Tuesday, October 9, 2012

The Obligitory Election Cycle Non-Sermon

In today's blog:  How you should vote and why you should be concerned about the latest Pew Poll on Religious affiliation.

Its that time again when we are on the cusp of electing a new President, all of our Representatives to the House and 1/3 of our Senators.  Its an anxious, yet at the same time, exciting time to be an American.

In times like these I often get asked, "Pastor, who do you think I should vote for?" or, "What do you think about ...xyz issue?"  Questions which I try my best to dodge, lest my political leanings would obscure the grace of Christ I preach, but more on that later.

As a church we are non-political.  Yet, as Lutherans with an understanding of Luther's Two Kingdoms theology, we believe that each of us is called to be active in the political process.  What does that mean?  Well let me give one example:  As a church we may value all life and we might preach against certain laws which degrade life or put it at risk, but we can not officially endorse specific candidates.

Why not?  Well, the main reason explained to me is that we would risk loosing our tax exempt status as a religious institution.  I haven't checked that out fully, but I would venture to guess that its a protestant dodge to committing to anything controversial.  After all, we often see the Roman Catholic bishops and priests and non-denominational preachers using their bully pulpits for political action and non of them have gotten in trouble with the IRS--yet.

The point is, as Luther explains in his explanation of the fourth petition of the Lord's Prayer (in both his small and large catechisms) we are to ask God for our daily bread which includes good government.  We are praying that God would give us leaders who would not molest or harm us and our free exercise of our religion.  In Luther's day there were no elections, so perhaps this prayer was prayed more fervently as kings fell from and ascended to their thrones.

But in 21st century USA, God has placed a great amount of that selection process into the hands of us, the voters--so then, when we pray to God for daily bread, we pray that he would move us, and others, to vote for those who would best serve the people they rule over so that we might obey and follow them as the authorities they have been appointed to be.

This brings us to my next point.  One of our Redeemer members, Bryan Hileman, was reading the KC Star this AM where they had an article about the most recent Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life survey (you can also click on the title to read it) in which for the first time in its history, Protestants no longer are in the majority.  No big deal, right?  We are a pluralistic society in which all views are tollerated and, even, accepted, right?

Well, yes, but I feel this trend is very disturbing to us a the Church because it convicts us not doing what Christ has called us to do as believers, AND, it also means that we have, potentially, abdicated our influence in providing godly leaders.

"Come on Perry.  Aren't you on a bit dramatic?"  No, and hear me out on this.  As protestants we are defined by the fact that we preach that the grace of God is free in Jesus Christ--that there is nothing man can do to merit eternal life and salvation.  We are the only branch of Christianity which preaches this and Christianity is the only religion which does not center salvation on the works of the self.  We believe that we have the best-option, if you will, of all the flavors of religion at the spiritual soda fountain.  We are the (fill in the name of your favorite ice cream flavor here) and the rest of the choices are like rubarb-onion-sardine slush.  Yet, we are not moving the product.  It sits in the cooler while all the other, clearly inferior, choices are being scooped up like mad.

Why?  We have been hiding our flavor in the back, where no one can see it and where no one can taste it.  We have been so content to sit with our brand of faith, hording its delicious goodness, perhaps even afraid that it will run out (did we forget about the feeding of the 5000?) that we just stopped passing it around.  After all, we were in the overwhelming majority for 200 years, why would we worry about sharing grace when "everyone we know" already has it.  Well, clearly, they don't.  And that has political implications.

If people who truly know and understand grace are no longer in the majority, it will be that much more difficult to elect those who do.  Even now, none of our Supreme Court Justices are protestant and nearly have of them are ready to retire, ready to be replaced.  When someone knows grace, they give grace.  When someone does not know grace, they live under the Law.  And someone who is weighed down by the Law will tend to make others bend and bow to that law that they so loathe themselves.  And that's the kind of rule that our forefathers sought to escape when they fled Europe, the Middle East, Africa and Latin America.

So the long and short of this little note today is you need to go out and vote this November.  Vote for those who you feel will uphold and support the kind of life that you value and uphold living under the Grace of Christ, rather than the laws of men.  But more importantly, in order to make that choice easier, perhaps we should be more focused on our first calling; to make disciples of Jesus Christ, by sharing that most-important gift of all with everyone we know--the Grace of Jesus.

Blessings on your deliberations and my God bless each one of you with his grace.  And, may God Bless America through your votes.

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