I really don't pay much attention to politics. You can read why here. I should probably pay more attention to it, but in light of our current state in America is seems rather pointless. If you disagree I would welcome your insights as to why.
Speaking on behalf of the vacationing JT on Between Two Worlds, Greg Gilbert says:
I tried to find one choice excerpt which could substitute for the whole, but there really isn’t one. So you should go read the whole article. Honestly, I think Boyd makes some important points, and ones that aren’t straw-men. For instance, I know first-hand of churches which have had Fourth of July services complete with pictures of F-14s and Jesus looking up adoringly at the American flag. That stuff really happens, and I think Boyd is right to point out the foolishness and error of all that.
But I also don’t think that’s what the New York Times finds so endearing about him, either. What makes him newsworthy is that Boyd and others (like Brian McLaren, who’s also quoted in the article) are taking issues like abortion and marriage, slapping the label “Republican” on them, and then saying that Christians shouldn’t speak to those things because Christians shouldn’t talk about politics.
Let me say as clearly as I can that the pulpit should never, ever be turned into a rostrum for political stump speeches. That’s shameful. The pulpit is meant for the exposition of Scripture, plain and simple. But if I’m expositing, for instance, Psalm 139, it’s not “conservative politics” for me to preach about the evil of abortion. If I’m expositing Genesis 1 and 2, it’s not “Republican” for me to preach about the institution of marriage. It’s simply faithful exposition.
Life and Marriage have been swept up into our national politics in the last thirty years. Both of them are undeniably “political issues” now. But long before they became that, they were issues about which God spoke to us in Scripture, and that doesn’t change just because the nation has developed an interest in them. It’s true that the church should never become just a wing of any political party. But the church has to speak where Scripture speaks, and Scripture most definitely speaks about abortion and marriage. Whether one political party or another decides to agree with us is beside the point.
1 comment:
I have always liked Greg Boyd. First with "Letters from a Skeptic" and then with his thoughts on open theism. Although I don't agree with open theism, it certainly made me think. The description from this article makes me want to seek out a church like Woodland.
Our recent church was definitely a flags and fighter jets kind of place. I am looking for a place that preaches about love, forgiveness, repentance, and is based on rock solid principles.
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