Friday, January 30, 2015

ELECTION NOISE of 2016



ELECTION NOISE of 2016
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The USA election “noise “will be growing in intensity over the next 646 days.  The increased volume leading up to the November 8, 2016 elections will make it ever more difficult to hear the still small voice of God through all the audio distortion of election politics. From now until then the loudest, most sensational and unfortunately the rudest will scream for attention.  
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So having expressed my opinions this January I plan to remain as silent as possible from here on out.  Excusing myself from the upcoming election discourse I close my January posts with an explanation for dodging the entire campaign racket.
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One reason is sighted in the January 29th reading of the always folksy, Oswald Chambers’ devotional, “My Utmost for His Highest”.  In it he warns against holding to strongly to, “…our most determined confidence in our own convictions.”  Oswald quotes the KJV of Luke 9:55 where Jesus corrected his disciples for thinking that expressing their outrage would somehow protect God’s honor and intentions.  “He rebuked them and said, Ye know no what manner of spirit ye are of.”  Oswald’s example of the spirit of an “advocate of His” (that is of Christ Jesus) “is described in 1 Corinthians 13.”  That scripture is commonly referred to as the love chapter.
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My personal reluctance to jump into political debates is more directly influenced by Paul’s exhortation in Titus 3:9 to avoid foolish controversies, genealogies, arguments, and quarrels about the law because they are ultimately a worthless waste of time. 
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An even more direct instruction is in Ephesians 4:14b & 15b.  After giving an apt description of election noise as, “the cunning and craftiness of men in their deceitful scheming.” Paul counsels a more appropriately Christian action, “Instead, speaking the truth in love.”     

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I am sure the outcome of the 2016 elections will fulfill God’s will for this nation and the world.  Despite that fact, it is not a godly or an ungodly political agenda that threatens to distort God’s image on earth.  It is rather our advocacy for God in a spirit unlike God’s Holy Spirit.
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So rather than contribute to the noise I hope to persevere quietly in prayer.   God help us all, especially His people, to hear and yield to His still small voice during the 2016 election noise.  Let's remember when either you or I feel we must speak out to always, “…speak the truth in love.”

Monday, January 19, 2015

WAR...IMAGINE BETTER



WAR…IMAGINE BETTER 

As a Christian I have been opposed to the US military’s international interventions since George W. Bush. I jumped on his bandwagon during his first run for the White House. The idea of “compassionate-conservatism” appealed to me. “What a concept”, I thought. “It’s the best of both worlds.”
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However there is a vast difference between compassion and sympathy.  Sympathy sees a need and feels sorrow for the sufferer.  While that is better than feeling contempt it is not compassion. Compassion acts on behalf of the sufferer. I am sure G. W. Bush is a very kind gentleman but a compassionate president, he was not.  However, for me, that wasn’t as bad as taking the nation to war in Iraq.
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I am a fairly gullible person so I could excuse being hoodwinked with the substitution of pity for policy.  Nevertheless I could not excuse being pulled into the very hawkish first-strike military engagement in Iraq.  I expressed my disapproval quietly by refusing to vote for him in his run for a second term. Yet feeling a certain amount of loyalty to the Republican Party I vote an almost solid Republican ticket without choosing any presidential candidate at all. I have since given up and become one of those rear oddball Christian-Democrats.  
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Even as a Conservative Christian-Republican I always considered war a population’s admission that they had no better ideas for dealing with an issue. Violence is what people resort to when they just can’t envision a more creative positive way of respond to an aggressor.  Fareed Zakaria’s GPS, CNN TV, reported an interview taken from one of the French gunmen discussing his thoughts prior to his violent attack.
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“Cherif Kouachi, one of the Paris terrorists, revealed the source of his radicalization: ‘I was ready to go and die in battle. . . . I got this idea when I saw the injustices shown by television on what was going on over there [in Iraq]. I am speaking about the torture that the Americans have inflicted on the Iraqis.’ So U.S intervention in the Middle East caused him to become a jihadi.”

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“Scholars Robert Pape and James Feldman analyzed all of the more than 2,100 documented cases of suicide bombings from 1980 to 2009 and concluded that most of the perpetrators were acting in response to U.S. intervention in the Middle East rather than out of a religious or ideological motivation.”

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“In a well-documented report for the Brookings Institution on the threat of terrorism from foreign fighters in Syria and Iraq, Daniel Byman and Jeremy Shapiro examine all the known reasons for these jihadis to become engaged. The reasons vary from a sense of adventure to religious radicalism, but battling a foreign (Western) intervention is often high on the list”.

