Saturday, February 11, 2017

Theology in Overalls "Religion and politics don’t mix" by Gregory Crofford for Sunday, 12 February 2017

Theology in Overalls   "Religion and politics don’t mix" by Gregory Crofford for Sunday, 12 February 2017
A beaker filled with water to which oil has been added, demonstrating insolubility of oil in water.
When I was a boy, conversations around the dinner table helped knit our family together. Many words of wisdom from my father and mother were delivered in that setting, including : "Religion and politics don't mix." I wonder: Have we forgotten this wisdom?
A woman had been part of her denomination for decades. However, she recently left because leaders in her congregation strongly hinted that to be "Christian" means voting for a particular political party. This story comes from my home country, yet as a missionary living in West Africa, I encouraged pastors to strictly avoid endorsing specific candidates or their parties, to merely ask people to pray then vote their conscience. This was in accordance with the long-standing informal policy of my denomination.
In the global village now connected via the internet, these same pastors now know instantly what world leaders say. They hear American politicians promising to remove any remaining legal obstacles to U.S. churches endorsing political candidates and they hear the applause of church leaders. Yet is this wise? Such a move could be disastrous, making congregations satellite campaign offices instead of places where people can come to hear the Good News of Jesus Christ. It would take our eyes off the unshakable Kingdom (Hebrews 12:28) that Jesus taught us to pray would come (Matthew 6:10), encouraging instead the church to down the cup of temporal power, a poisoned chalice that so far we've only been sipping.
The temptation is real in multiple countries. It was campaign season, and a West African politician approached one of our pastors and his associate, inviting them to visit his home. There, he pulled out a dresser drawer filled with money. "I'll allow you to help yourself to this money," he promised. "All you need to do is next Sunday endorse me from the pulpit." That day, the two pastors resisted the temptation. Instead, they told me the story and I commended them for their courage.
Jesus knew something of this temptation. Forty days and forty nights in the wilderness eating nothing, he was famished. Matthew 4:1-17 (CEB) recounts three ways that the devil tried to entice our Lord to abandon his mission. His final method was to tempt Jesus with power, taking him to a high mountain and showing him all the world's kingdoms. "I'll give you all of these if you bow down and worship me," he offered. Yet Jesus replied: "Go away, Satan, because it's written, 'You will worship the Lord your God and serve only him' " (4:10). When offered rulership - its power and its perks - the Son of God firmly refused. He would not be deterred from the holy mission his Father had set before him.
An election is just around the corner in Kenya. Last Sunday, our pastor encouraged people to register to vote, but added: "In our church, we don't endorse candidates or parties." My pastor knows the wisdom of neutrality, that the witness of the church can be compromised if we are not careful. I think he'd agree that what my parents insisted around our family dinner table is good advice. Religion and politics still don't mix.
___________________
Image credit: Carpenter Valley Assocation
Gregory Crofford
Sunday, February 12, 2017
Categories: reflections

No comments:

Post a Comment