Wednesday, September 30, 2020

#3154 (9/30) "Tens of Thousands of Christians Converged on DC and Trashed the City"

 "TENS OF THOUSANDS OF CHRISTIANS CONVERGED ON DC AND TRASHED THE CITY" Michael BrownMichael: Sep 28, 2020; https://townhall.com/columnists/michaelbrown/2020/09/28/tens-of-thousands-of-christians-converged-on-dc-and-trashed-the-city-n2577021

Source: Townhall Media/Leah Barkoukis

    Did you hear about the large Christian gatherings in Washington, DC [last] weekend? Did you see the news reports about the mayhem? The looting? The vandalism? The calls to “Burn it down!”? Did you hear the speakers calling for acts of violence and destruction? Oh, you didn’t? That’s because tens of thousands of Christians did gather in DC this weekend, but they came to pray for the nation and repent for their sins.

   The two main events were The Return, which began Friday night and ended Saturday night, and Franklin Graham’s prayer march, which was held from noon to 2:00 p.m. Saturday afternoon. Both events attracted tens of thousands, and The Return was watched by a reported global audience of tens of millions. But there were no angry voices. No calls for violence. No fistfights. Or brawls. Or looting. Or shooting at police.

   In fact, at The Return, where I participated on Saturday, there was hardly any police presence at all. It was not needed. I didn’t even see any counter-protesters. Worship prevailed. Prayer prevailed. Humility prevailed. Repentance prevailed. And while a constant theme of the event was the broken condition of America and the urgent need for repentance, that repentance started with the participants, with each of us. We, the followers of Jesus, have sinned and fallen short. We who are called to be light of the world and the salt of the earth have not lived up to our high and lofty calling.  That’s why The Return began its Saturday morning program with pastors and leaders asking for God’s mercy and confessing their sin. Repentance starts with us.

   Significantly, Saturday was also the day when President Trump announced his nomination of Amy Coney Barrett to replace the late Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Who could have foreseen this? These events were planned months in advance, at which time no one had any idea that Justice Ginsburg would pass away, let alone pass away during this sacred season on the biblical calendar.

   Even the timing of Trump’s announcement seemed propitious. As I tweeted, “So, Ruth Bader Ginsburg passes away at the beginning of the Jewish New Year, as the shofar blast is heard, & Amy Coney Barrett is announced as her replacement as shofars were being blasted at The Return event in DC, watched by 10s of millions globally. Coincidence?”

   On this same day, Saturday, September 26, 2020, major prayer gatherings were held in the Philippines and other nations as well. (An Asian leader told me at The Return that three million Indonesian Christians participated in a prayer event just hours earlier). But this is exactly what we must do. We are in the midst of a global pandemic, a global shutdown, a time of global shaking – and that means there nothing more important we can do than pray. All the more does this hold true in America, where deep divisions are literally tearing us apart.

   But the goal of these gatherings is not to impress people. The goal is not to put on a performance and please the crowds. The goal is to get the attention of our Father in Heaven. Only He can turn the hearts of a nation. And only He can hold back His judgment and wrath.

   In Jewish tradition, the constellation sign associated with Tishrei, the seventh (and current) month of the biblical calendar (but the first month of the traditional calendar), is a pair of scales, symbolizing the scales of justice. As one Jewish website explains, “The symbol of the month of Tishrei is a pair of scales.  How fitting are the scales of justice to this month!  On the Day of Judgment, Rosh Hashanah, our good deeds and mitzvos (commandments) are weighed against our sins.  If we have more mitzvos than sins, we are inscribed for another year of life.  Obviously, this is not a quantitative evaluation, that is, the number of offenses verses the number of good deeds.  The judgment takes into account the quality of our deeds.” [italics and colored emphasis mine]

   Yet even with the very best quality of deeds, and even when we work our hardest, there is no way America could survive a test like this, weighing our good deeds against our bad deeds. How much weight does a single abortion carry, let alone tens of millions? How much weight does a single act of sex trafficking carry, let alone tens of thousands? That’s why we plead for mercy. That’s why we repent so deeply. That’s why, in the synagogues, beginning Sunday night, Jewish prayers will focus on pleas for mercy and lengthy confessions of sin. There is no boasting of our own righteousness in the sight of a holy God.