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The evidence shows that the pre-9/11terrorists trace their hatred of the US to our bombing of Serbia, Bosnia, Iraq, and Afghanistan along with our bases residing in various Arabian countries.  Most of the more resent terrorists have been attracted to radical Muslim by the US’ ongoing drone, missal, and bombing strikes in Pakistan, Yemen, and now Syria. In general, they perceive the conflict as appropriate retaliation for the decades of US military interventions in Islamic countries. Fareed Zakaria asked a telling rhetorical question in a 1/25/2015 Washington Post op-ed article, “Perhaps we should have turned the other cheek.  And not only did the surge in Afghanistan make them angry, but so did our withdrawal.  How can sending troops in and pulling them out both make the radical Muslims angry?” The obviously answer is, they simply can’t imagine a better way of dealing with an aggressor…the USA.
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Fareed then offered the question posed by another regional expert, “To argue that the only way to stop terrorism at home is for the United States to intervene militarily and stabilize the many parts of the Middle East that are in conflict is to commit Washington to a fool’s errand for decades. Scholar Andrew Bacevich has pointed out that before Syria, Washington had already launched interventions in 13 countries in the Islamic world since 1980. Would one more really do the trick?”
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US leaders in the past have taken us into wars without doing the hard work of devising a more positive strategy. As frustrating as it is to sit by and watch the heartbreaking horror that is playing out in Syria and Iraq I for one am glad they are taking their time on this one. I suppose this is a moment when substituting sympathy for compassion, pity for policy, is justifiable. However, I am praying that they come up with something better than war.
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With that in mind, several months ago I submitted a proposal outlining a nonviolent strategy for the US to deal with the Syrian/Iraq War. I emailed my suggestion to the US State Department, my US Senator, a senior member of the Senate-Foreign Relations Committee, and the US Peace Corps. Do I really expect anything to come of my efforts? Frankly that is not why I wrote it. I sent the proposal in the hope that if someone notices an old salty retired charter-boat captain from San Diego had imagine a nonmilitary strategy perhaps someone in Washington would be encouraged to imagine an even better one. The good news is that one of the agencies actually emailed me a personal response. They informed me that they were unable to commit any resources to new programs…I’m good with that.
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 BTW ~ all of the officials I sent the proposal to were Democrats knowing that Republicans by in large are even less likely to consider anything other than escalated military intervention.   

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

LOVE AND SOCIAL WELFARE



LOVE AND SOCIAL WELFARE

It seems strange, even to me, that my life circumstances have influenced such an odd out-of-step liberal-Christian mind set…especially since I live a very conservative-Christian lifestyle. Perhaps the adage is truer than I really want to admit, "A conservative young person has as very little heart while an older person who is a liberal has a very little brain."
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Weather true or not that natural trend can and I'm afraid has created a divisive blind-spot not only between young and old but between liberal and conservative as well. Now in my seventies, when confronted with someone in need, I am inclined to think, "I got mine. You go get your own."  I personally doubt that self-protective urge is the guidance of the Holy Spirit. The truth is if someone hadn’t helped me along the way I would have far less of what I call "mine" today. 
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Before I knew Christ I went through a rough patch and was forced to live in the trunk of an old Chevy Impala. I was homeless and unemployed.  I depended on government food stamps and handouts from individuals to see me through. It is no surprise that my older, wiser, and wealthier friends and family were not the source of my aid and refuge. My help came from the residents of Portland, Oregon's intercity ghetto who were under 20. That was back in the early 1970s when, for a time, whites had a curfew in the neighborhood.  There in the city’s “Albina District” whites were being randomly targeted and shot when out after-dark. Over time I was able to get a job and return to being a self-supporting tax payer. But without government assistance  I'm sure I would not be here …discussing the virtue of Christian support for secular government “social gurus” taking the tax money of workers and distribute it were they deem fit.
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That experience undoubtedly contributed to my uncharacteristic liberal Christian reading of the Bible. For example when I read Romans 13:10,
 "Love does no harm to its neighbor.  Therefore love is the fulfillment of the law."
I see efforts to shrink public assistance programs as harming my neighbor.
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I like to believe that not-for-profit organizations, like the church, would offer generously funded job training, child education, business-startup grants, basic food, housing, and health care programs if they could.  It's no criticism of the church to note that church benevolentness programs cannot provide public assistance on the scale government programs could. Here in the US we have 2.8 million people unemployed, a minimum of 9 thousand homeless, and 49 million people living below the poverty line.  Churches, no matter how hard they try, are simply not established for the purpose of meeting that great a need. The strange thing is Christians, who are very sympathetic toward the poor, appose government programs designed to meet public needs they know they cannot.
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However Christians could, as a way of expressing God's incalculably generous love, promote, man and help administer Federal and State efforts to help the needy rather than fight them.  Without a doubt, Christian co-participation would positively influence even the more value offensive of these programs.  Nevertheless if conservative Christians refuse to assist, guide, and encourage government programs they should at least not oppose them.  It is almost as if there is a blind-spot to the harm they are doing to their neighbor by fighting them.  If they worked cooperatively with government, as they do in places like Camden, New Jersey, much of the crime and suffering of our neighbors would be alleviated.  Sympathy looks at a neighbor’s need sentimentally.  Instead Christ’s compassion moved Him at great personal coast to do something about it.  His disciples, conservative and liberal, are called to do likewise…fulfill the law with love.
  

