Conservatism
seems to be
getting more
popular in
America. In
the moral
realm that
encourages
me. In the
political
realm, I
have mixed
feelings.
While it was
still
unpopular
conservatism
offered many
necessary
correctives
to the
liberal
status quo.
I'm not
sure,
though, how
it will
stand up
under
greater
power and
popularity.
Conservative
politics as
usual may
prove not
much better
than liberal
politics as
usual.
When
liberalism
was popular
it became
arrogant and
presumptuous
and sunk to
its lowest
levels. I
fear the
same could
happen to
conservatism.
And I fear
it not only
in society ,
but in the
church.
The largely
liberal
philosophies
that have
dominated
American
media and
politics for
years have
failed us
miserably.
Some recent
elections
testify to
the fact
that America
is fed up
with the
lies and
half truths
of
liberalism.
While the
media are
still much
more liberal
than the
country as a
whole, even
they have
been
penetrated.
Rush
Limbaugh and
a host of
other
conservatives
jam the
airwaves
with their
ideology.
Millions of
Americas,
including
many
Christians,
are taking
notes and
saying
"Amen."
But what
about
conservatism?
Does it have
its own
dangers? Or
is
"Conservative"
simply a
synonym for
Christian?
Many people
I have
talked with
and many
articles I
have read
seem to
equate a
return to
conservatism
with a
return to
the
Christian
faith. "Rush
is Right"
bumperstickers
share space
with "Jesus
is Lord"
bumperstickers,
as if both
are
undeniable
truths
existing on
the same
plane.
I get the
feeling from
excited
politically-oriented
Christians
that voting
Republican
is
equivalent
to falling
on your
knees at a
revival
meeting and
getting your
life right
with God.
It's like if
America gets
more
conservative
it's the
same as
drawing near
to God.
The
possibility
of a
Republican
controlled
House,
Senate and
White House
may have
some merits
(it's hard
to imagine
things
getting
worse in
Washington),
but it's
hardly on
the level of
the Great
Awakening.
Though they
are too
slippery to
allow simple
definitions,
the words
"conservatism"
and
"liberalism"
contain
hints as to
their
essential
nature.
Conservatives
want to
conserve for
society what
is right.
Liberals
want to
liberate
society from
what is
wrong. To
this extent,
both
philosophies
are in
theory right
and
biblical.
Unfortunately,
in their
practice
both are
capable of
being
thoroughly
unbiblical.
Liberals
want to
change the
status quo.
That's good
when the
status quo
is wrong.
Liberals
desired to
change from
the status
quo of
racism in
the 60's and
they were
right. Even
though I
oppose most
of what it
does today,
I thank God
for what
liberal
groups like
the ACLU
accomplished
in the
racial
arena.
But liberals
didn't know
where to
draw the
line. They
seemed to
want to
change
everything,
as if the
notions that
society once
held
(including
that
abortion and
adultery and
the
homosexual
relations
are wrong)
are
restrictive
and
unhealthy,
demanding
liberation.
But it is
wrong to
seek
liberation
from all
norms. It
used to be
that
marriage was
much more
sacred,
divorce was
much more
rare and
abuse was
much less
common.
Children
learned how
to read,
achievement
scores were
much higher.
Life was
more sacred,
religious
values more
respected
and upheld.
Liberals
have done
much to
"liberate"
society from
what is
right,
removing the
guard rails
that kept
Americans on
the road. In
so doing
they have
enslaved
while
claiming to
liberate.
Too often
politically
liberal
Christians
end up being
liberals
first and
Christians
second. They
redefine
compassion
according to
current
political
correctness.
They act as
if you
either have
to hate and
vilify
homosexuals
or you have
to say their
behaviors
are right.
As if these
are the only
two
alternatives.
They need to
read
Ephesians
4:15 about
"speaking
the truth in
love." We
are not to
choose
between
being loving
and being
truthful. We
are to be
both. Jesus
loved the
woman who
committed
adultery. He
loved her
the way she
was, but
loved her
too much to
let her stay
that way.
His love
didn't
compel him
to say
"adultery is
okay, you
don't have
to change,"
but "Go and
sin no
more."
Conservative
Christians,
on the other
hand, like
to conserve
and hold on
to the
existing or
past norms.
In a society
they believe
to have been
recently
ruined by
liberalism,
they want to
go back to
the way
things used
to be, i.e.
the old
status quo.
They want to
go back to
when America
was a
Christian
nation, when
there was
prayer in
public
schools,
when
abortion and
homosexual
behavior
were illegal
and known to
be immoral.
