Posts Tagged ‘christians’

Claiming Biblical Principles as US Territory

Friday, June 12th, 2009

Now here’s an amazing christian screed. Its author, Roger Mullins, is definitely going on my must-read list if for no other reason than his entertainment value.

There are plenty of factual errors, overstatements and outright baffling claims made here. I want to focus one just one because, among them all, this is the only one that I haven’t encountered elsewhere before. It’s rare to find an original misstatement among these folks – another reason to add him to my reading list.

Mullins says “What was “popular” or “politically correct” was not taken into consideration when our leaders in that day drafted our Constitution and our Declaration of Independence. Which, by-the-way, made us the first and only country in the history of the world to have its government and society founded on predominantly Biblical principles.”

Really? OK, I’ll admit that the qualifier predominantly can make this an argument of greys. Plus the fact that he’s probably a Protestant evangelical – if it quacks like a duck – and rejects the idea that catholic equals biblical but still! Has Mullins never heard of the Vatican? That’s a country. And as the seat of the catholic church I think that it would be heard to deny that it was founded on biblical principles.

But setting that obvious example aside, how many other countries are based on principles or doctrines that can be argued to be as christian as those that established the US. (I question that claim, too. The founding fathers would by no stretch of the imagination recognize the modern evangelical christian as a brother.) If we accept Mullins argument that the US’s founding principles are christian then we have to accept that most countries’ are too.

What exactly are the principles he’s talking about? A peaceful society? Rule of law? Democratic rule? Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness? These aren’t principles over which christianity can claim a monopoly. As one founding father pointed out these principles are self evident. One doesn’t need a Santa Claus in the sky to grant them or teach them, an intelligent human seeking the best possible existence can realize their necessity.

Passionate, generalized, baseless arguments are what this diatribe – and most evangelical political thought – is based upon. It’s time to call people like Mullins out on it.

Does the Bible have a Position on Illegal Immigration?

Sunday, January 6th, 2008

First let me say that I don’t have a position on this issue. I really don’t. I don’t know a lot about it and most of what I read gets into, or at least alludes to, the economics of employment and how that affects prices of everything from warships to consumer goods. This kind of stuff makes my head hurt. Besides, ideologues on both sides of either issue can point to an economic study and declare that it supports their positions.

Here is one idea that I’ve heard discussed that seems to make a lot of sense. Why don’t we enforce the existing labor laws as they apply to employers as well as individuals? I know that this will cause a lot of financial heart-ache across the country but it is the law, after all. But I’m not here to discuss that. Like I said, I know very little about it.

I want to talk about the Christian Coalition’s position on this issue. You can find it here. The short piece starts out by mischaracterizing the position of the left on this issue. Truth be told, people within both parties take very different positions on this issue. While the writer of this piece can profit with her audience by oversimplifying then bashing the opinion of the left, her logic falls apart based on the facts in her article alone. She claims that 82% of the population of the US wants to keep aliens out of the country then she assigns the opposite opinion to that pesky left wing. In our two-party system a “left-wing” couldn’t survive with only 18% of the population.

But even that isn’t what I want to focus on here. (I’m having trouble staying on track!) My issue is that, rather focusing on the facts and figures of the present to support her argument, the author thought that it would be a nice touch to throw in something from the bible. The passage she chose is Deuteronomy 27:17. I’m going to quote it below but I want to you to stop reading this right now and go get a copy of the bible. Look up the passage and read it for yourself. Read the whole chapter so you can get the context.

This is something that politically active Christians love to do. They scour their book for any verse that can be read in a way that supports their argument. It matters not a bit if the actual contextual meaning – you know, the author’s intention – has anything to do with the argument that the Christian is trying to support. That’s one of the beauties of a book packed with parables, verse, obscure law, and traditional history. It can be made to support anything. It has been used to support slavery, oppression of women, human rights, peace, war, gay bashing, gay rights, creationism, evolution and almost any other political issue you care to come up with.

But I’ve drifted again. If you did as I told you to do then you’ve read that passage by now. My NIV says “’Cursed is the man who moves his neighbor’s boundary stone.’ Then all the people shall say, ‘Amen!’” That version makes discussion of context less vital. But other versions replace boundary stone with things like boundary or landmark. So, the argument goes, God wants us to protect and respect our borders.

This is obviously a discussion of rules governing individuals’ actions. Also included in this list of don’ts is don’t lead blind people down a road that they don’t want to take, don’t build idols, don’t dishonor your parents, don’t sleep with your dad’s wife and, my favorite of this lot, don’t kill your neighbor secretly. I could go on but you get the point. “Neighbor’s boundary stone” has nothing to do with national borders.

The other verse that the author sites is Romans 13:1-2 – that tired bit that says that you should follow the law because it wouldn’t be the law if God didn’t allow it. (Remind me again why it’s OK to fire bomb legal abortion clinics and murder abortion doctors?) I’m surprised that she didn’t fall back to the even tireder “render unto Caesar…” When Christians whip out these verses you know it’s because they couldn’t anything more relevant to their argument.

But let’s, for a moment, embrace the idea that the Bible really does support the idea of national boundaries. The obvious argument is that most of the folks living in America should head back to Europe, Africa, and Asia because we didn’t respect the boundaries of the Native Americans. And even they need to hustle on out because they supplanted another people with a more ancient claim to the land when they arrived. Should all nations return to the borders they occupied when these verses were written? Since most of what’s described in the Bible is mythical that would be impossible but it might be fun to try.

Of course these arguments are insane and trying to apply anything in the Bible directly to the immigration debate is impossible. It is an issue inhabited almost entirely by grey areas and trying to find the answer within the narrow tenants of a black and white religion like Christianity is impossible. This complex issue needs patient debate, human wisdom and compromise; things to which Christians hate turning.