Thursday, January 8, 2015

Closet Christian Democrat



                           CLOSET CHRISTIAN DEMOCRAT

 I'm a Christian who loves Jesus and am usually a Democratic voter. Most of my Christian brothers and sisters can't understand why I'm not a Republican yet I can't understand how a Christian can stay a Republican, even though for a time l too followed its lead. The deep sorrow I feel is not just the pain of separation from those I love but it’s the grief of seeing most everyone I care about following a spirit that I believe is totally unlike God. I have learned speaking up makes me sound arrogant and only causes arguments .So, most of the time I let Christian Republicans make their comments, bite my tongue, and pray. That's why over the years, as a rule, I only voice my opinion when a loved ones' public bluster is obviously damaging to their relationship with their gracious loving God. But it's hard...real hard. 

Having prayed to God for His Lordship to increase in my life I feel compelled to at least acknowledge my closeted convictions. While I have opened my closet door I have no desire to come out fighting. I don’t intend to persuade others to abandon their religiously motivated political convictions and adopt mine.  However I am willing to give an account for the hope that is in me. Some may judge my unwillingness to be disagreeable and accusatory as a lack of certainty of God’s heart on political topics or evidence of personal cowardice.  I simply believe arguing about convictions is unprofitable.  Combat between brothers creates two losers… they each lose the prospect of m maintaining a loving Christian relationship. 

I therefore intend to use my January blog to explain why I am so very confident that the political ideologies of the “bleeding heart liberals” bears a striking resemblance  to God’s hopes and will for America. To see my first January contribution read on.  My door is open but you’ll have to come in because I’m not planning to come out of the closet.

Greatest Comandment in Politics



GREATEST COMMAND IN POLITICS

My mother was a very simple Godly woman.  My sisters and I knew we were loved and so when she told us to follow love in everything we thought, did, and said we recognized what that meant.  It meant not demanding our own way, not seeking our best interests, or not considering ourselves “better” than others*1. In short, we were taught to “follow the way of love” *2 and in so doing follow God, who is love*3.  We did not realize that human beings cannot follow love separate from God’s Spirit but we knew what love was supposed to look like*4.
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Now as one of God’s “dearly loved” *5 it is my supreme joy to share in His nature along with all of God’s chosen people.  “God is love, whoever lives in love lives in God, and god in him. *6” “Whoever does not love does no know God, because God is love. *7   We can, if we choose, obey the command to, “…clothe your-selves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness and patience.” “And over all these virtues put on love, which binds them all together in perfect unity. *8   
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So with love as the bond which unites me with my brothers and sisters in Christ, why do I find myself at political odds over the question of love with the majority of my beloved family members?  Is it because I secretly don’t love my Christian family?  I know that can’t be it.  My Christian family is beyond precious and dear to me.  Could it be that I subconsciously don’t love my neighbor or my enemy or consider their welfare less important than my own?  God must be my judge but my voting record and favored political causes do not support that charge.  Am I simply arrogant, think my views reflect God’s character will while those opposing them are following some other spirit than love? I find it baffling that the majority of Christians can adopt policies which are so obviously rooted in a, “philosophy, which depends on human traditions and the basic principles of this world rather than on Christ. *9 
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Hasn’t God in Jesus shown his children what love looks like?  He willing gave up His rights, privileges, and material wealth to benefit the lives of others.  Even before the advent of Jesus the prophets of old saw the good God requires of us, “…to act justly and to love mercy and walk humbly with your God. *10” “This is love for God: to obey His commands. *11” and “This is the first and greatest of these is love. *12” It is my prayer that God’s children, of whom I am one, will express God’s love in our political affairs.       
NIV  References:
1.        Phi. 2:3
2.       1 Cor. 14:1
3.       1 John 4:16
4.        Rom. 8:7+8
5.        Col. 3:12    (KJV. “beloved”)
6.        1 John 4:16
7.        1 John 4:8
8.        Col. 3:12 + Col. 3:14
9.        Col. 2:8
10.     Micah 6:8
11.    1 John 5:3
12.     Matt. 22:38