   That’s why these gatherings in DC, with minimal press coverage and without the drama of the protests and the riots, could well be the thing that saves the nation. And while the media may not have paid sufficient attention, we trust that God Himself did. That is what really matters.

[italics and colored emphasis mine]

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

"Tens of Thousands Gather for Prayer March Because ‘Things Change When You Pray’" Virginia Allen / @Virginia_Allen5 / September 28, 2020; https://www.dailysignal.com/2020/09/28/crowd-gathers-on-mall-for-prayer-march-because-things-change-when-you-pray/

-------------------------------------


PRAYER MATTERS:

"To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against 
the disorder of the world Karl Barth
"Prayer is inviting God into a seemingly impossible situation and trusting/resting in His love and grace to accomplish His perfect will in His perfect time and for His greatest glory. Intercession is  one of the great privileges AND responsibilities for EVERY believer."- Stan
----------------------------------------------------------------------
“INTERCESSORS ARE THE RUDDER” – A WORD OF ENCOURAGEMENT - Wanda Alger, June 28th, 2017; https://www.getamericapraying.com/blog/I was recently given a word by my good friend, Bill Yount. His word greatly encouraged me as an intercessor. Working for Intercessors for America, I soon realized it was not just a word for me, but for all who have been praying for our nation, wondering if their prayers are truly making any difference. Bill told me, “I kept seeing you as a small rudder on a huge ship. Hidden, but giving guidance. Although it seemed slow it was turning the whole ship. Patience was needed to see the impact of your…ministry. I sense the Lord saying, ‘Don’t jump ship! I’ve made you the rudder!’ ” I was immediately touched in my spirit by this encouragement, knowing that our seemingly small place in prayer was having a great impact.
James 3:4 talks about the power of a small rudder to steer a large ship. In this scripture about the power of our tongue, consider the power of prophetic intercession! In the Forerunner Commentary on this verse we read, “…rudders manipulate the course of immense ocean vessels with a slight movement of a pilot’s hand. Since it is underwater and aft, the rudder of a ship does its work UNSEEN. A passenger is ignorant of its movements most of the time. Yet, when it is in proper working order, the rudder holds more power over the ship than the wind. The wind will blow, toss, even destroy the ship’s rigging, but the rudder guides the ship exactly where it directs.”
This is God’s promise to the intercessors in this hour of national turbulence. Don’t stop praying! Your prayers have great power to turn the ship! Continue praying, interceding, and discerning the workings and movements of the Holy Spirit, being faithful to God’s commands. As we come together to declare God’s faithfulness, this nation will, once again, head in the direction that God intends. Don’t give up and don’t give in. Regardless of the winds of adversity and the fires of the enemy, God’s people have a power that cannot be matched. Let us join in faith and continue to pray and speak of God’s faithfulness in order to bring God’s people and this nation into the fullness of God’s plans. Note this additional encouragement from God’s word:
Colossians 2:15 – “He disarmed the rulers and authorities and put them to open shame, by triumphing over them in him” (ESV). 
Psalm 33:8-11 – “Let all the earth fear the Lord; let all the people of the world revere him. For he spoke, and it came to be; he commanded, and it stood firm. The Lord foils the plans of the nations; He thwarts the purposes of the peoples. But the plans of the Lord stand firm forever, the purposes of his heart through all generations.” 
Wanda Alger, IFA Field Correspondent

PRAY FOR AMERICA: THANK GOD for His many blessings on America throughout it's history. May we then ask that AMERICA once again be a blessing TO GOD, by once again submitting to HIS will in our affairs - both personal and national - that He may truly "heal our land." (2 Chron. 7:14) Short of that, we should not be saying "God Bless America"but instead "God be merciful towards America!"
PRAY FOR OUR LEADERS 1) Pray for President Trump and his advisers, that they would select Godly leaders at the federal level who will be accountable to do an excellent job (or be fired!) ; that he would seek God's wisdom and be enabled to lead our country effectively in the years ahead; and 2) Pray our leaders at every level of government will Spirit-filled, leading us with Godly wisdom and integrity; that they will  only pass legislation and enact policies that will benefit Americans today as well as future generations and NOT do any lasting harm.
SUPREME COURT: PRAY that the justices will only hand down decisions that are Constitutionally sound and in the best interests of our country now and for future generations.

World-Wide Prayer Requests:

 PRAISE GOD for the continuing successes against ISIS!

