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The inconsistency of it all…

This election year, more than any since the days of Jimmy Carter, people of faith are divided and undecided regarding their vote.  The marriage between Republicans and Evangelicals has been annulled.  There are many reasons for this, including some large theological shifts in the emerging church (which I’ll hope to address later), and a sense of betrayal on the part many who feel that the promises of limited government and ‘compassionate conservatism’ turned out to be hollow words, as expansive executive powers, spiraling national debt, curtailing of health care benefits to children, and unilateral military actions became the voice that drowned out campaign promises.  

As each of us pray, ponder, and share together regarding the vitally important subject of how our faith intersects with both our politics and our nationalism, we should be wary of presumptions that any party is wholly ‘consistent’ or wholly ‘Christian’.
  For now, let’s consider the consistency piece for a moment:

I’ve always found it intriguing that my friends on the right are so deeply opposed to ‘government intrusion’ and ‘government control’.  They want their private rights as individuals to, among other things, buy assault rifles and drive cars that get 4 miles to the gallon.  They resist government intrusion at the corporate level as well, preferring to self-govern business practices, including everything from waste disposal to whether the CEO can make 800 times the wage of the entry level worker or not, and whether that entry level worker should be given a living wage and access to health care since one visit to emergency room can cost more than 2 months salary for him/her. ‘Hands off’ is the cry.  ‘Let the market forces determine what’s right.’

But then, in a stunning reversal of philosophy, this same party moves into the most private corners of people’s lives, regulating who can marry and what woman can do with the fetus in their womb.  “The judgment of the people is not be trusted” they say as they push for legislation in these matters.  “Abortion is a moral issue” they say as they try to find judges to move the supreme court in a pro-life direction (ironically, this comes from the party who often accuses their friends to the left of using the judicial branch to change laws rather than uphold them).   The same party that calls for economic libertarianism, is quick to appeal to the need for government control in these personal matters because ‘the moral fiber of the nation is at stake.’

Yes.  I tend to agree with my friends on the right that the moral fiber of the nation is at stake, and that the judgment of the people is not to be trusted – but not just in these personal matters.  Isn’t the moral fiber of the nation also at stake if 47 million Americans are at risk of losing all their assets with a single health care crisis (and that’s just the number of uninsured – the fact is that those of us who have insurance are increasingly at risk as well due to eroding benefits and escalating costs)?  This too is a moral issue.  Is the fact that people in service industries, (people upon which most of us reading this depend for access to daily necessities) are being squeezed out of the range of ‘living wage’ due to both inflation, economic downturns, and corporate greed, not a moral issue?  Are our dependence on foreign oil, easy access to assault rifles, corporate environmental degradation, and the irresponsible business practices of the banking industry and big oil not moral issues too?  

The same critique exists, of course, for my friends on the left, who so clearly call for regulations and laws to protect ‘the common good’ from the evils of unregulated corporate greed, but who are suddenly libertarians in all matters at home.  “What I do with my body is nobody’s business but my own” etc. etc.  

Why would either party call for liberty in one area of life (private or public) and government control in another, claiming that humanity isn’t to be trusted?  The right legislates ‘morality’ and lets the economy and environment run on the good will of the people.  The left legislates the economy and environment and calls for libertarianism in the private lives of people. Of course, I’m generalizing here and the conversation is actually more complex than this, but still, these are the tendencies.  Who’s correct?  

If we go back to the founding fathers, we discover an inherent mistrust in humans with power, rooted, I believe, in a basic understanding of our nature as fallen creatures.  Thus were the three branches of government designed to provide a mutuality of checks and balances.  What was unforeseen at the time was the rise of global corporations to places of prominence even greater than the government.  I wonder how our founding fathers would have reacted to companies whose annual income exceeds that most countries?  I have a feeling they would have put cautions in place to prevent the abuse of power there, just as in the other branches of government.  And of course, as a country becomes increasingly pluralistic, its ‘private’ values also must come under increasing scrutiny.  Do immigrants from strong patriarchal cultures have the ‘private’ right to keep their daughters home from school, preventing them from learning to read?  If I’m to have liberty at home, can I have two wives, or six, or ten?  Can I beat my children if they’re disobedient?  Here too, it seems that some protocol and basic values need to be articulated as a means of saying, “We the people… believe….”  

So you tell me – what’s to be legislated and what’s to be left alone?  How you answer that question will, no doubt become a huge determinant in how you vote this fall.  But please don’t tell me that either party is consistent in applying their principles, because they’re not.  That’s why I’m independent.  

Comments

You know, I sure wish some of those news channels would invite some of the conversant life writers to discuss the issues. This is so insightful and articulated in such a balanced way.

I'm convinced that I should change my party affiliation to independent, just like I've changed my church denomination to "non-denominational."

I have no idea what should be legislated and what should be left alone. That's a universal question that could be applied to parenting, teaching or christianity. Even the arminianism vs calvanism debate leaves us with a similar question. Who controls how much?

I think I'm going to ask God that one when I get to heaven.

Having little to no understanding of politics during the Election of 1992, I checked off 'Independent' before I cast my first vote because it seemed like the most appropriate choice for me at the time. I had just turned 18 and I always leaned toward not conforming to any given trend at the time. It was no doubt the skateboarder in me.

Here we are some 16 years later and I'm still an 'Independent' on paper and I think I have a far better grasp on politics than I did then. What intrigues me most now about the two parties is this notion on both the left and right that when their opposing party takes control of the government, the extremists on both sides get upset and say to themselves and one another things like: "he's not my president" or "I'm leaving this country" or something to that effect. You get the point.

I mean, I wish President Bush were more articulate, yes. I wish his diplomacy skills are better than what they are. On the flip side, I wish Clinton hadn't had the scandal that he had and I wish he had overall been a little more conservative than he was.

The bottom line is though - they were/are both my Presidents. Is this some intrinsic Independent Party value or is it just me? Probably just me, but after all, I love my country. Even if it's someone who I didn't vote for, at the end of the day it's still my country and I think we need to consider this now more than ever in the coming election as we watch what unfolds.

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The sunny days are fine because clarity allows for freedom of movement, and depth of vision. But don't forget the mist, where waters bless the parched soul, saturating us with grace and truth, providing needed sustenance for the journey.


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