth" being spouted on the issues. I say there are misleading "facts" because it does not take long to read 2 articles written addressing the same "fact" that differ hugely in the numbers and future numbers. In this case, either we are running a surplus for this fiscal year or a deficit depending on who you are reading. And we are talking to the tune of 100 million dollars either way, no small difference. Whether you believe it is one way or the other, I hope we all can honestly say that there is one actual truth. And on the other side of truth is error. Both cannot be true.

So what happens with many people is if you think health/pension benefits should not be cut, they agree with all figures that show a surplus. And for others that want benefits cut, they agree with all figures that show a deficit. I am, of course, making a generalization here that does not fit all people, but you get the point. Really, how can the truth be so obscure?

This situation can give us some insight into the human nature. How common is it for us to love the truth when it fits our personal agenda. Or to love what we think is the truth when it fits our personal agenda. Sometimes the "truth" can become conveniently ignored on the altar of passion for an issue. Or we just stop caring about the "truth" because the "other guys" are either greedy or lazy or vice versa. The fact is, as obvious as this is going to sound, that the truth is the truth........and the truth is important.

At this point, I have to turn the conversation to biblical truth as this is the main point of the post. How many things do we believe or do that we have never considering from a biblical perspective? How many times have we sacrificed truth for passion? Have you ever found yourself arguing passionately about something that you later realized you had little biblical grounds to argue?

I hope it is our desire to have a greater and greater biblical world view as we grow with Christ. I know that I have been guilty of "going with the flow" at times in my walk with Christ and not searching the Scriptures to know the truth on all things. The apostle Paul ran into this as he preached in Thessalonica in the first century. This is not a new issue.

As a contrast the Thessalonians, there was one church that caught Paul's attention as receiving the word eagerly and searching the Scripture to see if what he was teaching was true. This is found in Acts, chapter 17.

Acts 17:11
Now these Jews were more noble than those in Thessalonica; they received the word with all eagerness, examining the Scriptures daily to see if these things we so.

We often think of nobility in terms of doing the right things, standing up for the weak, or having high integrity. Paul, here, simply says knowing the Scriptures and testing what we hear against the bible is noble. I aim to be a noble Christian. I hope you do to.

And remember, as you listen to the rhetoric from the "wrong side", love your enemy as yourself.

Later- Shane

1 comment:

  1. Well said. Thankfully, when it comes to Biblical Truth (unlike "facts" supporting any secular argument, be it political, legal, or other opinion), we know the standard to apply - God's Word. It's relatively simple - compare what you think, or hear others' say, against the Word of God. If what you think or hear is in alignment, it's true. If not, it's error. It may not always be easy, but we know the process we need to use: hold everything up to the light of Scripture.

    This isn't to say it's always "easy." Interpretive issues can sometimes be a challenge, although they're less challenging than someone who wants to read something in that isn't there will try to make it. Application is where it can get really tricky and we can easily become legalists, dictating that everyone apply the Truth in precisely the same way (e.g., dress the way I do, support MY cause, raise your kids the way I do, etc.). What's important is that the standard we are applying is the True Standard, and that we apply it in a faithful way.

    Good post, drawing on a timely event to illuminate Biblical Truth.

    ReplyDelete