------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/

Women’s ministry in IRAQ. Dalia, 45, only recently returned to Iraq after she was forced to fleeher home when ISIS invaded in 2014. When she returned home, she felt she needed something to strengthen her faith and restore her self-confidence; she saw other Christian women around her needed the same thing. “Our bags are always packed, just in case we have to flee for our lives again,” she shares. Along with some neighbors, Dalia sprang into action and began setting
up women’s discipleship meetings where they learned how to share Christ with the women of their village. Soon, they were organizing multiple women’s Bible studies where women now come for prayer and encouragement. They have a large vision going forward.

September 30 - Pray the women would be bold in sharing Christ with others in their villages.

 *Representative name or photo used to protect identity.

STANDING STRONG THROUGH THE STORM - OpenDoorsUSA.org
 At my first defense, no one came to my support, but everyone deserted me. May it not be held against them.- 2 Tim. 4:16                                     
SPEAK ON BEHALF OF THOSE WHO SUFFER
The Apostle Paul knew exactly what it was like to be alone, to be deserted by all who called themselves “brothers” and “sisters.” A former colleague who has done considerable travel among the persecuted says, “It is hard to believe that Christians are the largest persecuted group in the world today. But it is even more difficult to believe that this is so seldom mentioned in our gatherings and church services. More Christians know the names of their favorite actors than their fellow believers who are in prison.”
He continues, “With every trip something in my heart breaks as I hear the echoes of suffering:
I remember the echoes of an Egyptian mother as she shared how her young boy was stuck in a haystack because she refused to deny Jesus.
I remember the sounds of weeping as fellow students in Indonesia shared how Sariman, their co-student, was hacked to death.
I remember the cries of anguish as we walked from church to church that was burned to the ground on the island of Lombok.
I remember the tears of Rebecca in Iran as she showed the picture of her father who was stabbed to death for sharing the gospel.
I remember the voice of Pastor Daniel in Vietnam as he shared how he was chained to the ground for six months.
I remember the fear of Grace from Sudan as she shared how her church was attacked and her friend was shot through the head.
Oh, I remember the cries of Caleb in Eritrea as he shared with tears how two dear friends were executed in front of him because of their faith.
And I remember the tears of Joy in the southern Philippines as she shared how her fiancĂ© was shot to death in their church in Mindanao.
But, most all, I remember the deafening sounds of silence every time I return home.
RESPONSE
How can I be silent today? How can I not speak on behalf of those who suffer? How can I desert those that belong to the same body that I belong to and who desperately need the encouragement of my intervention?


Tuesday, September 29, 2020

#3153 (9/29) "Fear Not the Catholic Justice"

"FEAR NOT THE CATHOLIC JUDGE" GianCarlo Canaparo / @GCanaparo / September 26, 2020 / https://www.dailysignal.com/2020/09/26/fear-not-the-catholic-justice

     Judge Amy Coney Barrett speaks Saturday evening after being nominated to the Supreme Court by President Donald Trump in the Rose Garden of the White House. (Photo: Olivier Douliery/AFP via Getty Images)

     Even before President Donald Trump nominated Judge Amy Coney Barrett to replace Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the Supreme Court, Barrett’s religious views came under fire from prominent progressivesIf this sounds familiar, it’s because these same people used this same line of attack in a failed attempt to derail Barrett’s nomination to the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in 2017.

   The most memorable part of those proceedings was the accusation by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., to Barrett that “the dogma lives loudly within you.” Barrett, like many other notable justices before her, including Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas, is a devout Catholic. Barrett’s faith is a problem for some people, notably Sen. Mazie Hirono, D-Hawaii, who when asked if Barrett’s faith was off limits responded: “No.”

   Slightly more sophisticated opponents, however, are quick to say that it’s fine for Barrett to be Catholic, but it’s bad for her to use her religious beliefs to decide cases. ]Former Rep. Katie Hill, D-Calif., put it this way: “If her religion never made it into her court decisions, she can believe what she wants.” [https://twitter.com/KatieHill4CA/status/1308576394570420225 Note the hidden premise. Hill assumes that Barrett decides cases based on her religious views. Lawfare editor Susan Hennessey was more direct: “Barrett’s personal faith is entirely unobjectionable,” she said, but Barrett’s “clear intention of imposing her private beliefs, including religious views, on the American public” disqualifies her. [https://twitter.com/Susan_Hennessey/status/1308521662128828416?s=20]

   There’s one glaring problem with this line of attack: It is totally, completely, 100% without factual support. If you click on the links provided above and review the assertions by Hill and Hennessey, you’ll notice that they offer no support for their conclusions. Neither points to a single judicial opinion, scholarly article, or speech supporting the claim that Barrett has decided or would decide any case based on her private or religious views. They couldn’t if they wanted to. No such opinion, article, or speech exists.

