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Doug Bandow

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Should Christians Ask: Who Would Jesus Vote For?

Posted: 01/05/2012 6:02 am

Evangelical churches long have been called the Republican Party at prayer. The observation might be close to true in Iowa. And that should make American Christians nervous about their future in politics.

The relationship of religion and politics has been fraught with controversy since America's founding. In Europe a brutal mixture of church and state harmed both institutions: faith was perverted by power, sometimes using and sometimes used by the state. The Founders opposed a similar practice in America, hence the First Amendment's ban on the "establishment" of religion.

At the same time, the new nation included people who fled religious persecution elsewhere and for whom obedience to God superseded obedience to king. To ensure their ability to practice their faith, including to be "salt and light" in the larger society, the Constitution guarantees religion's "free exercise."

However, the Founders did not want to see a republic divided along religious lines. Not only did the Constitution bar any religious test, but the early leaders were a motley crew when it came to matters of faith. Serious Christians were active at all levels of society, but the Founders were not an especially devout lot. Even George Washington, so revered by so many, probably was a deist despite his shows of public piety.

Yet today some Christian activists seek a Christian candidate. TV personality Jim Bob Duggar urged Iowans to vote for Rick Santorum: "We are asking all the Christians throughout America to get behind him so we can have a godly Christian man as president."

Not a competent, smart, effective president. Not a realistic, thoughtful, or even principled president. Not a president with good policy answers for big questions, such as economic growth, international conflict, and social division. Just "a godly Christian man."

For some Iowa evangelicals, at least, that appears to be a narrow category. It obviously does not include President Barack Obama, who professes to be "a godly Christian man." Nor do many others apparently qualify.

The Washington Post profiled one family who chose Santorum as essentially the last man standing. Michele Bachmann was unacceptable because she was a woman, even though the Bible does not bar women from political office. Mitt Romney was unacceptable because he was a Mormon, even though God does not restrict who can serve as a civil magistrate.

Newt Gingrich was unacceptable because of his serial adultery, even though the Apostle Paul emphasized maintaining moral purity within the community of faith ("What business is it of mine to judge those outside the church?", 1 Cor. 5: 12). Ron Paul was unacceptable because he did not favor promiscuous war-making, even though Jesus is the Prince of Peace. (Really, the Bible does not say "kill a foreigner for Christ.") Only Rick Perry, it seemed, was dismissed for mundane political reasons: an inadequate understanding of the issues.

That's quite a list. And these Iowans were not the only ones to cite Romney's Mormonism. Another one told the Washington Post: "Everyone needs to base their decision on something, and the basis for his decisions would be different. I'm not convinced it's a good point of view to be coming from." A couple friends in my evangelical church in northern Virginia believe similarly.

Yet this confuses civil and religious office.

No doubt, there is a certain personal satisfaction in having someone like one serve as president. But surely the most important qualification for the office is the capability to fulfill the duties of the office.

Imagine a godly man likely to consistently expand government power, sacrificing civil liberties, increasing federal spending, and promiscuously intervening abroad. (Imagine George W. Bush!) The result would be (and was!) less liberty, wealth, and peace. These policies do not become more palatable if implemented by a devout, God-fearing person. Give me the lovable rogue -- even a not so lovable one -- over the saint, if the former will take the nation in the better direction.

Indeed, Martin Luther made the point several centuries ago when he famously favored a smart Turk over a stupid Christian as ruler. Few men in history have been as concerned about good theology and praxis. But he recognized that the civil magistrate is not principally concerned about theology and praxis. The official's primary job is good governance.

There's something more, however. Religious believers who focus on private beliefs are likely to be scammed. Consider the long succession of Republican politicians who have espoused family values -- collecting a lot of votes in the process -- while failing in their personal lives. The smartest among them remake themselves by admitting their sins and proclaiming their turn to God, collecting additional votes in the process.

It's not that every profession of faith is false. But offering political rewards for personal testimonies encourages politicians to lie. Presumably Jim Bob Duggar believes President Obama is lying about being a Christian. Conversions are no easier to verify. As God told the prophet Samuel: "Man looks at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart." (1 Sam. 16:7) Even such a public reprobate as Louisiana's Edwin Edwards testified to Jesus' divinity in one of his campaigns, a bizarre political manifestation in a state characterized by bizarre political manifestations.

