primarily called to spread the Gospel. That when it comes to the most controversial issues, the best strategy is non-confrontation and to focus on what is most important. I think I know what he meant. There’s certainly truth to the idea that Christians overemphasize politics. As I’ve said on more than one occasion, politics makes a lousy worldview. In a culture without better answers to life’s biggest questions, politics too easily assumes the place of God, determining everything from our values to our sources of truth to who we’re willing to associate with. When Christians embrace a political identity rather than a Kingdom identity, the riches of Christ are exchanged for the porridge of political gamesmanship.
However, telling the Church to just 'stay in our lane' and
out of politics is an equally unhelpful answer. Typically, the 'stay in your
lane' mandate is only applied to unpopular issues, like
abortion, marriage and family, or religious freedom. No one ever tells the
Church to stop fighting against sex trafficking, or to no longer dig wells for
communities without fresh water, or to cease sustainable economic development
in impoverished nations. Christians should absolutely engage worthy causes
because the Lordship of Christ and the implications of the Gospel demand it,
not because they are deemed culturally uncontroversial.
Read the entire article by John Stonestreet and Kasey Leander here at BreakPoint.
Image courtesy of
Pexels.
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