Making widows and
orphans in a politically-charged age – the examples of climate change and
Donald Trump
The late Francis Schaeffer
wrote that the church that weds itself to the philosophy of the age will find
itself a widow in the next. The history of ancient and modern theology bears
that out.
Schaeffer’s remark has
other applications. These include civil politics. The church that weds itself
to a particular political ideology is likely to find itself an orphan and widow.
Wedding to one political ideology alienates those of other ideologies. As
political ideologies and parties change in pursuit of their goals, the ideologically-aligned
church can be left stranded. It’s just a dumb move to tie the Christian cause
to a particular political agenda,
Progressive and
liberal churches typically gravitate to the left of centre in politics. That
means privileging parties and politicians that major on social justice for
needy persons, refugee intake, gender equality, environmental care and such
like. By contrast, churches of conservative theology typically gravitate to the political
right. Preservation of personal freedoms; enshrining Christian values in laws around
sexuality and family life, free-market economics, small government and such
like feature in their agendas. Either way, those alignments obscure the gospel
behind political alignments and alienate the other half of the population. They
also blind both liberal and conservative Christians to the whole range of issues
that may be on God’s horizon, as reflected in the scope of Old Testament law
and New Testament ethics.
Two present examples illustrate
the problem of churches being aligned to a political ideology of the age.
The first example is
with respect to environmental issues.
I’ll put my cards on
the table to say that, within the supremacy of Scripture, it’s my general rule
to follow the science of the day when it comes to things that are properly
within the domain of science. When science presumes to speak about metaphysics
or ethics it is outside the domain of its methodology and I stop listening.
However, when scientists make rigorous observations about the physical world and
repeatedly test hypothesis arising from those observations I’ll cautiously go
with the science – even though knowing that it is just the science of this day
and may change tomorrow. In this sense, I am epistemically with A.A. Hodge in
his remark about the links between knowledge gained from the book of God’s
world and knowledge gained from the book of God’s word. And so, I heed what
mainstream science says about the reality and importance of climate change,
even while opposing the pantheist and monist metaphysics and catastrophising
language of some environmental activists.
I notice some people
of conservative theology gravitating to climate change scepticism as being the
Christian position. I struggle to understand why. Is it because they mistrust
any science; or because to acknowledge climate change will disturb a settled economic
order; or because they see climate-change projections as contradicting their
eschatology? Or is it because the people pushing climate-change agendas are often
liberal progressives and naturalists and hence presumed opponents of Biblical Christianity
– the fallacy of origins? Whatever the reasoning, this means that these theologically
conservative Christians become allied to the political groups and ideologies
associated with climate change scepticism. That’s a sure path to being
marginalised orphans when it comes to connecting to the concerns of the age.
The second example is
with respect to the American Presidential election. Again, my cards are on the
table. I find that voting is a matter is a compromised choice resulting from a relative
weighting between flawed options who are on a continuum. Who is the most preferred
or least disliked? I oppose the progressive liberalism of the US Democrats (and
their Australian equivalents) with its increasing intolerance of dissenting voices
on issues like abortion, gender identity, homosexuality etc. On the other side
of the aisle, I find Donald Trump personally obnoxious, amoral and a highly problematic
President. He seems to feel that he is above all law and can run the nation in a
manner reminiscent of the caricature of a nineteenth century business tycoon. He
is reminiscent of the Biblical Nebuchadnezzar.
However, I notice some
people of conservative theology who seem to feel that it is the Christian
position to support and defend Trump and who read any critique of him as
endorsement of his political opponents. Why is it a Christian agenda to defend
Trump from any criticism and berate any who critique him? Why is it that
objection to him is read as support for his opponents? The effect of locking in
behind Trump is similar to aligning with climate change scepticism – it makes
orphans out of the theologically conservative Christian cause and alienates
about half the nation.
In observing this, I
am not advocating that Christians abandon the public square and retreat to the
sanctuary. Good theology refuses to leave the fallen world to itself and instead
seeks to engage with it as salt and light. Good theology leads Christians to love
God by seeking to make the world what he intended at creation and will re-make
in the new creation. Love of neighbour leads people of sound theology to try
and keep our neighbour from things that will harm them in this age and leave
them liable to eternal judgement. We must be in the public square of today’s
issues.
So, Christians should engage
with the politics of their day in a way appropriate to circumstances. But we do
well not to marry ourselves to any political ideology. The ’for better for
worse’ part of that marriage vow is apt to end in tears.
2 comments:
Sorry to be picky, but in the third par for 25 January 1788, could we have permission to change 'eight' to 'eighteen' (or add [sic] after 'eight'?
Good stuff. Could be the start of something biiiiiiig.
Sorry to be picky, but in the third par for 25 January 1788, could we have permission to change 'eight' to 'eighteen' (or add [sic] after 'eight'?
Good stuff. Could be the start of something biiiiiiig.
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