The ludicrous practice continues today. For instance, Catholic convert Newt Gingrich, who seems to switch churches about as often as wives, said that he found "taking communion an enormously rewarding and deepening experience." That's nice -- as one of my Catholic friends put it with some asperity, she was glad Catholicism "was working out for him."

But presumably it is more important that he believe his faith to be true than to be comfortable. And however interesting his sentiment, how is it relevant to being president? Jimmy Carter taught Sunday school. That didn't make him a good president. Ronald Reagan was divorced and never said what he thought of communion. That didn't make him a bad president.

Gingrich also declared: "I pray before virtually every speech and virtually every major decision." Assume that to be true. Again, so what? Jesus explained: "Not everyone who says to me, 'Lord, Lord,' will enter the kingdom of heaven." (Matt. 7:21) Even prayer is not likely to make a foolish, erratic, and egotistical believer with bad judgment a good president.

Nothing in Scripture says God will tell us the answers to all problems, whether or not we pray. One of our most common yet frustrating acts of faith is working in community with one another to solve common problems. That's an important way Christians become salt and light. And it is how we exercise the wisdom given by God. (James 1:5)

The Bible offers no blueprint for government and says remarkably little about the role of the state. Conservative Christians often want to jail Americans for moral offenses and kill foreigners to make them good. Liberal Christians often want to steal money from Americans to demonstrate compassion and regulate Americans to make them good. All do so in the name of God, even though God never told Christians to use force to make anyone do much of anything. God's instructions to people to behave a certain way toward each other and toward God do not mean, ipso facto, that they should imprison and/or kill those who act otherwise.

And playing the religious card for one's faith encourages others to play the card against. Joel McDurmon of American Vision criticized Rick Santorum's Catholicism, explaining "imagine how complicated it gets when a man's highest Spiritual allegiance is to the Vatican and not to the American people." By the same logic, of course, Catholics might reciprocate concern over the lack of sound judgment of anyone outside the historic church. And non-believers could run away from those who claim to hear from God. Evangelicals likely will end up losers from playing the religion card.

Good Christians should be good citizens. But being a good citizen (or good government official) does not require being a good Christian.

Americans of all beliefs should focus on who would be the best president. One can imagine religiously-based policy disqualifications -- if you fervently yet genuinely believe God wants government to arrest every sinner, I won't vote for you, irrespective of your declared faith. However, the essential test should be ideology, not theology.

It is hard enough to assess who would implement the best policies. Imagine if voters also had to sort out who would find communion to be most rewarding.

