The religious leaders of
the day attempted to trap Jesus by challenging him on his political stance. They
asked him, “It is right for us to pay
taxes to Caesar or not?” Scripture tells us that Jesus saw through their duplicity, telling them to give to Caesar
what is Caesar’s and to God what is God’s.
Historically the church
has struggled with the paradigm of two kingdoms: the kingdom of God and the
kingdom of the world. Trying to combine the two is like attempting to mix oil
and water. Church history has been consistent on this matter. Every time
Christianity has fallen into the trap of using politics to achieve its means,
it has lost its power and effectiveness.
Relevant Christianity
never loses sight of the reality that in the kingdom of God, everything is
upside down when contrasted with the world’s pursuits. In God’s kingdom the
greatest is the least; the first is the last; we are to love our enemies; and
to be most effective, we are called to servanthood rather than to positions of
political power and correctness.
John Wimber, founder of
the Vineyard Church movement, once
said that if people truly have a relationship with Jesus, they will always
(want to) vote for the right things (“right” as in ethically and morally
correct). He said that our job as followers of Christ was to promote Jesus, not
political bias. Getting involved politically can potentially derail our effectiveness,
causing us to lose focus on our true vision, thus weakening our cause.
As an involved participant
in the Christian environmental movement, I have endeavoured to stay non-political.
For me, the care of God’s creation is purely a biblical matter of obedient
stewardship. The world has politically polarized an issue that should be of
great concern to every human being. The global environmental condition is an
issue that has become a primary cause of human suffering in developing nations.
Knowing that Christ has
called his people to a ministry of compassion, mercy, and social justice, we
cannot allow ourselves to be caught in the duplicity of religion and politics
at such a crucial hour. Our effectiveness will come only through authentic
biblical conviction and the faith to act on it.
By Tri Robinson
Pastor, Vineyard Boise,
Idaho.
Quote from Unchristian by David Kinnaman and Fermi
Project (Baker Books, 2007) pg. 175-176
THINK BIG.
START SMALL. GO DEEP.
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