Categories
worldview

What is your political worldview?

I heard a sermon yesterday which supports my view that Southern
Baptists have no biblical political philosophy.

In the introduction our pastor mentioned the “culture war”, his
words not mine, by mentioning the attack on Karen Pence for
teaching at a Christian school that openly believes in the
biblical definition of marriage.  Southern Baptists, in general,
and specifically my pastor, take Scripture seriously.  I was
immediately interested in what he had to say next.

He made a mistake by saying Karen’s attackers are not our enemy.
They certainly are.  This is an important point.  In spite of
this error, our response, and my pastor would agree, would be to
obey Christ and “love our enemies”.  We must recognize there is
no neutrality in most of what politics forces upon their
citizens.  If we believe the Bible we certainly believe the
Triune God: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, is ultimate sovereign
over everything.  This includes politics.  Whoever, or whatever,
is ultimate sovereign over a nation’s laws is either the Triune
God or illegitimate (anti-Christ).  Politics is not secular.  In
fact, it is worship.  We must bow our knee to this ultimate
sovereign, or we must accept the civil penalty for breaking the
law.

Our pastor then went on about apologetics, i.e., giving a defense
of what (and perhaps why) we believe the gospel.  Perhaps he
knows of the biblical instruction?  Maybe not, because it was not
part of his sermon yesterday.  There is a confusing, almost
contradictory, passage in Proverbs concerning “apologetics”.
Proverbs 26:4&5 says “Answer not a fool according to his folly,
lest you be like him yourself.  Answer a fool according to his
folly, lest he be wise in his own eyes.”  How can both these
statements be logically correct?  I think the best answer is to
see how Jesus obeyed this section of the Word of God in his
answer to those fools, and his enemy, the pharisees.

“‘What do you think about the Christ?  Whose son is he?’
They said to him, ‘The son of David.’  He said to them, ‘How
is it then that David, in the Spirit, calls him Lord, saying,
The Lord said to my Lord, Sit at my right hand, until I put
your enemies under your feet?  If then David calls him Lord,
how is he his son?'”

I have thought about apologetics for years.  I believe the best
summary is: respond to questions with another question.  Quote
Scripture as applicable.  The purpose being to expose the
worldview of our apologetic opponent.  A secondary purpose is to
have a conversation.  Let them talk about what they truly
believe.  A third purpose is to let Scripture bring about faith
to win our opponent.

What I have found, when I’ve asked Southern Baptists about their
biblical political philosophy and are willing to talk about it,
is they believe the conscience, as described in the first few
chapters of Romans, is “separate” from Biblical authority.  Those
who attempt to apply this to civil law often call it “the law of
nature and of nature’s God”.  The words “religious liberty” are
also used, but in many ways.  The biblical meaning is a liberty
to no longer sin but live righteously, i.e., not political.  When
applied to politics this expression makes no sense whatsoever.
Whose religious opinion should civil law give the green light
(liberty) to anyway?

The biblical political philosophy, i.e. worldview, of Southern
Baptists is to use your conscience and the Bible, if you believe
it; to form your own opinion. Be sure to vote, but don’t ever
claim someone else’s opinion is wrong.

Categories
Raising Sons

Use Unrighteous Wealth Wisely

As most fathers, I have been proud of my sons and love to talk about
it too. A friend at work reminded me of a story I had told him that I
had not included in my book. The gospel of Luke chapter 16 verses 1
through 13 records Jesus telling a story of a dishonest manager. He
was commended for making the most of his situation though. He
arranged to have secured his economic future by making friends of
those who owed his master money. His master, who fired him, commended
him for his shrewdness. “One who is faithful in a very little is also
faithful in much, and one who is dishonest in a very little is also
dishonest in much. If then you have not been faithful in the
unrighteous wealth, who will entrust to you the true riches?” The
story concludes with “You cannot serve God and money.”

Jeremy, my oldest son, was doing well in school. He had a test coming
up we knew very little about. Jeremy wasn’t prepared. He didn’t
bother bringing his calculator. It was known mostly by its initials:
PSAT-NMSQT. Since he was just in 10th grade we didn’t know how much
it had to do with college. I didn’t prepare him either. Afterward,
we found out what those letters in the name of the test stood for:
Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test – National Merit Scholarship
Qualifying Test. At about the same time his younger brother, Toby,
was invited to be a part of a Duke University study which involved
taking the SAT in 7th grade. After reading the letter, I decided it
may actually be a good idea to take the SAT in 7th grade. We didn’t
accept the invitation to be a part of the Duke University study, but I
did pay the test fee and scheduled Toby to take the SAT. Jeremy
didn’t do well enough on the PSAT-NMSQT to get in the running for
national merit scholar. This one test was literally worth upwards of
$100,000 for college expenses. With escalating college fees, it’s
probably worth more now. Why not, I thought, have all three sons take
the SAT and ACT once per year? I wanted to prepare them for college
and “acing” a standardized test, especially the PSAT in 10th grade,
was a target worth aiming at. So, all three, even our youngest son,
T.J., starting in 6th grade, began taking the SAT and ACT once per
year. It cost me about $100 per year. Did it pay off? Jeremy
received a full-tuition scholarship, and both his brothers did well
enough on the PSAT-NMSQT to eventually become National Merit Finalists
and got all expenses paid for their 4-year undergraduate degrees. All
3 sons received B.S. degrees in mechanical engineering with very
little financial assistance from Mom and Dad.