 
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JBS
Part time misanthrope & full time curmudgeon
06:53 PM on 03/01/2012
Unless Jesus can produce a long form birth certificate proving he was born in the United States, it's illegal for him to vote.
09:37 PM on 02/02/2012
JESUS WOULD YOU VOTE FOR HIM AS PRESIDENT,HE'S GOD COMING TO BE KING OF THE EARTH ,TO TRULY END ALL PROBLEMS THE EARTH WILL BE AT PEACE,GODS KINGDOM ON EARTH YOU WILL KNOW THE TRUE JESUS FOR HIS GLORY IS APOND HIM HIS EYES AS FIRE,CROWNS UPON CROWNS AND A NAME ON HIM KING OF KINGS AND LORD OF LORDS OUT OF HIS MOUTH COMES A TWOEDGED SWORD THERE BE NO MORE WARS WITH ALL HIS POWER HE IS LOVE FOR HE DIED FOR OUR SINS SO WE COULD LIVE WITH HIM AND NOT HAVE TO GO TO HELL READ THE BIBLE ITS NOT JUST A BOOK BUT GODS LIVING WORD JESUS HE IS THE WAY, THE TRUTH, THE LIFE NO ONE COME TO THE FAHER BUT BY HIM JESUS,SAY JESUS I'M A SINNER FORGIVE ME I TURN FROM MY SINS AND ASK YOU TO LEAD ME IN THE PATHS OF RIGHTOUSNESS FOR YOUR NAME SAKE NOW YOU KNOW YOUR GOING TO HEAVEN.PEACE BE WITH YOU MICHAEL.
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
08:58 PM on 01/07/2012
Just because they look and talk like a Christian is no guarantee that they are a Christian. Just because someone looks and quacks like a duck, wearing a duck suit is no guarantee that they are a duck. They are just quacks! Place any human beings under a microscope and they shall always fall short of ideological perfection. But the microscopes are focused by the mass media. The mass media is paid for by those who don't want the focus place on themselves. The Devil knows the Bible better than anyone else as so appears as an angel of light to most. Trust not those wearing ideological camouflage!
08:39 PM on 01/07/2012
I think if Jesus were here today and saw our world and the people supposedly looking after its people there would be 5 Horsemen of the Apocalypse.
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logicanada
Blogger, radio co-host, writer, editor, voice-over
05:53 PM on 01/07/2012
I want politicians who are more concerned about the prosperity of people in THIS life. We can leave the NEXT life in the hands of whatever follows.
02:37 PM on 01/06/2012
What is a good Christian I should start my answer and proceed in reminding that if anyone applies Jesus`s Father laws he will be accused of blasphemy and be crucifix as it is happening daily and WE LOST ALL MAIN HUMANITARIANS, PEACE - JUSTICE CONSULTING COORDINATORS including Honored Masons, Evangelists etc in our communities, because respected the laws and applied them in their lives showing us as parents Teachers THE EXAMPLE TO FOLLOW!
Brave who believes in Justice and not scared of death keeps on walking on their steps baring Medical-Laboratory shooting pain anywhere on Earth...+***^***+
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HonkyTonkMan
12:49 PM on 01/06/2012
The best part about being Lithuanian:

The country was the last in Europe to be converted and it wasn't until the 1700s when Catholic practices became more common that pagan. The country's conversion was drawn out and late for purely political reasons. In the end, Lithuanian culture is very wary of the big religions... a take it or leave it, objective attitude is engrained in the culture.
11:58 AM on 01/06/2012
I think the better question is who would The Easter Bunny vote for?
10:14 AM on 01/06/2012
I occasionally troll over at FoxNews, just for a little bit of fun, and recently asked some of the very same questions that some of you are asking;
In Christ's new kingdom would there be Universal health care? Would he endorse victimizing the poor for being poor, would he find gays and prostitutes and single mothers and throw the first stone? I have never seen such a vitriolic attack in my life. Very christian.
09:26 AM on 01/06/2012
Every religion, given the power, will deny human freedom. The Abrahamic religions, Judaism, Mohammadism, and Christianity are the best examples of this intrinsic intolerance. It is, given their dogmatic assertions, impossible that any other religion be tolerated. Countless bloody wars among religious sects fill the pages of history, and upon religious belief are based the present wars and civil wars in the Mideast. The hatred of "infidels", "heretics", and "unbelievers" has crushed individual freedom from Biblical times to the present, as hatred of the human condition, the world of "flesh and the devil", is the principle that grounds all religious conviction. But human reason stands as this human condition, against the inhuman "blind faith" in "God". It is reason alone that grounds the principle of freedom -- the clear separation of church and state. Yes, I believe in God, but this "higher power" is mine, not yours. A humane political leader, and they dare not, for fear of losing the support of the "faithful" should assert "Freedom from Religion" rather than "Freedom of Religion".
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essbird
IOKIYANO
09:56 AM on 01/06/2012
I love this. Thank you.
10:57 AM on 01/06/2012
I agree with you “Every religion, given the power, will deny human freedom” however, the same goes for every government given the power! That is why the founders not only separated church from state they also warned about an all powerful government. “A government big enough to supply you with everything you need is a government big enough to take away everything that you have…The course of history shows that as the government grows, liberty decreases.” Jefferson.

Examples Stalin, Mao, Hitler, Castro, North Korea etc. all governments with too much power. Small government under the confines of the constitution balanced by the three branches of government!