   What’s more, Barrett has made clear, time [https://www.judiciary.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/Barrett%20Responses%20to%20Whitehouse%20QFRs.pdf] and time [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j0ZN532f9d0] and time again [ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=onE3L0BhH-g], that her approach to judging leaves no room for her personal beliefs.

   In response to written questions from a senator, she said: “I do not think it lawful for a judge to impose personal opinions, from whatever source they derive, upon the law.”

   In a speech that was in part about  Scalia’s legacy, she explained that judges should not be conservative in terms of partisan politics, but should embrace a conservative view of  judges’ role in our government. The reason is as simple as it is intuitive: If a judge rewrites a law according to his or her personal views, then “it ceases to be the law that has democratic legitimacy.”

   These are just a few of the hundreds of examples of this sentiment articulated in Barrett’s writings and speeches.To declare that Barrett suddenly will do an about-face and start deciding cases based on her religious views takes a lot of faith. Bad faith.

   Nothing supports the claims by Hill and Hennessy but the bad-faith assumption that religious people cannot separate their faith from the job of judgingNever mind that plenty of judges do that every day. Scalia—the foremost champion of judges’ getting out of the way of democracy—did it expertly, and with style.

   Barrett’s writings and speeches provide all the confidence you could ask for that she will do the same, interpreting laws according to their text and making sure to avoid the trap of usurping the democratic process. It makes one wonder, then, why progressives are so hell-bent on pressing this spurious attack on Barrett.  Why not attack her commitment to originalism and textualism—two methods of judicial interpretation that say, respectively, that the Constitution and statutory texts should be interpreted according to the words as written?

   To put it simply, an argument against those methodologies is a losing argument. Given the choice between a judge who imposes her views on the law and a judge who restricts her own power so as not to trample on the will of the people, which would you pick?  Bear in mind that you can’t always pick a judge whose personal views align with yours.

   The truth is that many progressives want judges who impose their views on the law, provided those views are progressive. They’ve cheered as the Supreme Court, over the past 60 years or so, has circumvented the democratic process to rewrite the Constitution in ways that advance progressive causes. But they’re terrified of a politically conservative judge who would do the same thing. So much so, in fact, that even though there is no evidence that Barrett will impose her personal views on the law—and a mountain of evidence that she won’t—it’s all her critics can think about. [italics and colored emphasis mine]

   This boils down to one of two things: a fear that someone with Christian views will behave the way progressives want progressive judges to behave, or a total inability to understand that some judges, like Barrett, truly believe that judges can and should be objective. After looking at Barrett’s record, only with the faith of a mustard seed could you believe that she’ll decide cases based on her faith.

[italics and colored emphasis mine]

GianCarlo Canaparo is a legal fellow in the Edwin Meese III Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at The Heritage Foundation.

------------------------------------------------------------------

 "The Attacks on Judge Barrett's Faith Are Despicable and Must be Condemned" - Tony Perkins, Washington Update, September 24, 2020; https://www.frc.org/updatearticle/20200924/attacks-faith

-------------------------------------


PRAYER MATTERS:

"To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against 
the disorder of the world Karl Barth
"Prayer is inviting God into a seemingly impossible situation and trusting/resting in His love and grace to accomplish His perfect will in His perfect time and for His greatest glory. Intercession is  one of the great privileges AND responsibilities for EVERY believer."- Stan
----------------------------------------------------------------------

World-Wide Prayer Requests:

 PRAISE GOD for the continuing successes against ISIS!

------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/

Women’s ministry in IRAQ. Dalia, 45, only recently returned to Iraq after she was forced to fleeher home when ISIS invaded in 2014. When she returned home, she felt she needed something to strengthen her faith and restore her self-confidence; she saw other Christian women around her needed the same thing. “Our bags are always packed, just in case we have to flee for our lives again,” she shares. Along with some neighbors, Dalia sprang into action and began setting
up women’s discipleship meetings where they learned how to share Christ with the women of their village. Soon, they were organizing multiple women’s Bible studies where women now come for prayer and encouragement. They have a large vision going forward.

