Should Christians Argue Politics?

Should Christians Argue Politics?

Frank Pastore

“The Frank Pastore Show,” KKLA, Los Angeles


September 30, 2008

For the past several months I’ve heard two recurring themes from critics of my show: “You’re too political and unloving, Christians shouldn’t argue about politics,” and “You’re not fair and balanced, you’re close-minded and too biased against liberals.”

Perhaps many Christians believe these things because they don’t understand politics is really an exercise of theology applied—one way we love our neighbors as ourselves. Our political and social policies should grow out of our theology, not vice versa. We are not to reverse engineer our theology based upon our political and social agendas. Our faith is foundational to everything else. For Christians, theology creates and shapes our approach to politics; for non-Christians, politics creates and shapes their approach to theology—or at least their worldview.

A Christian becomes too political when their politics is no longer rooted in their theology, when their faith becomes merely peripheral and unnecessary to their political agenda, rather than the one thing that is fundamental and essential.

How we vote to spend our tax dollars, what economic and social policies we hope to advance through votes for particular candidates, and what domestic and foreign policies we hope our government advances—these things are the applications of the values rooted in our Christian worldview.

Just as how I choose to invest my time and treasure is the best expression of whether I’m living out my Christian values, so too what the government spends money on and what policy preferences it pursues is the best expression of our true American values.

The best way for me to love my neighbor is through those things I choose to do personally. The second best way is through votes for candidates who support policies that I believe will promote the common good. Thus, I am political because I am loving, and I am loving because I am Christian. Therefore, I should argue—albeit in a God-glorifying manner—about politics.

Perhaps many Christians don’t know how to argue without getting angry—though there are times when anger is morally justified. The two things that we should be willing to argue about are theology and politics. This isn’t about getting mad or letting your emotions get out of control. In fact, when we lose our cool and merely emote, we’re not arguing very well and we actually become less persuasive rather than more so. It usually escalates into a test of whose emotional intensity is strongest, rather than the strength of the arguments themselves.

Perhaps many Christians think arguing is bad because they can’t distinguish between a person and their ideas. Even for themselves, they can take it personally when someone is arguing against their ideas. But not arguing does make me a nice person. And the fact that I do argue about consequential things does not make me unloving. Nice people can be wrong, and mean people can be right. I can criticize a person’s ideas without criticizing the person. The challenge is to communicate my disagreement—to argue—in such a way that the person understands I disagree with their ideas, not them personally. Friends can and do argue over their disagreements, though it is most often the case that they are friends precisely because they do agree on so many things.

Finally, with regards to the criticism that I am “not fair and balanced” and that I am “close-minded and too biased against liberals,” I am perhaps guilty as charged. However, it is only because I have weighed the arguments on both sides and found the current expressions of modern liberalism deficient. I gave liberalism a fair hearing when I began to formulate my political philosophy and found it contrary to my Christian values. I am no longer struggling with moral equivalence between the left and the right. I would be close-minded and biased if I were unwilling to weigh arguments for liberalism. Having done so, I am a conservative precisely because I have found the arguments for liberalism unpersuasive.

Some Christians may claim, “Christians shouldn’t argue about politics” simply because they’re political liberals who are unwilling to actually engage in argument over their political views. Instead, they would rather attempt to stifle debate by taking the pseudo moral high ground, saying something like, “Truly spiritual Christians are above politics.”

That’s too bad. Christians can and should argue, especially about theology and politics—and hopefully in that order.



Frank Pastore is host of “The Frank Pastore Show,” recognized by the National Religious Broadcasters as Talk Show Host of the Year in 2006. His program is heard on KKLA in Los Angeles 4-7 p.m. Monday through Friday. Contact Frank at Frank@kkla.com.

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ploodie
10/28/2008 7:47 AM
By the way - this quote from the article:

"Some Christians may claim, “Christians shouldn’t argue about politics” simply because they’re political liberals who are unwilling to actually engage in argument over their political views. Instead, they would rather attempt to stifle debate by taking the pseudo moral high ground, saying something like, “Truly spiritual Christians are above politics.”

. . . is one of the most simplistic and ignorant over-generalizations I've heard. So if I oppose arguing politics, I'm just a liberal looking down my nose at other Christians!? There's no way I could possibly have derived this belief from studying God's word!? I find it hard to believe someone with as much renown as he supposedly has would resort to such a childishly broad argument.
ploodie
10/28/2008 7:42 AM
It's simple - show me which disciple/apostle went to Rome to join the senate and change the empire politically. Oh, you can't? That's right, because none of them did! They were too busy ministering to people in their community. Politics is a distraction. We have been blessed in this nation - however, that blessing has become a source of laziness in this country. It's an unfortunate fact that persecution historically brings out the best in Christians, while blessing brings out the worst. Our American freedoms are a nice fringe benefit, but they are only superfluous - we aren't owed them by God, and we need not waste our time protecting what we don't ultimately need. Paul was able to carry out the Great Commission, even while in prison!

The Great Commission says "go therefore and make DISCIPLES" not, "go therefore and make REPUBLICANS" - I think politics is a distraction that has done nothing more than further divide the church from the lost.
GPEN
10/27/2008 2:50 AM
When talking about politics we should know what the Bible has to say about the issues and be polite to the other person. We are called to be the Salt of the Earth and the light of the world Matt.5:13-14. We need to know where the candidates stand on the issues and vote accorrding to the Bible. For example on Abortion the Bible says it is wrong Psalms 139:13-16, and again Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born I set you apart. --Jeremiah 1:5.
According Ehpesians chapter 5 we need to walk in love towards them that without, and we must also walk in light. We need to tell them that even if they still disagree with them on. That Jesus still loves them and is willing to accept them as they are. After all we are sinful humans, who without the mercy and grace of God would be on our way to Hell.
Ezekiel 3:16-21 calls for us to be watchmen.
Proverbs 29:2 When the righteous are in authority, the people rejoice: but when the wicked beareth rule, the people mourn.
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