You also seem to forget that not only does article one of the bill of rights keep religion out of government it keeps the government out of religion.
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errol44
Just in town for the GOP circus
08:36 AM on 01/06/2012
In August 2011, when Rick Perry gathered a gaggle of evangelical speakers in Houston for "The Reponse," I kept thinking about Matthew 6:5-6:

5 “And when you pray, do not be like the hypocrites, for they love to pray standing in the synagogues and on the street corners to be seen by others. Truly I tell you, they have received their reward in full. 6 But when you pray, go into your room, close the door and pray to your Father, who is unseen. Then your Father, who sees what is done in secret, will reward you."

But I think the one that really got to me, spiritually speaking, was when George Bush implied that God told him to invade Iraq. Months and years into the occupation, seeing the cost in human lives and suffering, I just wanted to throw up when I thought of how evangelicals supported this war. We attended a John Hagee service in San Antonio where he expounded at length about what a righteous war this was.

But it doesn't stop there. So-called evangelicals now openly support taking from the poor to give to the wealthy; they openly idolize Ayn Rand, a devout atheist and mocker of religion. They crusade about cutting entitled benefits for our elderly and poor citizens and are fighting, tooth-and-nail to prevent 50 million of their fellow citizens from having health insurance.

"Health insurance?"

God help us.
08:12 AM on 01/06/2012
This article could have been written for any special interest group the ecologists, the occupiers etc. who would only vote for a person that agrees with their ONE philosophy while the rest of their agenda would totally destroy the country.

I find it also quite interesting how everyone that reads of Jesus’ teachings has a different interpretation there of. And that’s the way it was intended the individual salvation you have to make the choice.

Lets look at the big picture before the US there were the rich and the peasants and because of our constitution and free market capitalism more people have been brought out of poverty and put into the middle class then ever in the history of the world. We are the most charitable country on earth American individuals donated more money to Haiti then most industrialized countries did. I would think Jesus would approve of that. Should charity be left to the government? Governments are too corruptible charity should be left to the individual.

Who would Jesus vote for? Ok I will play this game. So you think he would vote for the group that says it is ok to kill unborn babies but its not ok for school children to pray to him? Hmmmm I think he would vote libertarian haha!
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FirstGame72
The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters
08:25 AM on 01/06/2012
I'm pretty sure that if God is doing any judging at all it is on an individual by individual basis and not by groups.
Judging people by groups is something humans (wrongly) do. A God would have more wisdom (and more ability for sure) than that I think.
08:55 AM on 01/06/2012
I was being facetious you liberals have no humor what so ever!
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essbird
IOKIYANO
08:55 AM on 01/06/2012
There's a lot in what you say. But I think you should read more American history before you say that the Constitution and free market capitalism alone are responsible for the prosperity of a middle class. Certainly without them, it would not have happened to this degree, although there was a significant rise of middle class in Europe as early as the 14th century, merchants and craft guilds (read: labor unions). America of the 1890s was a land of robber barons, monopolists, and exploiters of labor. Coal miners were paid a pittance and were forced to buy and rent from the Company. It wasn't until the reforms begun by Theodore Roosevelt that some regulation of industry and finance began to provide fair wages, equal opportunity, and safety (of work, food, medicine, etc. - read "The Jungle" about the meat packing industry) and the middle class really took off. Then add both the fact that World War II destroyed all our industrial competition for many years, and the GI Bill provided a generation of college-educated white collars, and you have the prosperity that many confuse with "American Exceptionalism" and the Right attributes to the Constitution and free markets.

In fact, we were best off when we had good regulation to temper the market, and strong labor to ensure a fair slice of the pie.
10:43 AM on 01/06/2012
Yes I do know history and I know that the merchant class was a very small percentage of the populating. I also know through history that up until the 1900’s this country was mainly an Agrarian society. That for the first time in peoples lives they were allowed to own their own land raise the crops they wanted to and sell them on the open market and keep ALL the profits without having to share with a land owner or the government.

During the 1900 era people like Edison and Ford were allowed to invent and innovate not only creating wonderful products but also wealth and they were allowed to keep that wealth without having to share it with a king the government or a church. Hiring people to build these products giving them the money to buy these products. When Europeans immigrated to this country at that time they were amazed to see normal people with washing machines, ice boxes and electric lights thought to be luxury items only for the rich.