September 29 - Pray that the women participating in the studies become grounded in their faith as they learn who they are in Christ.

 *Representative name or photo used to protect identity.

Monday, September 28, 2020

#3152 (9/28) "Ruth Bader Ginsburg Was No Mother Teresa"

 "RUTH BADER GINSBERG WAS NO MOTHER TERESA" - Susan Stamper: Sep 26, 2020; https://townhall.com/columnists/susanstamperbrown/2020/09/26/ruth-bader-ginsburg-was-no-mother-teresa-n2576943 [AS I SEE IT: Throughout the entire week following her death, all we heard were people praising Justice Ginsberg. But what is the truth about her? Well, this article - posted the day after her funeral, sheds some light / And as I've thought, there are  things about her  - from at least the standpoint of the unborn - that should be considered in determining her true legacy. An eye-opening expose! - Stan]

Source: AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta

     In a statement announcing Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death September 18, 2020, Chief Justice John Roberts said, “Our nation has lost a jurist of historic stature. We at the Supreme Court have lost a cherished colleague. Today we mourn, but with confidence that future generations will remember Ruth Bader Ginsburg as we knew her – a tireless and resolute champion of justice.”

   Ginsburg was a champion of something, but it wasn’t justice for the unborn. Sure, the left’s superhero was a tireless and relentless liberal judge, but she won’t go down in history as the saint Democrats suggest, far from it. Chief Justice Roberts failed to mention that because of her pro-abortion stance, millions of unborn babies won’t have the opportunity to remember Ginsburg, who fought up until the end for the legal right for mothers to kill their unborn babies. What an awful legacy to leave behind, let alone carry into the hereafter.

   While I’m sorry for her family’s loss, let’s be honest; the crocodile tears flowing down leftists’ faces have little to do with Ginsburg. Democrats mourn because they are about to lose their “insurance policy,” with the Supreme Court set to return to its commonsensical roots of interpreting the law rather than legislating it. Oh, the agony.

   For generations now, activist justices have deliberately muddied the law and found countless ways to shove their non-values down our throats. As I type, Democrats wail like snot-nosed crybabies because they fear Ginsburg’s replacement means overturning Roe v. Wade. 

   Lies and deceit conceived Roe v. Wade, but that matters little to death cult Democrats who worship at the altar of selfism, believing abortion is an inalienable right they’ll do anything in their power to preserve. Shortly after Ginsburg died, Biden voters called for political terrorism, “burning it all down” -- if President Trump and the Republican-controlled Senate perform their constitutional duties to fill the vacant seat.

   Ginsburg sang the praises of Roe v. Wade during an Elle fashion magazine interview in 2014, displaying her zealous partisanship and passionate commitment to leftist politics. When asked about retiring, Ginsburg said, “So anybody who thinks that if I step down, Obama could appoint someone like me, they’re misguided. As long as I can do the job full steam…” And full steam ahead she went until the end, spewing archetypal Democrat double-speak, claiming to fight for the poor and minorities, while simultaneously supporting policies that disenfranchised them. 

   Ginsburg’s stance on abortion seemed to edge toward eugenics during a New York Times Magazine interview in 2009 while opining about the Hyde Amendment, which prohibits federally funded abortions. Ginsburg said, “Frankly, I had thought that at the time Roe was decided there was concern about population growth and particularly growth in populations that we don’t want to have too many of.”“That we don’t want to have too many of.”  While it’s unclear Ginsburg endorsed Roe’s eugenic motivation, it certainly was an odd thing for a Supreme Court Justice to say during the interview. 

   Democrats’ abortion movement has deep ties to eugenics with Planned Parenthood and Margaret Sanger.  Ron Weddington, the co-counsel in the Roe case, made the relationship quite clear in a letter he wrote to President-elect Bill Clinton, imploring him to rush to market RU-486, the abortion pill. “(Y)ou can start immediately to eliminate the barely educated, unhealthy and poor segment of our country,” Weddington wrote. “It’s what we all know is true, but we only whisper it…Think of all the poverty, crime and misery…then add 30 million unwanted babies to the scenario. We lost a lot of ground during the Reagan-Bush religious orgy. We don’t have a lot of time left.” Weddington suggested who he had in mind when he wrote, “For every Jesse Jackson who has fought his way out of poverty of a large family, there are millions mired in poverty, drugs and crime.”

