Evangelicals and Politics
By: Tom Gilson - stream.org - May 2, 2019
Surveys and pundits keep saying that people dislike evangelicals’ involvement in politics. Frequently it’s framed as a problem with our witness for Christ. Onlookers claim that more people would actually come to faith in Him if evangelicals would quit doing so much politicking. But I’ve got a question: Could someone explain to me just what the problem is here? Sure, we’ve all got our inconsistencies; we all make mistakes. But I keep hearing there’s something systemically wrong, right at the heart of what evangelicals hold dear. And that’s the thing I wonder about. I’m not saying there isn’t any issue. I know it’s there, at least in perception; no doubt about that. But I can’t put my finger on precisely what that problem is. None of the potential explanations make sense to me, when I look at them closely. Let me illustrate with four of them. 1. “Christianity should have nothing to do with politics.” For some Americans, religion is a heavenly matter that has nothing to do with worldly affairs. Others will accept it as a private practice for home or church, but want it kept it of the public square where it might impact or influence others.
The Bible teaches a religion of public involvement; it’s actually a matter of Christian doctrine.
But the Bible teaches a religion of public involvement; it’s actually a matter of Christian doctrine. And in a democracy, that necessarily includes political involvement. So when people tell Christians we should keep our religion out of our politics, they’re imposing contrary, un-Christian views on us.
So if we follow the Bible’s teachings on this, how does that harm our witness?
2. “Evangelicals can do politics all they want, but why don’t they do ___ instead?”
You can fill in the blank all kinds of ways: “Why don’t put all that energy into caring for the poor?” “Why don’t they fight divorce like they opposed gay marriage?” or “Why don’t they help young mothers as much as they fight against abortion?”
The answer to that is easy: We do. We don’t do it as publicly as we do our politics, but that only makes sense. Politics just is a public activity. These other caring acts are better done one-to-one, or at least on a community level.
3. “We don’t like evangelicals’ moral values.”
But maybe it isn’t our involvement in politics that bugs people. Maybe it’s the policies we tend to stand for.
- We’re convinced unborn children are morally significant human beings, so we oppose abortion.
- We tend to favor “traditional” morality in matters of sex, sexuality and marriage.
- We’re strong on helping others in need, but we don’t think the government does a good job of it, and we question the morality of doing it through forced taxation. So we tend not to support wealth redistribution via taxation.
- We’re convinced our nation must sustain its economy and its identity if it is to sustain its compassion; therefore we support wise and firm immigration policy.