The story can’t end here though. Money, or as Jesus calls it,
“unrighteous wealth”, is only one of the tools to accomplish the “true
riches” God has entrusted my family. As the servant given 5 talents
was able to give 10 back to his master [Matthew 25:20], my wife and I
pray for our sons daily.

Categories
worldview

Questions that Demand an Answer

Quick, what do you think is the true story of the missing Boeing 777 jet?  There is a theory you expect to be – the right one – don’t you?  Some questions require an answer, at least temporarily, with a belief, an opinion.  Most people will allow their opinion of the missing Boeing 777 to be replaced if and when enough facts surface (yes I know it’s a pun) to cause belief in another scenario.  This is still belief, albeit a much stronger one, unless you actually are there on a boat and see with your own eyes a panel with the plane’s registration number recovered or found somewhere .  But, some will forever cling to their belief saying news sources are in collusion with da di da, or some other such reason.  No matter how strong the evidence is there will always be conspiracy theories, well, at least on the web.

What about metaphysical questions?  Where did I come from?  Where did the universe come from?  Is man innately evil or good?  Did Jesus really rise from the dead?  We all have our opinions.  How can we not?  How many have examined the evidence?  Hmmm.

Categories
haiku

Questions?

We have had a few earthquakes here in Broken Arrow. Thought I might try a haiku post.

“Shocks and aftershocks.
Who will prepare for earthquakes?
Who prepares for death?”

Categories
book review

Review of _The Post-American World_ by Fareed Zakaria, Norton, 2009.

 Fareed is an Indian who decided to stay in America after getting his post-secondary education here. His current job is with Newsweek magazine. He captures much about America’s position within the world with regard to economics, foreign policy, politics, etc. His story paints a picture of progressive thinking, i.e., strong central governments which have firm control of the nation in those subjects mentioned above. He has an optimistic view of humanistic planning and downplays religion.When religious differences among nations surface he views that as being either minor or unnecessarily ugly.

His topic is huge. As a result, in one book of just under 300 pages he can include only the details which corroborate his views. Fareed does this well. Obviously, he overlooks many details which don’t fit his own world-view.

Why did I take time to read a book written by a non-Christian? The short answer is because my son asked me to. However, after reading, and being inside the context of Fareed’s worldview, I decided it was worth it.

What did I learn? Although Fareed never defines his own worldview, it appears to be secular humanism. Based on his writing he appears to be agnostic in his own belief about God. From Fareed I learned that it’s hopeless to attempt to talk about morality as being a derivative of one’s religion to someone of this worldview. In his thinking man interprets something (what that is remains subjective and undefined often involving compromise) as a definition of good an devil. In civil matters collective man (humanist) must come to some moral decision but it is a democratic process and thus subjective. What is good (or evil) today may not be tomorrow. What’s good (or evil) in the Chinese culture may coexist with a different good (or evil) definition in America. A Christian may claim to have their morality based on the Bible but to someone like Fareed this is nonsense. Reading between the lines, perhaps Fareed believes the only role of religion would be that some religious (church) creed is the dictator of one’s moral beliefs, i.e., an ecclesiastic humanist morality. Thus, in his belief someone who considers a religious moral belief to equal civil morality is delusional or certainly misguided.

Do Christians really expect civil morality to come from the Bible? Is there such a thing as a moral standard which God expects man to put in place within those (self as well as various civil) governments over him? These are not new questions. In fact, the strong ‘yes’ to the former question but the differing answers to the latter are what distinguished the 13 original colonies from one another in early America. But something happened over the years. Today most Christians in America don’t take seriously Hebrews 5:14, which commands the mature believer to distinguish good from evil. Most Christians view civil morality as being secular “humanist” to some degree.There is no counting how many Christians I have heard repeat that phrase “separation of church and state” to justify having a secular civil government. Some may claim to want a biblical moral civil law, but (probably) not really. The immature Christian’s action doesn’t square with their stated belief. So, how should a mature Christian confront a humanist thinker such as Fareed, or even an immature Christian? An acceptance of Christ as (civil) King cannot begin with Matthew 28:18 or Romans chapter 13. Instead, the approach the Apostle Paul took (Acts chapter 17) to explain Christianity to the thinkers in his day is the right one. His discussion started with creation (vs 24) then went to the fall (vs 30), where good and evil fits in, then to redemption (vs 31).

I also understand a bit more of the squishy religion called Hinduism. Perhaps the best way to explain it is that Hinduism allows any and all religious views so long as they are not fanatical. In other words it allows, even encourages,inoculation(s) but don’t ever get a particular full blown”disease”. This explains why my conversations with Hindus often lead to how much my Savior, Jesus Christ, means to me but with a response of “yes, I believe that too” in reply.