   NPR reports Ginsburg’s dying request was: “My most fervent wish is that I will not be replaced until a new president is installed.” If that’s true, it means Ginsburg left this world agonizing over politics rather than things which really matter like her family and friends, or where she’d spend eternity.  Pitiful. If true, tears should be shed for a life utterly wasted.

   Currently, the left accuses conservatives of dancing on Ginsburg’s grave. Not at all. Sure, we’re dancing, but it’s not on her grave; we’re celebrating that Ginsburg’s replacement will value human life and that the Supreme Court will return to what the Founders intended. After what Democrats did to Brett Kavanaugh, Republicans owe Democrats nothing and must straightaway fill Ginsburg’s empty seat, for the sake of our country and its future, both born and unborn.

[italics and colored emphasis mine]

   Susan is an award-winning columnist who lives in Alaska. She feels safer around the grizzlies which roam her property than the leftists roaming worldwide. She has written for scores of newspapers and media publications across the U.S., including USA Today, Townhall, The Christian Post, GOPUSA, BizPac Review, and Jewish World Review. Contact Susan at writestamper@protonmail.com. 

-------------------------------------


PRAYER MATTERS:

"To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against 
the disorder of the world Karl Barth
"Prayer is inviting God into a seemingly impossible situation and trusting/resting in His love and grace to accomplish His perfect will in His perfect time and for His greatest glory. Intercession is  one of the great privileges AND responsibilities for EVERY believer."- Stan
----------------------------------------------------------------------

World-Wide Prayer Requests:

 PRAISE GOD for the continuing successes against ISIS!

------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/
Women’s ministry in IRAQ. Dalia, 45, only recently returned to Iraq after she was forced to fleeher home when ISIS invaded in 2014. When she returned home, she felt she needed something to strengthen her faith and restore her self-confidence; she saw other Christian women around her needed the same thing. “Our bags are always packed, just in case we have to flee for our lives again,” she shares. Along with some neighbors, Dalia sprang into action and began setting
up women’s discipleship meetings where they learned how to share Christ with the women of their village. Soon, they were organizing multiple women’s Bible studies where women now come for prayer and encouragement. They have a large vision going forward.

September 28 - Pray for continued growth and success of the 16 women’s ministry groups Open Doors supports through our local ministry partner in Iraq.

 *Representative name or photo used to protect identity.

Sunday, September 27, 2020

#3151 (9/27) SUNDAY SPECIAL: "Why (and How) Christians Should Vote"

 "WHY (AND HOW) CHRISTIANS SHOULD VOTE" - John Stonestreet, Breakpoint.org,, 09/22/20; https://www.breakpoint.org/why-and-how-christians-should-vote/

      In the 2016 election, only about 61 percent of voting-age Americans cast a ballot. The percentage of self-identifying Christians who voted, both evangelical and non-evangelical, was pretty similar. In other words, though faith does seem to greatly influence the voting decisions of American Christians who vote, it doesn’t seem to make much of a difference in whether or not American Christians vote.

   Of course, if our faith should make a difference in every aspect of our lives (and it should), it should shape how we think about and live out citizenship, too. To put it bluntly, Christians have both a civic and a Christian responsibility to vote. As my friend Tim Goeglin, vice-president of external and governmental relations for Focus on the Family, put it recently, to vote is the beginning of our civic duty of Christians.

   Here are three reasons why:

   First, voting is an act of obedience. Both Jesus and St. Paul described our responsibility to defer to the governing authorities and to “render to Caesar” what is due to Caesar. Both Jesus and Paul navigated the realities of the various political authorities they faced differently, depending on the nature of their political authority and their rights as citizens. For example, Jesus never went to Rome, but He often confronted Jewish political powers and structures. Paul claimed and appealed to Roman citizenship when he was arrested.

  In our context, the people are the political authorities. We don’t submit to political authority; we grant political authority to the representatives we elect. So, in our context, voting is the most fundamental way there is to “render to Caesar what is Caesar’s.”

  Second, Scripture describes sin not only as doing wrong, but also failing to do the good we can. Voting is an opportunity to do some good. Christians should see voting as an opportunity to steward what is good.

