Purple Haize wrote: ↑November 16th, 2020, 10:41 pm
Jonathan Carone wrote: ↑November 16th, 2020, 4:11 pm
Why am I a “dang libruhl” because I think climate change is real and think we should be doing things to care for the planet?
Why am I less of a Christian because I think sensible gun control legislation is a conversation we should be having?
In what way am I a Marxist who isn’t a true Christian because I think we should be providing healthcare and other opportunities to low income parents?
These are all things said to me or about me over the last few years by Christians who didn’t even bother to ask the motivation behind why I feel this way. We have lost the ability to disagree with each other and still realize we’re one in Christ.
And herein lies the problem. Intermixing Religious beliefs with Political philosophy
What does Gun Control have to do with being a Christian?
Why is forcing someone else to pay for the upkeep of others a Christian virtue? Weren’t the teachings of Christ more about choosing to do things not forcing? I mean once you force someone to be virtuous, it losses it’s virtue.
Climate Change? Sure we can take that several different ways. Are you saying that God created something so Fragile that Man can destroy it? Or if you aren’t a Young Earther, the Climate has changed several times over the Earths existence so no big deal. Or do you mean we should make sure we have clean air and water, which most Conservationists agree with and has little to nothing to do with whether or not Man Made Climate change is a thing
Or we can focus on Gods love and saving us from our sins. Being a light to our neighbor. Spending more time concerned about my actual neighbor than my metaphorical one.
The only thing I want to push back on is this philosophy of separating political philosophy and religious belief. For one, I don’t think it’s actually possible. A quick example that probably shows this for everyone here: where do you stand on abortion and why? The answer is always going to come from a religious foundation.
And if your faith informs your politics, as I believe it should, your faith should inform where you stand on gun control, social programs, and climate change, to use your examples. Now, what’s troubling is when disagreements about how to apply Christian ethics to these issues is used, as someone said earlier, to shame the other.
It brings me back to my soapbox about modern Christian Gnosticism- the idea that secret knowledge of the right doctrine is what saves you. People may not tell you that’s what they believe, but they sure do act like it. To Jon’s point earlier about being called “not a true Christian” or rtb72’s example of being called a “phony” Christian: people are implying that they aren’t saved because they don’t believe the “right” doctrine, even if they might say the right things about where salvation actually comes from. It elevates these ancillary issues to central and it follows that people get very touchy around them because of it.
One of my guiding principles for the past few years as I’ve really dug into the Christian world outside of the evangelicalism I was raised with is from an old Lutheran theologian:
“In Essentials Unity, In Non-Essentials Liberty, In All Things Charity”
One of the lies of the modern Gnostics is that everything is essential. In losing non-essentials we’ve lost liberty and it seems also charity.