Last week, a prominent Baptist leader called Barack Obama “the worst president of the United States that Israel has ever had.” But that was only one of what I consider to be a series of careless, thoughtless proclamations.
Here are a few of them:
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- “The reason I am a social conservative is because I believe the Bible.”
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- “President Obama and his policies are pro-Palestinian.”
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- “America and Israel are founded on the same basis, the word of God.”
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- “If we want God to bless America, then we have to bless the Jews.”
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- “God blesses us when we obey him, and he doesn’t bless us when we disobey him.”
Some of you are probably asking, “So what’s wrong with that?” And that’s fine – if we all agreed on everything, then there wouldn’t be any reason for a blog . . . a dialogue . . . a conversation. In fact, if we all agreed on everything, then we wouldn’t be Baptists!
On the other hand, before you take me to task, please consider carefully the basis of my concerns with these pronouncements.
- “The reason I am a social conservative is because I believe the Bible.”
The speaker allows no room for disagreement. If we disagree with his brand of “social conservatism,” then we simply don’t believe the Bible.
The members of our Sunday School class constantly challenge each other. We disagree widely over the meaning of practically every passage of Scripture. But we never question that everyone in that class “believes the Bible”; we just have different understandings of it, and we learn from each other.
- “President Obama and his policies are pro-Palestinian.”
The speaker allows no room for compromise. The accusation that the president is “pro-Palestinian” is likely based on Mr. Obama’s reported call for a return to pre-1967 borders. Yet what he really called for was “mutually agreed swaps” – in other words, compromise, a position that every U.S. president for the past 20 years has taken. So why does the speaker single out Mr. Obama?
Compromise is at the heart of Mr. Obama’s position – the point that, as long as rigidity rules on either or both sides, peaceful coexistence will be impossible to achieve. Between nations, if there is no compromise, there is only one ultimate solution: war. To tell you the truth, I’m weary of old men stubbornly resisting compromise, then callously sending young men and women to die on their behalf.
- “America and Israel are founded on the same basis, the word of God.”
No, these United States were joined together on the basis of the Constitution, a secular document binding us together under common understandings, one of which is religious liberty for all people, even those who reject belief in any supreme being. Years ago, Brent Walker of the Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty listed the arguments made by the “Christian America” crowd and explained – clearly and definitively – why each of those arguments is without any basis in fact. To read Brent’s essay, click here.
- “If we want God to bless America, then we have to bless the Jews.”
- “God blesses us when we obey him, and he doesn’t bless us when we disobey him.”
The speaker is promoting a works-based relationship with God, in which blessings from God are merited; we receive them only because of our obedience. My experience – and my understanding of the Bible – tell me that God blesses us because He loves us, not because we deserve it. Furthermore, we should seek to bless all people – without regard to ethnicity or nationality – because God has blessed us, not to earn God’s blessing.
That’s not to say that our obedience doesn’t bring us closer to God. Of course it does, and the blessings are surely greater and deeper when we are close to Him.
But he who says “He doesn’t bless us when we disobey Him” has put himself on the throne (and apparently deposed God from it). I guess that’s what you get when you combine unerring biblical interpretation with obedience that has earned showers of blessings.
But he’d better watch out – his crown is slipping, and his throne is wobbling!