Friday, November 7, 2008

Ingratitude at the Gas Pump

“We don’t vote in my house,” the guy across the gas pump said. Trying to make small talk with the young Missouri man yesterday, I’d asked him if he’d gone to vote yet. My eyes must have grown as wide as dinner plates, because he quickly went on to explain: “All the negative ads. It just disgusts me and my wife, so we don’t vote.”

My guess is that many people around the country—and especially around the world— would find that utterly incomprehensible, especially in an election of such consequence. My friend Pastor Paula Mehmel of Casselton, ND must have run into similarly negative people at her end of the Great Plains, because she recently wrote this in a monthly pastor’s piece:

(Imagine) the Zimbabwean who risked death or injury to vote and only saw her vote negated, or the person from China who would give anything to have a vote in what was happening in his country, or the woman in the Muslim nation who can’t even show her face, let alone vote. What about the countless of men and women from this country who sacrificed their lives out of a commitment to the basic values of our democracy and…freedom, or the civil rights workers and suffragettes who sacrificed so much and faced persecution to give everyone the right to vote? It makes “suffering” through the ads and taking time to sort through the mudslinging to look at the issues sort of pale in comparison...
My guess is that most people in the Third World—and in the Holy Trinity—would find the young man’s attitude profoundly ungrateful, as well. To use political jargon, “God has a proven track record” of not just of complaining about problems (He does sometimes complain about us in Scripture), but also of enlisting real-live people to be His partners in solving them! God expects us to remember what He’s done for us, and to structure our lives and make our decisions accordingly. Whether we voted for the honorable & inspiring John McCain or the inspiring & honorable Barack Obama, if we voted from Biblical principles, a passion for the public good, and humility before God, we were doing God’s work.

But if we folded our arms and just sat it out, I think we mocked the blessings God gave us, and the blessings so many Americans have fought, bled, and died to protect. As He said to a grousing and angry Job, whose life was far more inconvenienced than my gas-pump buddy’s: “Brace yourself like a man, because I have some questions for you, and you must answer them” (Job 33:5).

Both Obama and McCain used the word ‘gratitude/grateful’ in their speeches late last night—and I don’t think that’s an accident. Classy politicians—like our two Presidential candidates—are fundamentally grateful people. They recognize that to whom much is given is much expected. And, personal ambition and incidental vanities aside, they act as if their lives can be partial ‘Thank You’s’ for the blessings they received.

Classy Christ-followers are thankful, too. One of the reasons the offering jars at Kaw Prairie are on inconspicuous locations in the lobby instead of passed down the rows during worship is that we know that God wants tithes and offerings from joyful, grateful givers—not from socially-pressured ones! The reason so many of us are making sacrificial gifts in the tens of thousands of dollars to the Beyond! Building Fund is that we truly feel we’ve been blessed by God’s grace and Jesus’ love beyond measure—and we want to share the gift of His love with the people and families of west Johnson County.

Whether or not “your” party was victorious in yesterday’s elections, I thank God that YOU as a Kaw Prairier are a thankful and classy Christian, who votes, serves, and gives with a gratitude and humility that honors the Lord you serve.

Let the message about Christ, in all its richness, fill your lives. Teach and counsel each other with all the wisdom he gives. Sing psalms and hymns and spiritual songs to God with thankful hearts. And whatever you do or say, do it as a representative of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks through him to God the Father. Colossians 3:16-17

Monday, November 3, 2008

What if he doesn't win???!!!

Within 24 hours—assuming there are no hanging chads in Charleston or court fights in Florida—another exhausting and frighteningly expensive US presidential campaign will be over. Many folks are hopeful John McCain will emerge victorious. And many others of us are hopeful that Barack Obama will prevail. And yet most of us know that, whether our first choice gets the nod or not, the sun will rise— and the Lord will reign— the next day over a blessing-filled but deeply-challenged nation.

Though my opinion is not always popular among faithful single-issue voters (or among the highly anxious or partisan), I honestly believe that faithful Christ-followers can in good conscience vote for either man, since even though both candidates advocate some things that aren’t faithful to God’s will, both also advocate many things that are. (I unpacked both the godly and the more problematic attributes of both sides of the political spectrum last month in the WWJJ series).

Additionally, both men are, I believe, essentially honorable in their motives and behaviors—though obviously each has made compromises that are unfortunate but typical when seeking a high office in a highly corruptible process. And of course, it wasn’t expected in the New Testament scriptures that a country’s leader could be a Christian (Caesar certainly wasn’t a Christian when Paul told us to honor his office in Romans 13—and in Matthew 22 Jesus okayed paying taxes to a pagan government, too) But from the evidence I’ve seen, both Mr. McCain (despite his lucky rabbit’s foot) and Mr. Obama (despite his bombastic former pastor) are believers in Jesus Christ, though they’ve lived out their faith in different ways, and, have chosen their churches using different criteria.

I’m confident God is never pleased with some of the dark spots of our American elections: broken campaign promises, character-attack ads, public distraction by trivia, celebrity-mania, idolatries of party loyalty and nationalism, and so forth. But I know for sure that Scripture doesn’t allow Christ-followers to give up on their country—or to be hateful toward their government. See, just because our US Constitution gives us the right to protest and debate vehemently, our biblical ‘founding documents’ hold us to a higher standard.

In fact Paul’s letter to the church in the politically carnivorous city of Rome gives some specific post-election advice, with my loose translation (Romans 13:1-10):
• we’re not allowed to get violent in the streets if we don't get our way. It’s insulting to God and disruptive to the peace He longs for in our communities
• we’re not allowed to curse, whine, or disparage our new leader(s), [though of course we don’t have to agree or keep silent about our concerns!]
• we’re not allowed to cheat on our taxes (a favorite ‘protest’ of self-serving types of all ideologies), no matter whose reforms or changes are implemented.

All in all, whether my guy wins or loses, he’s not the one that I’ll be serving, worshiping, or building my identity or eternity on. So in 36 hours, I’ll get up early, make my coffee, grab my Bible, and open it up for marching orders from my King. Then I'll open the laptop to find out who’s my President.

1-3 Be a good citizen. All governments are under God. Insofar as there is peace and order, it's God's order. So live responsibly as a citizen. If you're irresponsible to the state, then you're irresponsible with God, and God will hold you responsible. Duly constituted authorities are only a threat if you're trying to get by with something. Decent citizens should have nothing to fear.
3-5Do you want to be on good terms with the government? Be a responsible citizen and you'll get on just fine, the government working to your advantage…God also has an interest in keeping order, and he uses the [authorities] to do it. That's why you must live responsibly—not just to avoid punishment but also because it's the right way to live.
6-7That's also why you pay taxes—so that an orderly way of life can be maintained. Fulfill your obligations as a citizen. Pay your taxes, pay your bills, respect your leaders.
8-10Don't run up debts, except for the huge debt of love you owe each other.
Rom 13:1-10 Message