When the church is aflame with bitter political partisanship rather than the fire of the love of God, then functionally we have become atheists. That kind of church is an offense to the example and teachings of Christ. That kind of church is at best a group of religious performance artists or at worst idolaters. There aren’t enough strong words to condemn this culturally preferred and accepted betrayal of Jesus’ vision. When the church forfeits her sacred calling and becomes a pawn and public relations firm for either political party she refuses her spiritual inheritance and she frustrates the grace of God. She becomes like the salt Jesus spoke of, “having lost its saltiness deserves to be crushed underfoot.” Not nearly enough of us in the church condemn this behavior for fear of shrinking membership and monetary donations. Political partisanship of one stripe or the other has successfully cowered much of religious leadership. Too often these days the church resembles the prodigal son, running from a loving parent, bankrupt, on his knees, and eating from a pig trough! This behavior has helped to cause the absence of young people in our churches. They are right to call us hypocrites when they notice the gap between our Sunday proclamation of love and our Monday incarnation of contempt. They are right to look for spiritual meaning and depth beyond the doors of our churches if we refuse to be Christ’s church. The church was founded to manifest the timeless truth of God revealed in Jesus of Nazareth. The church was founded to assist God in God’s search and rescue mission to a drowning world. The church was meant to be a brilliant “other” to the world. We were organized to be planned community – a “colony of heaven” – perpetually in the midst of hell so that people would be saved by seeing and choosing the contrast. We were always meant to be a transformed and transformational community. The church was founded to hope in God, not politicians or political systems. We were not founded to join politicians of any party in their craven coveting of power or their ceaseless disparaging of members of the American family. When we find that political rhetoric and political contempt for people who do not share our political views is our norm, even though we have pledged to “…respect the dignity of every human being…,” then it should be clear, we are a part of the problem. Still, even with the depth and severity of our betrayal, there’s still good news, God delights in showing mercy! So we can acknowledge that we have wandered away from our God and God’s purposes. We can repent and ask for God’s forgiveness and we can bend our lives toward the vision Jesus actually modeled. We can replace our regular vocabulary of rancor with one of extraordinary Christian resolve. The hope of the world remains for more of us to choose daily to follow Jesus Christ. So yes, vote. Vote your Baptismal Covenant. But every day leading up to voting and every day after remember you cannot serve both God and partisan politics.
For People with Bishop Rob Wright
The new podcast expands on Bishop’s For Faith devotional, drawing inspiration from the life of Jesus to answer 21st-century questions.