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3 Ways We Should Live in a Politically Divisive Time

politically divisive

For many people, this has been a really challenging and politically divisive time. If it has not been for you, it is likely you only spend time with people who think just like you which isn’t good for you. The good news is that we are not the only Christians to live in a politically divisive time, so thankfully we can learn from those who have gone before us.

3 Ways We Should Live in a Politically Divisive Time

1. Remember our first allegiance is Jesus and His Kingdom.

Few would admit politics or a political ideology has become their god or their religion, but we are wise to ask the Lord to search our hearts. Where have you placed your hope? Who has discipled you this last year, Jesus or your favorite news anchor? What are you most passionate to speak about? When leaders told Peter and John, two of Jesus’ disciples, that they had to stop speaking about Jesus, they replied, “we can’t help but speak about the things we have seen and heard” (Acts 4:20). In a politically divisive time, what Peter and John could not contain themselves from speaking about was Jesus.

Trusting something other than Jesus ruins us. My heart breaks for the alcoholic who keeps running to the bottle for relief, though the bottle is destroying him. My heart breaks for people who keep running to politics, on both sides, for their hope. It breaks my heart when people run down rabbit holes of misinformation for relief even though they are only destroying people with anger. Like a drug, political rabbit holes promise solace but only deliver on anger and disappointment when “the prophecies” don’t come true. Run to Jesus. Every single prophecy about Him has come to pass. He is true.

Ultimately, our citizenship is heaven. As much as I love America, America is not our forever home. We won’t be around the throne in eternal glory celebrating America. We will be celebrating the worth of our God. We won’t be singing the “Star-Spangled Banner” (as much as I am glad to sing it now); we will be singing about the Lamb of God who has rescued us.

2. Be convinced and kind.

The apostle Paul once dealt with a serious divisive issue among God’s people. Do they eat meat that is sacrificed to idols? Some were saying “yes, we can eat meat because the Bible says everything is clean. That idol is not real anyway.” Others were saying, “No way. We can’t eat something offered to an idol.” This was a big issue. Paul did not want people saying “how can you be a Christian and eat?” or “how can you be a Christian and not eat?” Today, we hear people saying, “how can you be a Christian and think that way politically?” Paul told the Christians to stop judging one another and to promote peace among each other (Romans 14). He wanted the Christians to be convinced in their own minds and kind to their brothers and sisters.

We too can be convinced and kind at the same time. It is easy to be convinced and not be kind, and it is easy to be kind and not be convinced. But to be both convinced and kind in a politically divisive time takes maturity.

3. Engage more than politically.

Compared to God’s people throughout the centuries, we are a rarity in that we have a political voice and vote. Most Christians throughout the centuries lived under a monarchy with no political voice. In fact, when Peter and Paul wrote to pray for our leaders and honor them, they were writing about leaders who would kill them. The early believers did not have a seat at the political table, but they still cared for all that the Lord cares about and found ways to serve people and to represent Christ. Larry Hurtado, in his book Destroyer of the Gods, pointed out that Christians in Rome were passionate for all ethnicities, the poor, a counter-cultural sexual ethic, and the children who would be killed by infanticide. May our political voice not make us complacent in finding ways, outside of politics, to care for all the Lord cares about. We should engage politically because we can, but we can and must engage more than politically.

 

This article on living in a politically divisive time originally appeared here, and is used by permission.