Conservatives
seem to want
every-thing
the way it
used to be,
like it was
when kids
weren't
bringing
guns to
school and
killing each
other in
gangs and
dying of
AIDS and
when
television
wasn't
filled with
garbage
(which many
of them
watch,
despite
their
complaints).
Well, that
all sounds
good. But
you have to
qualify what
you're
talking
about. "The
way things
used to be"
includes
women being
unable to
vote. "The
way things
used to be"
includes
slavery. In
the
post-slavery
era it
included
notoriously
racist Jim
Crow laws
and
segregation.
And frankly,
to their
shame, many,
even most
conservatives
wanted to
conserve
these unjust
practices.
Many
conservatives
today want
to go back
to the days
when prayer
was allowed
in the
schools. But
they forget
the same
schools that
allowed in
prayer did
not allow in
black
children. To
be nostalgic
without
qualification
about times
that were
racist and
demeaning to
many
Americans is
unjust and
insensitive.
Politically
conservative
Christians
can thus end
up being
conservatives
first and
Christians
second.
As
undiscerning
liberalism
tries to
liberate us
from not
only the bad
but the
good,
undiscerning
Conservatism
tries to
conserve the
bad along
with the
good.
Liberals
live under
the false
notion that
change is
always good,
conservatives
under the
equally
false notion
that change
is always
bad. ("Who
do those
northern
agitators
think they
are comin'
down here
and stirrin'
up our
niggers?")
So when
conservatives
talk about
going back
to our godly
roots,
theologically
conservative
but socially
liberal
Christians
(both black
and white)
are
understandably
skeptical.
"You mean go
back to
those godly
roots where
black people
were
enslaved and
beaten and
raped and
had their
families
torn apart
by
plantation
owners who
were deacons
in their
conservative
churches? Or
back to
those days
of Ozzie and
Harriet and
Leave it to
Beaver,
where you
wouldn't let
black people
in your
restaurants
and theaters
and schools,
and you
wouldn't let
us drink out
of your
water
fountains?"
I know
conservative
evangelicals
who are
selective in
standing for
what's
right. They
may want the
schools to
be more
hospitable
to truth and
Christianity.
But they may
not bother
intervening
on behalf of
the unborn.
Or they may
be active in
pro-life
work but
ignore or
minimize the
issues of
poverty and
racism. In
the 50's and
60's, while
defending
the
Scriptures,
a very good
thing, they
defended
institutional
racism, a
very bad
thing. As
some
liberals
have no
discernment
as to the
fact that
some people
are poor due
to laziness
and need to
be required
to work,
likewise
some
conservatives
seem to have
no heart for
the truly
poor, those
who are not
at fault for
their
poverty and
who given
opportunity
and training
would work
hard to
escape it.
Some
conservatives
seem to
think that
free
enterprise
(in which I
believe)
solves
everything.
They seem to
have no
ecological
concerns, as
if a sense
of
stewardship
of the earth
God has
entrusted to
us is
restricted
only to
"environmentalist
whackos."
Some
conservatives
serve the
god of
patriotism.
Their
Christian
faith is
dangerously
intertwined
with their
faith in
America.
Ours is a
great
country, as
countries
go. But
countries
only go so
far. Despite
its flaws,
America
deserves our
respect and
loyalty. It
deserves
neither our
uncritical
endorsement
nor our
worship.
I know
politically
liberal
evangelicals
who are as
quick to
disregard
the rights
of unborn
people as
many
conservatives
were quick
to disregard
the rights
of black
people. To
them,
pro-life
efforts are
just another
"white
middle class
right wing
agenda."
Some
liberals,
even
professing
Christians,
equate
animals and
trees with
human beings
and defend
preborn
eagles while
advocating
wholesale
destruction
of 1.5
million
preborn
humans each
year.
Liberal
solutions to
economic
problems are
stealing
(via
taxation)
from other
citizens and
indiscriminately
passing out
the money to
the poor,
creating a
permanent
underclass
riddled by
no sense of
personal
responsibility
and by
bitter
resentment.
Often
liberals are
more
concerned
about
appearing to
be racially
sensitive by
throwing
people's
money
(others, not
their own)
at
ineffective
programs for
minorities,
including
the largely
(though not
exclusively)
debilitating
welfare
program. As
black
economist
Walter
Williams has
said, "If I
were the
Grand
Imperial
Wizard of
the Klu Klux
Klan and my
goal was to
destroy
black
Americans, I
could not
have come up
with a more
effective
plan than
America's
welfare
system in
our inner
cities."
