Archive for the 'Join the Movement' Category
American Christians: Not Voting is Never the Option
As the 2016 election looms large this week, polls suggest that both candidates are considered two of the most unfavorable in history, even while simultaneously activating enormously enthusiastic constituencies.
It’s a real political fight, and the differences between the two are stark. Because of this some voters are threatening to stay home and not cast a vote at all, or even write-in another candidate. I’m among those who believe that writing in a candidate is often – effectively – voting for the least desirable of the two main party options, but I have friends who disagree with me.
However, refusing to vote altogether is a serious mistake. I do not believe that’s an option for a Christian.
While the Bible does not explicitly mention voting (since our modern concept of the popular vote was practically unheard of when the Bible was written), it does stress our responsibility to seek the good of the government because governments have been instituted by God (Romans 13). Jeremiah challenged God’s people to seek the welfare of the city even though it was pagan (Jeremiah 29). Both Paul and Peter urged the early Christians to pray for and honor those in authority (1 Timothy 2; 1 Peter 2). Jesus himself, when questioned on whether it was lawful to pay taxes to Rome, said, “Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s” (Matthew 22). These verses reveal a great deal about God’s high regard for governmental authority, and they underscore how grateful we should be for the role we get to play in our own political process.
Casting a vote might seem trivial or even mundane, but it is an opportunity to speak into our country’s future. We cannot in clear conscience keep quiet on issues as important as the sanctity of life, religious liberty, and the kind of judges the next president will appoint on the Supreme Court. Whatever size, scope, or sphere of influence we have been granted, we should use it to protect our constitution, preserve truth, and guard righteousness.
These ideals are also deeply rooted in the American story.
From the revolutionaries’ chant, “No taxation without representation,” to Susan B. Anthony’s odyssey for women’s suffrage and the Civil Rights Movement, the right for every American citizen to vote has been fought for on all fronts. As Christians and as Americans we cannot take this lightly, especially when we look around the world and see just how rare this privilege truly is.
This year, The Economist Intelligence Unit released its “Democracy Index 2015,” revealing that only 20 countries in the world – or roughly 9% of the world’s population – qualify as “full democracies.” The remaining countries are either “flawed democracies,” “hybrid regimes,” or “authoritarian regimes.” Eritrea, as one example, hasn’t held an election in more than two decades.
The sad truth is that American Christians have a poor record when it comes to voting. In the 2012 Election, 25 million Evangelicals chose not to vote. The election was decided by less than 5 million votes.
Anecdotally, the most common excuse given to me by those who chose not to vote in previous elections is that they did not like the candidates. The truth is that the candidates will never measure up to our expectations – but this doesn’t mean staying home is the answer. We can still use our vote to defend the biblical values we believe in. This idea is as old as our democracy.
In an essay published in the Boston Gazette in August 1763, John Adams, who would later become our nation’s second president, explained how every American ought to approach an election:
“It becomes necessary to every subject then, to be in some degree a statesman, and to examine and judge for himself of the tendency of political principles and measures… let us believe no man to be infallible or impeccable in government, any more than in religion.”
Platforms and policies outweigh parties, personalities, and politicians. It is much more important a candidate endorses the issues that are important to us, than for us to endorse them. I always vote for the sanctity of human life, religious liberty, the biblical definition of marriage, and for those who promise to preserve and protect our constitution through their Supreme Court appointments.
America does not need to be redefined historically, but rediscovered.
For American Christians, this year’s election – perhaps, more than any other in my lifetime – demands our thinking, our prayers, and especially our action.
Whatever we do this week, we must not stay at home. When November 9 comes, and the election is over, may it be declared that this was the year the greatest number of Christians voted in American history.
Let’s make this a November to remember.
Now is the Time to Lead,
Ronnie W. Floyd
Senior Pastor, Cross Church
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Dr. Ronnie Floyd is the Senior Pastor of Cross Church, immediate past President of the Southern Baptist Convention, and founder of the Cross Church School of Ministry.
To request an interview with Dr. Ronnie Floyd
contact Gayla Oldham at (479) 751-4523 or email gaylao@crosschurch.com.
