AD| Maximize Your Ministry Training and Effectiveness
http://l.salemweb.net/tcs0104m/mic/
_____________________________


The Al Mohler Crosswalk Commentary � 
http://www.crosswalk.com/news/weblogs/mohler/


Friday, September 3, 2004

Welcome to the Al Mohler Crosswalk Commentary, a free newsletter from
Crosswalk.com. This daily email offers timely and informative commentary
on current headlines from one of today�s best Christian communicators.
Note: If this newsletter no longer meets your needs, please use the
unsubscribe link at the bottom of this newsletter and you will be
removed immediately.


>>  Engaging the City of Man: Christian Faith and Politics

Over the last 20 years, evangelical Christians have been politically
mobilized in an outpouring of moral concern and political engagement
unprecedented since the crusade against slavery in the 19th century. Is
this a good development? With the 2004 presidential campaign now under
way, the issue of political involvement emerges anew with urgency.

To what extent should Christians be involved in the political process?

This question has troubled the Christian conscience for centuries. The
emergence of the modern evangelical movement in the post World War II
era brought a renewed concern for engagement with the culture and the
political process. The late Carl F. H. Henry addressed evangelicals with
a manifesto for Christian engagement in his landmark book The Uneasy
Conscience of Modern Fundamentalism. As Dr. Henry eloquently argued,
disengagement from the critical issues of the day is not an option.

* * * * * * * * * * * * ADVERTISEMENT * * * * * * * * * * *

How can you change the world?  Help save a child through 
World Vision�s child sponsorship program. For just $26 a 
month, you�ll provide clean water, regular medical care, a 
secure food supply, and access to education. Request your 
no obligation packet today!
http://l.salemweb.net/worldvision0604/cwcomm/090304/

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

An evangelical theology for political participation must be grounded in
the larger context of cultural engagement. As the Christian worldview
makes clear, our ultimate concern must be the glory of God. Building
from that, we understand that when we are instructed by Scripture to
love God and then to love our neighbor as ourselves, we are given a
clear mandate for the right kind of cultural engagement.

We love our neighbor because we first love God. In His sovereignty, our
Creator has put us within this cultural context in order that we may
display His glory by preaching the gospel, confronting persons with
God's truth, and serving as agents of salt and light in a dark and
fallen world. In other words, love of God leads us to love our
neighbor--and love of neighbor requires our participation in the culture
and in the political process.

Writing even as the Romans Empire fell, Augustine, the great bishop and
theologian of the early church, made this case in his monumental work,
The City of God. As Augustine explained, humanity is confronted by two
cities--the City of God and the City of Man. The City of God is eternal,
and takes as its sole concern the greater glory of God. In the City of
God, all things are ruled by God's Word, and the perfect rule of God is
the passion of all its citizens.

In the City of Man, however, the reality is very different. This city is
filled with mixed passions, mixed allegiances, and compromised
principles. Though the City of God is marked by unconditional obedience
to the command of God, citizens of the City of Man demonstrate deadly
patterns of disobedience, even as they celebrate and claim their moral
autonomy, and then revolt against the Creator.

Of course, we know that the City of God is eternal, even as the City of
Man is passing. But this does not mean that the City of Man is
ultimately unimportant, and it does not allow the church to forfeit its
responsibility to love its citizens. Love of neighbor--grounded in our
love for God--requires us to work for good in the City of Man, even as
we set as our first priority the preaching of the gospel--the only means
of bringing citizens of the City of Man into citizenship in the City of
God.

Thus, Christians bear important responsibilities in both cities. Even as
we know that our ultimate citizenship is in heaven, and even as we set
our sights on the glory of the City of God, we must work for good,
justice, and righteousness in the City of Man. We do so, not merely
because we are commanded to love its citizens, but because we know that
they are loved by the very God we serve.

>From generation to generation, Christians often swing between two
extremes, either ignoring the City of Man or considering it to be our
main concern. A biblical balance establishes the fact that the City of
Man is indeed passing, and chastens us from believing that the City of
Man and its realities can ever be of ultimate importance. Yet, we also
know that each of us is, by God's own design, a citizen--though
temporarily--of the City of Man. When Jesus instructed that we are to
love our neighbor as ourselves, He pointed His followers to the City of
Man and gave us a clear assignment. The only alternatives that remain
are obedience and disobedience to this call.

Love of neighbor for the sake of loving God is a profound political
philosophy that strikes a balance between the disobedience of political
disengagement and the idolatry of politics as our main priority. As
evangelical Christians, we must engage in political action, not because
we believe the conceit that politics is ultimate, but because we must
obey our Redeemer when He commanded that we must love our neighbor.

We are concerned for the culture not because we believe that the culture
is ultimate, but because we know that our neighbors must hear the
gospel, even as we hope and strive for their good, peace, security, and
well-being.

The Kingdom of God is not up for vote in the 2004 elections, and there
are no polling places in the City of God. Nevertheless, it is by God's
sovereignty that we are now confronted with these times, our current
crucial issues of debate, and the political decisions that will be
answered in the electoral process.

This is no time for silence, and no time for shirking our
responsibilities as Christian citizens. Ominous signs of moral collapse
and cultural decay now appear on our contemporary horizon. A society
ready to put the institution of marriage up for demolition and
transformation is a society losing its most basic moral sense. A culture
ready to treat human embryos as material for medical experimentation is
a society turning its back on human dignity and the sacredness of human
life.

Trouble in the City of Man is a call to action for citizens of the City
of God, and that call to action must involve political involvement as
well. Christians may well be the last citizens who know the difference
between the eternal and the temporal, the ultimate and the urgent. God's
truth is eternal and Christian convictions must be commitments of
permanence. Political alliances and arrangements are, by definition,
temporary and conditional. This is no time for America's Christians to
confuse the City of Man with the City of God. At the same time, we can
never be counted faithful in the City of God if we neglect our duty in
the City of Man. That's a good principle to remember as America gears up
for a political season.

____________________________________

R. Albert Mohler, Jr. is president of The Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky.  For more articles and resources by
Dr. Mohler, and for information on The Albert Mohler Program, a daily
national radio program broadcast on the Salem Radio Network, go to
www.albertmohler.com.  For information on The Southern Baptist
Theological Seminary, go to www.sbts.edu.  Send feedback to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


>>  Visit Crosswalk�s News channel for more great articles and weblogs
on the latest news from a Christian worldview.
http://www.crosswalk.com/news/


____________________SUBSCRIPTION INFO_______________________

* This newsletter is never sent unsolicited.  To unsubscribe
from this newsletter immediately, simply click on the link below.
If this link is not clickable, simply cut and paste it into the
address bar of your browser.

http://www.salememail.com/unsub/225/1698058.aspx


* Copyright � 2004 Salem Web Network and its Content
  Providers. All rights reserved. 

1698058

____________________________________________________________

TRINITY COLLEGE & SEMINARY OFF CAMPUS & ONLINE  
Experience Personal & Ministry Growth
Through Bible-Focused Degree Programs
Associate and Bachelor of Arts
Master of Arts, M.Div., Doctor of Arts, Doctor of Ministry
http://l.salemweb.net/tcs2003tr/footer/
____________________________________________________________








Questions or comments can be sent to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 











------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
$9.95 domain names from Yahoo!. Register anything.
http://us.click.yahoo.com/J8kdrA/y20IAA/yQLSAA/BCfwlB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/kumpulan/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 



Reply via email to