S
SoCalRC
Guest
If more people wholly vote their faith, their votes wonāt be āwastedāā¦And that complaining will accomplish what?![]()
I actually see this theme a lot in biblical studies from Africa and Latin America. The first step in altering oppression is to change the behaviors of the oppressed. However, the final outcome depends a great deal on what new behaviors are adopted.
If we allow a political party to lay claim to our absolute teachings using the narrowest possible definition and rhetoric, then we cannot complain when there is no measurable progress and the same party is comfortable having pro-abortionists as front runners for President.
We allow the bar to be set absurdly low, and then have nothing to do but howl when it goes lower still because we have bought in to a myth of earthly political power. In other words, we donāt dare āleaveā becase we have convinced ourselves that there is no better alternative to superficial power in a system that is not producing the results we want.
But if we just abandon fear and our belief in earthly power, we can stand with God. Just by shedding the label of āpolitical baseā, we are potentially empowered. We become a vote to be actively wooāed, not taken for granted. And the future is potentially better. It is predicted that Catholics will grow to 50% of the US population in the coming decades. Most of this is driven by the growth in our Hispanic population. Under the current political entanglements, this political power is seriously diminished - because of the āpragmatismā that ties together political alliances.
But again, just standing with God and foresaking the earthly power brokering and political alliances would make us very powerful indeed. It is the chasing of false illusions of power instead of dutifully following the one true power that makes us weak and largely ineffective.