It works today look at Steve Jobs he created an empire out of his mom’s garage capitalism at it’s finest.

The sure way to tell a socialist from a capitalist is a socialist want to take a bigger piece of the same pie a capitalist wants to make MORE pies to go around.
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WeThePeople99percent
Greed is a poor substitute for intelligence!
11:16 AM on 01/06/2012
Excellent Response. Thank you. I agree. I fear however the secrets people keep to themselves will win out. These misguided people who look to Right-wing nuts and follow only right wing media do so out of fear of change. They KNOW that there have been many times that the far right outlook and media have supported or made statements that just don't sit right in their gut but they fear their own right-wing crowd around them and do not want to admit they might have been made a fool of. For this reason they will justify and defend with the most ludicrous and unproven facts, easily found but not easily proven, on the right-wing media and dismiss ALL real facts to the contrary out of a manipulated fear of standing up against their own party. I KNOW this as a fact because i was one of them and since have talked to MANY others who have had the same experience and some of us blame ourselves for allowing ourselves to have been manipulated by the Far-right for so long.
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fiddler3
physicist, musician, parent
07:51 AM on 01/06/2012
Ultimately it comes down to an assessment of character. These assessments are very subjective and often are not simple for people to explain. For serious Christians, a serial adulterer might indicate a character flaw that they find completely unacceptable. St. Paul's sins are irrelevant to the assessment. Similarly for each of the other examples.

It is subjective opinion to say all Christians should be anti-war because Jesus was the prince of peace. Quite a few Christians believe the theological arguments for just war actually create conditions where it is a responsibility for a nation with the power to address the world's evils to address them -- using military power.

I think Mr. Bandow is a bit quick to see inconsistency, or even hypocrisy in people. Perhaps there is an element of pandering to the anti-religious progressives in this.
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FirstGame72
The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters
08:20 AM on 01/06/2012
You turn morality into a blank slate on which anything can be written and then called moral.
Your idea of morality ultimately breaks down to "might makes right."
cosmicdart
paragon of paradigms
01:46 AM on 01/08/2012
Historically, when it comes to religion, might makes right. At one time, the Zoroastrian religion was the dominant religion in the Middle East. Alexander the Great destroyed it, and tried to replace it with the Greek religion. But for the destruction of the Zoroastrian religion, the Moslem religion most likely would never have taken root centuries later. Every time they destroy a religion this leaves a vacuum filled by the invention of another religion that's composed of bits and pieces of failed religions. Perhaps we should concentrate on perfecting the religions that we have rather than inventing more, or destroying the ones that we already have. Desire is the mother of invention.
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OliverTwist
Contrarian advocate for truth and justice
08:43 AM on 01/06/2012
It is profoundly corrupt to put oneself in the position of God to claim the ability to calculate the goodness of outcomes and the acceptability of actions aimed to accomplish those outcomes.

The original purpose of "just war theory" was to reserve to the Church the authority to validate war. Now, disconnected from association with the Church, it is common that any group with sufficient power to wage war successfully has also the power to successfully claim for itself the authority to judge those wars "just."

In my view your religious views are profoundly corrupt (you might say "evil").

That's too bad.
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fiddler3
physicist, musician, parent
10:31 AM on 01/06/2012
My religious views???? What are you talking about? I said nothing about my religious views. I was discussing the religious views of others -- which was the topic of Bandow's article.
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Martha Fair
Professional RepubliBilly Factchecker
07:37 AM on 01/06/2012
Jesus would not be able to vote because he is not a corporation and everyone knows (esp Republicans) that the only people that really count are the corporations
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FirstGame72
The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters
08:26 AM on 01/06/2012
No, individuals still vote in the U.S. It's just that they can't influence politicians that's the problem.
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sigmetsue
militantly moderate
08:53 PM on 01/07/2012
Good point! Voters only have power in local politics these days.
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hollace
I told you I was sick
02:44 AM on 01/06/2012
...and just by coincidense the person gets the answer they wanted before they even asked? It's not like there is a test afterward.