The Coming Debate
As we sift through all the post-election commentary and finger-pointing, one thing emerges clearly: Religious beliefs are important to American voters — and, hence, to politicians.
Twenty-two
percent said that “moral values” motivated their vote. I see a
great national debate coming, as the politicians position themselves.
We’ll be faced with questions like this: “Do you have to be
pro-life and oppose gay ‘marriage’ to be Christian?”
“How can you be a Christian without a plan to help the poor?”
During
the campaign, for example, John Kerry argued from the book of James and said we
ought to be doing more to help the poor and that his religious faith taught him
to live that way. Well, I, of all people, surely applaud that. But, at the same
time, that’s not a substitute for other issues like life. All values are
not morally equivalent.
If
you’re helping the poor, that’s wonderful, but if your concern for
the poor isn’t grounded in the fact that the poor are created in the
image of God and are every bit as precious as anybody else, then your concern
for the poor is hollow. It’s a political thing; it’s like a
preference. It won’t necessarily last.
There
is a hierarchy of values, and respect for human life created in God’s
image comes first. It’s the bedrock basis for all other convictions. Our
pro-life, pro-family positions come from the created order. Of course, helping
the poor is a biblical commandment, and we do it, but we do it because we
believe in the created order and the imago Dei in every human. Why do we go
into the prisons to take care of the most despised people in society? Why do we
care about the AIDS victims in Africa or about religious persecution and human
rights? It is because suffering humans are created in the image of God and have
worth and dignity from conception to natural death.
It
is inconceivable that somebody could say that he or she is a good Christian,
but doesn’t believe that life is created in God’s image and is
sacred and inviolate. To do so is to miss the whole point. We do good deeds
because we are Christians, but our faith rests upon the truth — that God
is, that He has created us in His image.
Watch
out for the arguments that are coming. We are going to be cast as
fundamentalist right-wing bigots who want to deny a woman control of her body
and deny gays the right to marry. The “real” Christians, as the New
York Times has already told us after the election, will be the ones taking care
of the poor and helping pass big government programs while standing up for abortion
and gay rights. Which Christians do you suppose the media will praise as the
“real” Christians? Who will Hollywood say are the
“real” Christians?
There
is a debate already underway over the heart and soul of what it means to be a
believer. In this campaign we even had some evangelical leaders saying that
there are ten Christian issues, from life to the environment, suggesting that
they are all equal. You and I need to be ready to answer that debate with more
than words. The light we shine before the watching world must be thoroughly
pro- human. That means, besides being pro-life and pro-family, we care for the
poor, the orphan, the prisoner, and the hungry — not to please the New
York Times, but to please our Father in heaven who made them in His image.
o
Chuck Colson is president of Prison
Fellowship Ministries. Reprinted with permission. Copyright 2004