Hardly! What that means is that it’s OK to take the wins that present themselves, and then you continue the fight.
I think we’re saying the same thing two different ways.
Very few abortions are a response to a medical problem threatening the life of the mother. It is nowadays unheard of for the only medical treatment available to the mother (whose life is at risk from pregnancy) to be the murder of the baby.
We are a free society, and free people, not a theocracy. I simply believe it is unnecessary, and unwise, to impose legal bans on all sinful items. If you oppose abortion, don’t get one. But don’t infringe on the civil liberties of others.
Cali - you claim a desire to embrace a system of faith and morals (call it a Religion), and you find yourself drifting toward the Catholic church. Yet, you impose a requirement to subordinate that system of faith and morals to the law making of earthly States. Religion is from God, yet you say it must be subordinated to the laws of men - that is, what the State says is OK, is OK. Presumably, the only bad things are what the State says are bad? So why do you need to have any religion beyond the Laws of the State?
I never said religion should be subordinated to the laws of men. Rather, I advocate political pragmatism. Religion is still necessary because it answers the biggest existential questions, like what is the meaning of life.
And as I have previously remarked, what if the Church did not advocate that Catholics ought to lean on their representatives to adopt pro-life positions? What difference would that make? Certainly it has no bearing on the morality of abortion, which morality derives from God, not earthly laws. And I contend that few if any Catholics would change their vote - do you seriously suggests that all the “conservative Catholics” to whom you refer only vote the way they do because the Church tells them too?
It would have no bearing on the morality of abortion. But it still makes a huge difference, as then I can vote pragmatically. Yes, it is very possible that many Catholics vote a certain way because the Church tells them to. How else to explain one-issue voters? I have known Christians who say they would gladly vote for the other guy, if it weren’t for abortion, or gay marriages.
An interesting article I got on my other thread:
libertarianchristians.com/2008/11/25/new-testament-theology-1/
In each gospel, the question is prefaced differently, but the phrasing of the question itself is always the same: “Is it lawful for us to pay taxes to Caesar, or not?” The question is very clever. The Herodians would be for paying the tax, and if Jesus answers in the negative they have grounds to arrest him for rebelling against Caesar. On the other hand, the Pharisees would generally not like the tax (although they are forced to pay it), and an answer in the affirmative would likely result in a loss of popular support of Jesus. Furthermore, there is a subtle legal phrasing in the question by asking “is it lawful,” or in some translations “is it permitted.” In other words, the Pharisees are asking, “Is it consistent with Torah (Jewish Law) to pay the tax to Caesar or not?” All those present were aware of the law and of the words of Leviticus 25:23, “The land [of Israel] shall not be sold in perpetuity, for the land is mine.” The question is now more complicated because Torah may be at stake. Since Caesar is trying to take the land from God, is it not disobedience to pay the tax?
Jesus saw through the trickery, of course, and responds with a clever gambit of his own. When he asks the Pharisees to produce a coin, they unwittingly bring forth the very evidence that exposes their hypocrisy. Jesus asks them whose image and inscription is on the coin. They answer, probably reluctantly, “Caesar’s.” But they, and the surrounding people, realize their error, for the inscriptions on these coins would always read, “Tiberius Caesar, Augustus, son of the deified Augustus, chief priest.” **The Pharisees, those leaders expected to uphold the law of God, have brought into the temple an item that effectively breaks the second commandment, to have no graven images, showing that in their hearts they break the first commandment as well. They, not Jesus, are the hypocrites. They are the ones who bought into the Roman’s pagan system. **In commentator Thomas Long’s estimation, Jesus’ response means, “Everybody has to decide between Caesar and God. No man can serve two masters (Matt. 6:24). You seem to have made your decision, forged your convenient compromise. But what about your obligation to God? Render to God what belongs to God. Choose this day whom you will serve” (251).
If this interpretation is correct, then there is effectively no guideline set forth here for resolving church and state issues. State practices are not legitimized here by any means. Rather, Jesus says that any neat schemes of division in life that we create must come down, and discourages nationalism or jingoism as a legitimate church practice. We may live under a state, but we belong wholly to the God who is above all states. We are always to render to God what is God’s.
In summary, Jesus’ direct teachings about civil government are virtually non-existent, but the gospels make some strong implications about the nature of the state that might surprise us.
The state appears to have a strong connection to Satan and his kingdom, and is antithetical to the Kingdom of God, which shuns the use of power for personal gain.
If this is true, it lends credence to my contention that Jesus is above secular politics and does not really care which way political systems go, therefore making our votes irrelevant in his eyes.