Visit our website at http://ronniefloyd.com
Follow Dr. Floyd on Twitter and Instagram @ronniefloyd
It’s A Simple Decision: One Candidate Supports Partial-Birth Abortion
In every election, abortion remains at the center of my decision making. It’s a moral issue and it’s a constitutional one. The Bible and our Constitution undeniably prioritize the value of human life.
While I never endorse candidates, I could never support a candidate who advocates taking the life of a child, and in Hillary Clinton we have a candidate who not only calls for the continuation of abortion, but also defends late-term abortion, the most barbaric form of abortion.
“I want a Supreme Court that will stick with Roe v. Wade and a woman’s right to choose… Now, Donald has put forth the names of some people that he would consider. And among the ones that he has suggested are people who would reverse Roe v. Wade… I think that would be a terrible mistake and would take us backwards,” said Sec. Clinton in the second presidential debate.
In the third debate, just three weeks shy of Election Day, Sec. Clinton was even more forthright about her position on abortion: “I will defend Planned Parenthood. I will defend Roe v. Wade…. We have come too far to have that turn back now.”
When moderator Chris Wallace pressed Sec. Clinton for specific answers on her position on late-term abortion Clinton remained unwavering in her opinion that late-term abortions were permissible. Clinton even famously voted against a ban on partial-birth abortion. It was the Supreme Court which eventually banned this unconscionable procedure in Gonzales vs. Carhart.
Just stop and think about this for a moment: Sec. Hillary Clinton has made it one hundred percent clear she intends on promoting abortion, using taxpayer dollars to do so, and has even been an unwavering supporter of partial-birth abortion. Of the bipartisan Hyde Amendment, which presently bans the use of taxpayer dollars to fund abortion, Sec. Clinton couldn’t have been clearer, “I think we should do everything we can to repeal the Hyde Amendment.”
For many evangelical Christians this position alone disqualifies her for office. It’s just that simple. Every abortion procedure is designed to end life.
Sec. Clinton has said that seeking to change abortion in America “would be a terrible mistake and would take us backward.” In the final presidential debate, she added, “We have come too far to have that turn back now.”
Yet I’d like to ask: when a doctor can insert a vacuum into a woman’s uterus and aspirate out a fetus or inject a drug that stops a baby’s heart and proceed to tear him or her apart, piece by piece, with forceps, is this not reflective of a society who is heading backward instead of forward?
This is also an especially critical moment for this issue.
Just last week the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a California law that would require crisis pregnancy centers to promote abortion. This decision is, as Dr. James Dobson has noted, a flagrant violation of the “constitutionally mandated rights to life and to religious freedom.”
Dr. Dobson went even further, “I have a simple word of advice to those pastors, priests and others who run California’s crisis pregnancy centers. If California attempts to enforce this law then do not comply. Make them put you in jail.”
I join with Dr. Dobson and millions of evangelicals who believe that life matters from the womb to the tomb. As a Christian, it’s my moral responsibility to use whatever influence I have, including my vote as a U.S. citizen, to “speak up for those who cannot speak for themselves, to ensure justice for those being crushed.” (Proverbs 31:8)
As I have stated before, I do not vote for candidates or even political parties—I vote for policies. In this complicated election, with all its scandals and revelations, the most important issues should determine our decision on November 8.
I believe abortion remains one of those issues that matters most, and I will not give my vote to a candidate who would allow a doctor to kill a nearly born baby.
This article was originally published by Newsmax on October 28, 2016.
Now is the Time to Lead,
Ronnie W. Floyd
Senior Pastor, Cross Church
*******
Dr. Ronnie Floyd is the Senior Pastor of Cross Church, immediate past President of the Southern Baptist Convention, and founder of the Cross Church School of Ministry.
To request an interview with Dr. Ronnie Floyd
contact Gayla Oldham at (479) 751-4523 or email gaylao@crosschurch.com.
Visit our website at http://ronniefloyd.com
Follow Dr. Floyd on Twitter and Instagram @ronniefloyd