Fareed reminded me of the ideal government, mentioning a benevolent King or dictator as the best form of civil government.

What did I learn from what Fareed *didn’t* say? As a self-confessing non-Christian he denies the possibility of anyone having a personal relationship with the Divine. He doesn’t come right out and say a belief in God is bad or dangerous but his discourse always suggests the avoidance of the Divine is the better choice. He suggests that neither Japan nor China is “immoral” but rather that only certain human rights maybe different from the West’s. I suppose China’s one-child policy or willingness to trade with governments known to murder their own people, e.g. Zimbabwe, which Fareed mentioned, is “moral”. He mentions that Enlightenment philosophers had adopted Confucianism as a good thing but never discusses the bloodbath of the French Revolution that resulted from this line of thinking. Fareed quotes the Rig Veda, the Hindu Creation Hymn. In spite of God “creating” the human with a mind to understand “Creation”, the Hindu tosses this ability and desire aside in an agnostic way. In contrasting this view with the Book of Genesis he claims “Hindus are deeply practical” when doing trade or commerce internationally. Thus, by extension, are those who take the Book of Genesis seriously then impractical in international trade?

Not giving a reason why, he does mention that in 1890, America had become #1 in the world economically. But, in all other categories he considered America a “weak” state as if this was a bad thing saying “the American state–Washington–grew, centralized, and gained unquestioned precedence over the states… and presidents … began defining America as a world power.” I tend to think the “weak” central state was a good thing where most civil power resided in the states or counties. But it was the self-discipline or self government which most Americans displayed which pointed to their true King over our nation. The role of our Heavenly Benevolent King as given in America the Beautiful:
America! America!
God mend thine ev’ry flaw,
Confirm thy soul in self-control,
Thy liberty in law.
is nowhere to be seen within this book’s pages.

What caused Britain’s decline as a world power? He asks and attempts to give possible answers but neglects the obvious: as said by Ben Franklin, “The longer I live, the more convincing proofs I see of this truth, that God governs in the affairs of men. And if a sparrow cannot fall to the ground without His notice, is it probable that an empire can rise without His aid?” If there is one theme of the Old Testament which cannot be overlooked, it’s that God corporately blesses nations which obey Him and punishes those nations which disobey. Again absent within this book.

Western Civilization started with the Christianizing of the Old Roman Empire. Christians rose to power because they could be”trusted”. They were known to be “honest” and “fair”. General Sada who served under Sadaam Hussain knows where these virtues come from. Fareed has yet to learn.

Categories
haiku

Wisdom or wind

Intellect speaks out
as wind drys earth, ears still thirst.
There is no wisdom.

Categories
haiku

Three Seasons

Adam brings winter.
Unless Jesus brings rebirth
Summer never comes.
Categories
haiku

Today

Today is the day
Which the Lord has made. Rejoice
And be glad in it.

Categories
haiku

blog from iPhone

Technology has come a long way. I am constructing this using my iPhone. Alas, the keyboard is so tiny it will need to be short.
Love without limit
And obeying Jesus Christ
Is always lawful.

Categories
worldview

SQ 755 — Is civil law religious or secular?

U.S. District Court Judge Vicki Miles-LaGrange said she
was persuaded that a constitutional amendment known as
State Question (SQ) 755 seemed to have a legally improper
religious purpose and posed a threat to violate the rights
of Muslims. It doesn’t matter that the ballot measure
passed last week by a vote of 70 percent to 30 percent.
So why did this federal judge rule against the
overwhelming majority of Oklahoma voters? She said "While
the public has an interest in the will of the voters being
carried out, the Court finds that the public has a more
profound and long-term interest in upholding an
individual's constitutional rights." The Constitution
Vicki is referring to is our U.S. Constitution (USC). Ok,
so let’s see if a judge can define the difference between
secular and religious? “[P]laintiff has made a
preliminary showing that State Question 755’s amendment
does not have a secular purpose”. She says it has a
religious purpose. In court argument it was noted that SQ
755 was proposed to make sure that Oklahoma courts were
not used to undermine the "Judeo-Christian" founding
principles of the country. But, wait a minute. If this
purpose is true then civil law *really* has a religious
foundation? Is civil law facially religious? Vicki
affirms a ‘yes’ herself when she affirms that the state is
involved in all kinds of contracts of a religious nature.
In fact, she accepted the plantiff's argument that an
Islamic will would not be fully probated by a state court
in Oklahoma. But what do we do about all those nasty
things like corporal punishment of wife, etc. where Sharia
law conflicts with "Judeo-Christian" law. So, I’m
confused. Is civil law secular? Is it even religiously
neutral? How can Vicki *judge* that SQ 755 "is not
facially neutral”. I suppose this means a judge is at
liberty to “religiously” define “neutral” as well as
uphold whatever law they want.

Will Vicki be impeached? Probably not. I do believe our
beloved USC is broken.

Quotes are from www.constitutioncampaign.org/blog.