  Finally, voting is a way to fulfill both what Jesus called the greatest commandment and “the second one like unto it.” To love God with all our heart, mind, soul, and strength means, to some degree, loving what God loves: justice, righteousness, truth, and hospitality are all things that God loves, and they can be reflected in law and policy.

   And, to love our neighbors as ourselves means more than person-to-person niceness. Voting in ways that will limit or end abortion is a way to love our preborn neighbors. Voting in ways that will uphold the family and stop sexual experimentation on children is a way to love kids. Voting for policies that provide real opportunities for the poor and needy is a way to love them.

   Of course, fulfilling our civic and Christian duty involves not only voting, but voting in a right way. While I don’t think there’s just one right way to vote in every election, on every race, about every issue, there are certainly wrong decisions to be made. Because voting between candidates, whether for President or for dog catcher, will always involve choosing between the better of imperfect options, the best we can do is make comparisons.

  First, we should compare their worldview, because that is the basis of both their personal character and their public policy. A candidate’s worldview, by the way, is not the same as their professed faith. For too many candidates, faith is not only personal, it’s private. A candidate’s worldview, on the other hand, reveals those beliefs fundamental to how they will govern, specifically, what they think needs to be fixed and whose job they think it is to fix it.

   Second, we should compare their company, because every candidate comes with others. In particular, every President comes with a few thousand others: appointees who run departments, advisors who offer counsel, and judicial nominees who will be on the bench for decades. And just about every candidate comes with a political party, which has its own set of rules and expectations not to mention a platform that party intends to advance.

  Finally, we should compare candidates’ stated policies, because policy matters. Policies are based on ideas. Ideas have consequences. Bad policies built on bad ideas have victims.

 Of course, most Americans will not just choose who will be President. We won’t just be choosing between Congressional candidates. Choosing on ballot initiatives is every bit as important as choosing between candidates. In Colorado, we’ll be choosing whether to end the over 200 later-term abortions that occur in this state every year.  [italics and colored emphasis mine]

   Finally, while it is critical and necessary, Christian involvement in the public square cannot stop at voting. The issues we face, such as abortion, assisted suicide, religious freedom, loneliness, and so many others, cannot be solved by government alone. The Church has plenty of work to do upstream from politics, in communities and families, not to mention plenty of praying to do too.

  Though our responsibilities certainly include more than voting, they certainly do not include less.

[italics and colored emphasis mine]

RESOURCES:

"Heading into the Election, What Would You Say About the Tough Issues of 2020?"John Stonestreet | Breakpoint | September 15, 2020; https://breakpoint.org/heading-into-the-election-what-would-you-say-about-the-tough-issues-of-2020/

"Christians and Elections . . . What Do We Do?"John Stonestreet and Shane Morris | Breakpoint | September 2, 2020; https://breakpoint.org/christians-and-elections-what-do-we-do/

"Elections Matter . . . But Where Are We Placing Our Trust?" John Stonestreet | Breakpoint | August 21, 2020; https://breakpoint.org/elections-matter-where-our-faith/


-------------------------------------


PRAYER MATTERS:

"To clasp the hands in prayer is the beginning of an uprising against 
the disorder of the world Karl Barth
"Prayer is inviting God into a seemingly impossible situation and trusting/resting in His love and grace to accomplish His perfect will in His perfect time and for His greatest glory. Intercession is  one of the great privileges AND responsibilities for EVERY believer."- Stan
----------------------------------------------------------------------

World-Wide Prayer Requests:

 PRAISE GOD for the continuing successes against ISIS!

------------------------------------------------------------
Praying Through the Open Doors World Watch List for persecuted believers:https://www.opendoorsusa.org/take-action/pray/monthly-prayer-calendar/

Women’s ministry in IRAQ. Dalia, 45, only recently returned to Iraq after she was forced to fleeher home when ISIS invaded in 2014. When she returned home, she felt she needed something to strengthen her faith and restore her self-confidence; she saw other Christian women around her needed the same thing. “Our bags are always packed, just in case we have to flee for our lives again,” she shares. Along with some neighbors, Dalia sprang into action and began setting
up women’s discipleship meetings where they learned how to share Christ with the women of their village. Soon, they were organizing multiple women’s Bible studies where women now come for prayer and encouragement. They have a large vision going forward.

September 27 - Pray the joy of the Lord would be Dalia’s and the other leaders’ strength.

*Representative name or photo used to protect identity.