Christian Post
 
_How Would Jesus Vote? New Book Looks at Evangelical Faith and  Politics_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/news/how-would-jesus-vote-new-book-looks-at-evan
gelical-faith-and-politics-57573/) 
Fri, Oct. 07, 2011 Posted: 01:00 PM EDT   
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Two evangelical Christians, one a Republican and the other a Democrat, roll 
 out their ideas on how the Bible applies to culture and politics in a new 
book,  titled Left, Right & Christ. 
Can a Democrat be a Christian? Should the government care for the sick? Do  
legalized abortions increase the number of abortions? These are just some 
of the  issues Lisa Sharon Harper and D.C. Innes undertake in this new book 
from Russell  Media. 
Harper, director of Mobilizing at Sojourners, and Innes, associate 
professor  of Politics at The King's College, offer mostly different responses, 
but 
do  agree that these are the type of conversations Christians should be 
having if  they already are not. 
Their conversation, stemming from different world views, opens a field for  
Christians to discuss political issues and their relevance to Scripture  
openly. 
Left, Right & Christ also gives a good idea of how one  Christian 
denomination can contain people with vastly differing views on the  world and 
politics. To compare those views, and to present them to the public in  their 
full 
range is important, according to Harper and Innes. 
Often times, a book like Left, Right & Christ, which involves  two authors 
presenting their respective arguments, gives readers the opportunity  to 
consider the arguments on both sides, Harper told The Christian Post. 
Harper's and Innes' differing views often stem from different ways of  
interpreting Scripture. 
"I hope my argument [in the book] is compelling," Innes told CP. "Obviously 
 more biblically faithful [than Harper's]. Lisa tries to be biblically 
faithful.  I think her hermeneutic is off. But we have a conversation that will 
help people  take the Bible more seriously; take its application more 
seriously, and not be  afraid to talk to one another about the fundamental 
political issues. Explore  why are they different." 
"[Innes] approached Scripture very theoretically," Harper told CP  
separately. 
He looks at the Scripture, interprets it, and then applies it, she added. 
But  Harper often does the opposite, she said. She takes questions from life 
to  Scripture. If she then manages to find a story in the Bible that 
corresponds to  the issue in question, she will draw conclusions from the text. 
But the authors seem to agree on at least one issue – that it is important, 
 especially in public life, not only to profess your religion, but to put 
their  faith into practice. 
"I think how [religion] is being used in politics is really the question,"  
Harper said. "It's not enough for candidates or legislators to profess 
faith.  What really matters is the policies that they propose and push." 
Most importantly, she added, it is important that the policies they push 
are  actually about the values that their religion supports. 
"Professing faith is very easy to do, and that's really using religion;  
that's using religion for other means and to gain political points," Harper  
said. "We're in very confused times, and very polarized times. So it would be 
 easy for evangelicals to put down their Bibles, and pick up ideologies; 
their  party's politics. But I think that's lazy, and I also think that's not  
faithful." 
She added that Left, Right & Christ was written in order to  give 
evangelicals an opportunity to wrestle with important contemporary  questions 
together with the authors. 
"We may not know how Jesus would vote, but Harper and Innes help us 
solidify  what we actually believe and where we are in terms of our faith and 
politics,"  the book's press release adds. 
Both authors gave a short lecture in New York on Thursday, followed by a 
book  signing and a panel discussion featuring prominent Christian speakers 
Jim  Wallis, CEO of Sojourners, and Richard Land, president of the Southern 
Baptist  Convention's Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission. 
Both Wallis and Land were happy to chime in on the conversation since they  
are also both evangelicals, yet have differing political views. Land 
supports  small government and little regulation. Wallis was a spiritual 
adviser 
to  President Barack Obama. His work focuses on social justice. They join the 
idea  enclosed in the title, with the Left (Wallis) and the Right (Land) 
trying to  find common ground on the issue of Bible and politics. Or to at 
least clearly  state their arguments.
Luiza Oleszczuk
Christian Post Contributor   
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