I have in
front of me
the
evangelical
but socially
liberal
magazine The
Other Side.
It professes
to believe
the
Scriptures.
Over the
last thirty
years The
Other Side
spoke out
against
racism and
advocated
racial
reconciliation
in America
when most
conservative
Christian
magazines
had nothing
to say, and
by their
silence
perpetuated
injustice.
Yet in my
current
issue of The
Other Side
there's a
full page
worth of
books
endorsed by
the
magazine,
which
advocate
"Christian"
homosexual
relationships.
One book,
which I've
read and
reject as
blatantly
unbiblical,
is described
this way:
"From an
evangelical
Protestant
perspective,
the authors
argue for
the validity
of faithful,
permanent,
same-sex
relationships."
In their
attempt to
be
compassionate,
the editors
of The Other
Side
sacrifice
the revealed
truth of the
Scriptures.
I get tired
of being
told I have
to choose
between
conservatism's
emphasis on
truth and
liberalism's
emphasis on
compassion.
Why can't we
oppose
injustice to
minorities
and to the
unborn? Why
can't we
embrace
biblical
stewardship
of creation
and the
primacy of
human beings
over the
rest of
creation?
Why can't we
oppose the
greedy
destruction
of the
environment
by some
businesses
and the
anti-industry
excesses of
New Age
environmentalism?
Why can't we
affirm the
biblical
right to the
ownership of
property
(along with
the command
"thou shalt
not steal")
and
emphasize
God's call
to his
people to
voluntarily
and
sacrificially
share their
wealth with
the truly
needy?
Why can't we
uphold the
truth of
God's
condemnation
of sexual
immorality,
including
homosexual
practices,
and reach
out in love
and
compassion
to those
imprisoned
in this
degrading
lifestyle,
as well as
those dying
from AIDS?
The answer
is, we
cannot do
all these
things if we
are first
and foremost
either
liberals or
conservatives.
We can do
all these
things only
if we are
first and
foremost
followers of
Christ. We
can do them
if and only
if we are
governed not
by temporal
political
affiliations,
but by
eternal
allegiance
to Almighty
God. Our
governing
document
must be
neither the
Humanist
Manifesto
nor the
Contract
with America
nor even the
U.S.
Constitution
(great a
document as
it is), but
by the
authoritative
Word of God.
Neither the
judicial,
legislative
nor
executive
branches of
our
government
is the
ultimate
solution to
America's
problems.
Isaiah 33:22
tells us the
solution--"
For the LORD
is our judge
(judicial),
the LORD is
our lawgiver
(legislative),
the LORD is
our king
(executive),
it is he who
will save
us."
May God
preserve us
from a
liberalism
hell-bent on
liberating
us from what
is good. And
may He
preserve us
from a
conservatism
hell-bent on
conserving
for us what
is bad.
Let's change
the bad and
preserve the
good. In
doing so we
will
sometimes
look like
conservatives,
sometimes
liberals.
But what we
look like to
men
shouldn't
matter. What
we look like
to God, the
Audience of
One, should.
(He is
neither
Republican
nor
Democrat. He
rides
neither on
elephants or
donkeys. He
is the
ultimate
independent.)
God doesn't
care about
conservative
and liberal,
he cares
about what
is true and
right and
just and
compassionate
and
biblical.
(He does
therefore
care about
political
party
beliefs,
platforms,
moral
positions
and
policies.
Before
standing
behind any
party we
better be
sure these
harmonize
with his
Word. That's
part of
being a
Christian
first.)
So, when the
status quo
is right,
let's
conserve it.
When the
status quo
is wrong,
let's get
liberated
from it.
Is Jesse
Jackson
right about
some things?
Sure. About
everything?
No way. So
if you
defend Jesse
Jackson, you
better
qualify your
defense. If
you attack
him you
better
qualify your
attack.
"Rush is
right" cries
out for
clarification.
Right about
what? Some
things?
Sure. (Keep
this in mind
if you're a
Rush basher.
Better
qualify your
attack.)
Most things?
Maybe. All
things? No
way. So if
you defend
Rush
Limbaugh,
you better
qualify your
defense.
After all,
Rush is no
more God
than he is
the devil.
I happen to
believe that
despite its
limitations,
conservatism
is right
more often
than it is
wrong.
Still, it is
sometimes
wrong, it
often does
not resonate
with the
compassionate
heart of
God, and it
never saves
the soul.
"Rush is
Right" is
only true
sometimes.
"Jesus is
Lord" is
true always.
"Rush is
Right"
requires
qualification.
"Jesus is
Lord" does
not.