How Will God Vote?
By Elizabeth Farah
There
is a teaching within the Christian community that God
ordains all leaders who take political or religious office. The teaching goes like this: God is sovereign, which is to say,
God has power to and does exercise His will and decree over all events in history. All societies need governance. Governments require
leaders – these leaders are chosen by God and therefore, Christians (as well as
all mankind) must respect and obey all leaders. The virtues espoused here are
those of respect for authority and obedience to the law.
If you are not a Christian, you may never have heard this idea expressed
just this way. Your first question might relate to why God chooses so many
despots
and
murderers to be our leaders. Nonetheless, all Christians have at the least
been exposed to this teaching.
There
are several areas of Scripture that seem to support this teaching in its
entirety. But, sincere Christians desiring to please God and maintain order may
be applying this teaching too broadly and absolutely. If so, what are the
consequences?
I
believe that this kind of thinking leads to passivity, indifference,
determinism (as in Islam) and a loss of the power that God gives all who
believe and obey Him, as well as a rejection of personal responsibility to, as
some call it, “influence and occupy” the culture.
If
God picked Bill Clinton to be president, why should we fight his policies? If
God put Woodrow Wilson, FDR, LBJ and Nixon in office, why should we fight
socialism and social re-engineering? For that matter, if the men and women who
have made up the majority of our Supreme Court for decades – most of whom I
would be ashamed to have in my home – are really God’s choices (through the
presidents He chose), then why should we object to abortion on
demand and the myriad heinous decisions that have eviscerated our form
of government and our freedoms?
Very
obviously, if God chose King George to rule over the colonies, then our
Founding Fathers were ALL wrong, and we should resubmit to the
While
most parts of this teaching are correct, the conclusion is wrong. Yes, God is
sovereign. But He chooses when we will exercise His decrees. Sometimes – often
– God allows men to make wrong decisions and then live with the consequences.
Yes,
the Bible teaches that we should
respect authorities or “rulers.” But how does it define that office? Very
clearly: “For rulers are not a terror to good works, but to the evil. Wilt thou
then not be afraid of the power? do that which is good, and thou shalt have
praise of the same: For he is the minister of God to thee for good. But if thou
do that which is evil, be afraid; for he beareth not the sword in vain: for he
is the minister of God, a revenger to execute wrath upon him that doeth evil.”
(Romans 13:3-4)
Right
now, seven words come to mind: Hitler, Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot and United Nations.
Do we even have to argue that the aforementioned “rulers” were not terrors to
the evil while praising the good?
What
kind of worldview do we espouse if to resist the evils of Mao and the U.N. is
to resist lawful authority?! Excuse me
for going to extremes – but I will – should we obey the anti-Christ when he
shows up?
After
the November election, millions of Christians will sigh and say, well, the Lord
God Almighty is sovereign. He must have wanted (fill in the blank) to be
president. I respond – no!
Get
out your Bible – read the parts that
so many Christians don’t spend much time in. The Tanach, otherwise called the “Old
Testament.” Go to the book of Hosea and
memorize verse four of chapter eight: “They have set up kings, but not by Me:
they have made princes, and I knew it not: of their silver and their gold have
they made them idols, that they may be cut off.”
This
should send chills into the hearts of many of us – sobering us to our personal
and national responsibility. No more should we blithely, even smugly, assume
our rulers were chosen in “God’s will.” No, just like
I
have heard Romans 13 cited hundreds
of times, but have never in my life heard a reference, let alone a sermon, on Hosea 8:4. I think that should stop. We
can’t pass the buck – blaming God for all the good as well as the evil in the
world.
This
November, when you vote, remember, you are responsible for your candidate’s
choices once in office. Does he believe in protecting the lives of the innocent
by appointing good Supreme Court justices? Does he respect and uphold the rule
of law – by standing firmly against illegal immigration and amnesty? Does he
defend our highest civil law, the Constitution, by upholding freedom of speech
– especially in political and religious areas? Is he honest about these issues?
Or does he block honorable judges, approve judges who destroy the Constitution,
support amnesty for lawbreakers and sponsor legislation that guts the First
Amendment?
After
committing Hosea 8:4 to memory, I
suggest you read my husband’s book “None of the Above” before you make a
decision you can’t take back.
Elizabeth
Farah is co-founder of WorldNetDaily and serves as executive vice president
for marketing and special projects.