Can You
Be a Christian and Democrat?
By
Matt Friedeman
“You’ve got to help me with a question,”
said the caller. “Tell me now, can you in any way be a Christian and vote
Democrat?”
I have been doing talk radio for 15 years or
so, smack dab in the middle of the Bible
Belt. Believe me when I say that, through the years, my listening
audience has considered the social agenda of the Democrats and voiced the same
question on the air at least a couple of hundred times.
• Abortion
on demand
• The homosexual agenda
• Slow dismantling of the Judeo-Christian tradition, not the least from
left-wing judicial nominees
• Public monopoly of education and a secular humanistic curricular
emphasis
• Welfare dependency (government is your “daddy”)
This is not the stuff of Jesus, I dare say.
So, can you be a Christian and vote Democrat?
My question for the caller. “Hey, man, what
does it mean to be a Christian -- to be saved?” There was momentary
silence on his end so I just continued. “We are saved by grace
through
faith in Christ Jesus. Period. The Republican Party cannot save,
although that is news to some. The Democratic Party can’t save, and
that is obvious to most. But politics or political positions cannot
and will not save us. For we are saved by grace through faith in
Christ Jesus.”
This columnist started paying attention to
politics sometime during the Nixon years. Last time I checked, there was
still a sign in the basement of our old house in Kansas that declared, “Nixon’s
the One!” But it would take some pretty rose-colored glasses not to see
that the GOP and its players have transgressed legally and in the realm of
common sense just as much as their counterpart Dems.
For those of us who thought that Republicans
and Christian faith rode tandem, we of the faith have been riding on the same
bike as welfare-promoting, law-breaking, greedy, pork-barrel enthusiasts who
have about as many sex and financial scandals as those with polar opposite
political proclivities.
Political power and ideological platforms
cannot save. And the Kingdom of God is bigger than our corridors of power
and our political solutions.
Even so, my faith, grounded hopefully in
Holy Writ and an intimate relationship with God, leads me to be pro-life and to
hold a strong view of heterosexual marriage and a conviction that the
Judeo-Christian worldview belongs in our nation’s schools. I believe that
disciplined liberty, not license, is the path to a healthy society with a
hopeful future and that a dependency mentality virtually enslaves the poor and
impedes them from knowing that hope.
Not all people share my views. I think
they are wrong, of course. And sometimes wrong to the tremendous
detriment of our nation, our families, and ultimately the world. If
someone gets converted under my ministry, I will also try to disciple them into
core cultural convictions on abortion, family, freedom, the poor, etc.
But not all will agree.
Will they be in heaven? Actually, it
reminds me of a George Whitefield story.
During a strenuous season of theological
debate, one of Whitefield’s Calvinistic disciples asked him if they would see
the Arminian John Wesley in heaven. Whitefield thought for a moment and
admitted that he didn’t think they would. The disciple grinned. “No,”
said Whitefield, “for he will be so close to the throne of God and we at such a
distance I doubt we’ll get a glimpse of the man.”
Humility, those who have attended Sunday school
might remember, is a biblical virtue. Even, and perhaps especially,
in political and cultural war.
Matt Friedeman (mfriedeman@wbs.edu) is a professor
at Wesley Biblical Seminary. He can be heard at AFRTalk from
5 to 6 p.m. (Central) and at InTheFight.com.