In the upcoming Presidential Election there are two unique
and very different individuals running.
Some have said they will not vote because they do not want to choose
between a Muslim and a Mormon. Others
are saying all manner of thing about the records of each candidate, while
proposing that we do not have a choice.
Read this article and gain insight for voting day.
A BreakPoint Commentary
Nobody's Perfect: Purists and Politics
Yesterday you heard Chuck
Colson talking about the need for Christians to vote. Today, I want to talk about an aspect of
voting that deeply troubles some Christians every time we have an election.
I'm talking about the fact that
nobody's perfect.
Wait a minute, you say,
everybody knows that. That's
elementary-school stuff. Maybe so, but
the truth remains that every election year, many Christians discover this simple
fact all over again, and it throws them into a tizzy. They go into the political process as if they
were picking a pastor instead of an elected official. They look for someone who is right in every
category that matters to them, instead of looking for someone who will advance
the common good and agrees with them as much as possible. When they don't find the perfect person, they
become disillusioned.
Politics is a rough business,
but so is all of life. There's always
something that triggers this trend. This
year, some of those triggers include the Foley scandal and David Kuo's book
TEMPTING FAITH, which attempted to persuade evangelicals that they were being
used by those in power, even those who claimed to be on their side. And for some, it worked.
Thus, for example, Rod Dreher
writes at his blog on Beliefnet.com, "I'm not prepared to be used ...
again.... I can't bring myself to vote
Democratic, because I have no faith in the Democrats.... [But] I doubt very much I'm going to vote for
[the Republicans] at the national level, because they have not earned my
vote." I guess we're left with the
conclusion that no one is good enough to vote for.
Rod is a good man, a good
journalist, and a faithful Christian.
He's a brother. But I think he's
dead wrong. If you read more of his
blog, it appears that he, and others with the same mindset, are insisting that
politicians not only make the right decisions, but that they make them for the
right reasons and that they make them all the time. Take it from someone who's been in politics -
that's just not going to happen.
Are we right to want our
leaders to share our values? Of
course. But will we always have the
choice? What should our response then
be? To choose as wisely as we can - or
not to choose at all?
The great conservative writer
Russell Kirk called for us to be guided by "the principle of
prudence," or of sound judgment and consideration for long-term
consequences. It might feel good if you
feel disillusioned to refuse to vote, sitting on your hands at home,
registering your protest. It might make
you feel like you've taught the politicians a lesson. But if that's the case, we've only failed to
stand up and tell the politicians what we believe in. How can we expect our government to take an
interest in what we believe if we won't take the simplest action of voting to
defend it?
The fact is, we always have a
choice, whether we realize it or not. We
have a choice between candidates. We
have a choice to influence our government, or to stay silent. This year, I hope that all of you all around
the country will make the right choice.
Go to the polls. Pray for wisdom and prudence. Then vote.
Copyright (c) 2006 Prison Fellowship Ministries. Reprinted with permission. "BreakPoint with Chuck Colson" is a
radio ministry of Prison Fellowship Ministries. Mark Earley; 11/2/06 .
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