These are just a few comments on where I am at in my present thoughts regarding our new president. It seems that lately I have had some people (who are members of pastor search teams) look over my blog posts, and apparently the piece I did on the Donald is drawing some comments (made directly to me, since I hardly ever get a comment on this blog). One person even called to tell me that, no only did he not like what I said, but that there was "no way we are going to allow something like that here." While this is definitely an aberration from most reactions, it does point out that I need to provide some kind of update to the post. After all, it was written very early in the primary campaign, and, as we all know, a whole lot has changed since then.
While I am not yet sure where President Trump is going and what he will actually accomplish, I have joined the wary majority that did elect him to office. This does not make me a fan, but I have come to be a supporter. He is the president, duly elected by the will of the people (despite desperate claims to the contrary), and just as I prayed for and sought to support Barack Obama (with whom I disagreed quite regularly and drastically), I do the same for Donald Trump. Like many during the campaign who found themselves caught in the proverbial place that is "between the devil and the deep blue sea," I had the same choice everyone else had: Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton. While I had many aforeposted misgivings about Mr. Trump, I had ten times more regarding Mrs. Clinton. One claimed to be pro-life (most likely for public consumption), the other was blatantly and boastfully proud of not only supporting abortion, but made it clear she would do everything in her power to expand its devastation. One would appoint activist judges who want to dictate a judicial tyranny on any who disagree with their progressive or liberal views, and the other promised to appoint constructionist judges who would give allegiance to the constitution as the Founders intended. Both had personal lives that were far from exemplary, and both were marked by glaring moral failures. So, given my personal views on abortion and the courts, I had very little alternative than to vote for Mr. Trump, hope for the best, and pray a lot.
The bigger issue is the rancor that has happened between some Christians who chose to support Trump and some who chose to support Clinton. I've read numerous articles on both sides accusing the other of not truly being Christian, and saying that supporting one or the other is tantamount to rejecting the Word and betraying what it means to follow Christ. One good friend of mine, who does wonderful work (ironically in a ministry reconciling cultural and political enemies), has taken to publishing in Facebook that people like Franklin Graham and others who are willing to identify with Trump's agenda are in fact not really Christians at all. That is, as our new President would say, "very bad - very, very bad." I will go one farther, and say it is yielding to the influence of Satan who seeks to divide the church and fracture the ministry of Christ in this world. While who is a political leader and what they do is, of course, important, and has definite long lasting effects on our lives, our nation, the world, and history, it is far more important to affirm and celebrate the unity we have in Christ, who is, as St. Paul says, "far above all rule and authority and power and dominion, and above every name that is named, not only in this age but also in the one to come." (Ephesians 1:21)
So, that is where my political predilections are at this time, for what that is worth (not much). I don't know yet if President Trump is going to be a good thing or a bad thing. I pray for him, and I pray that he will seek God's direction every day. My own sense is that there will be great difficulties, but none so large and devastating to a free and hope-filled America as a Clinton administration would have been. We are all in the same boat right now, Democrat and Republican, socialist and libertarian, liberal and conservative, and if we don't all pull on the oars together in rhythm, we may very well sink. Thankfully (and I am talking about gratefulness to God), there is One who walks on the turbulent waves and who can calm the storm, and it isn't Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders, Ted Cruz, or even Donald Trump.
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1 comment:
This is me, leaving a comment, because people hardly ever comment on your blogs! Haha, take that "people". Also, you forgot to mention people like me who think that everyone who voted for either Clinton or Trump could not be Christian, and only the true remnant who wrote in Cruz are actually elect! Haha, just kidding of course, love you man!
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