In the Twentieth Century,
especially the latter half of the Twentieth Century, it became normal or even
typical for Christians in America to blame the displacement of the Christian
worldview, the erosion of traditional family values, and alarming increases in
divorce, unwed pregnancy, venereal disease, youth rebellion, and other social
maladies on everything but the decline in Christian influence instead of
recognising the responsibility of Christians to impact culture and community
for righteousness. It became commonplace for Christians to obsess over pet
theories about Bible prophecies and promote a neutrality or isolation that
rejects or prevents interaction between Christianity and culture and encourages
believers to withdraw from society and be neutral because of preoccupation with
speculations about things which they obviously do not and cannot know while
ignoring the implications of the teachings and arguments being used to justify
the apathy being promoted: The longer you keep a sinking ship afloat the more
time there is left to rescue the perishing.
Man is a natural-born
sinner, inherently depraved. It is not human government that is sinful or
wicked but rather those who comprise human governments, which is why Christian
influence is essential. Christians are the salt of the earth and the light of
the world. Salt cleanses, purifies, preserves, and makes people thirsty, and
light dispels darkness. Christians are supposed to be a cleansing and
illuminating influence, impacting society and culture for righteousness.
(Matthew 5:13-16)
Should we interpret the
words of Christ in Matthew 6:9-11 to mean that He was promoting laziness and
idleness? No, a good job should be considered an answer to prayers for
necessities. The exhortation to pray for all men and for all that are in
authority does not imply neutrality regarding politics and community affairs;
opportunities to influence society and culture and participate in politics and
community affairs should be considered answers to such prayers. (I Timothy 2:1-2)
Many insist that the
Bible doctrine of separation means that Christians must be neutral concerning
everything outside of church activities, but the separation taught in the Bible
is godly distinctions, conduct, and relationships within society, not isolation
from society or neutrality concerning politics and community affairs. (Romans
13:1-7; Ephesians 5:3-11; I Timothy 3:7; I Peter 2:11-12) The Christian
worldview gives a comprehensive understanding of reality, and the Bible
provides guidance in every area of human existence, including civil government.
Consider that Joseph and Daniel served as public officials in civil government
and exerted their influence to benefit the nations in which they lived, and
Jesus cared for the spiritual and physical needs of people. (Healing the sick
and feeding the hungry was an extension of the message of the Gospel.) The
“good works” of believers should include every area of life, and since human
government has a legitimate God-ordained role with significant real-life implications
it is wrong for Christians to be neutral or uninvolved in politics and
community affairs. (Galatians 6:10; Ephesians 2:10) How can Christians claim to
love and care about others while neglecting the arena with the most impact on
basic rights, freedom, welfare, and justice?
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