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Christians and Politics(By John MacArthur)

This article is a continuation from yesterday. Also, the transcript from last night’s Larry King Live show can be read by clicking here. John MacArthur’s part in the show was at the very end.

LESSONS FROM SCRIPTURE

My point is not that Christians should remain totally uninvolved in politics or civic activities and causes. They ought to express their political beliefs in the voting booth, and it is appropriate to support legitimate measures designed to correct a glaring social or political wrong. Complete noninvolvement would be contrary to what God’s Word says about doing good in society: “Therefore, as we have opportunity, let us do good to all, especially to those who are of the household of faith” (Gal. 6:10; cf. Titus 3:1-2). It would also display a lack of gratitude for whatever amount of religious freedom the government allows us to enjoy. Furthermore, such pious apathy toward government and politics would reveal a lack of appreciation for the many appropriate legal remedies believers in democracies have for maintaining or improving the civil order. A certain amount of healthy and balanced concern with current trends in government and the community is acceptable, as long as we realize that that interest is not vital to our spiritual growth, our righteous testimony, or the advancement of the kingdom of Christ. Above all, the believer’s political involvement should never displace the priority of preaching and teaching the gospel.

There is certainly no prohibition on believers being directly involved in government as civil servants, as some notable examples in the Old and New Testaments illustrate. Joseph in Egypt and Daniel in Babylon are two excellent models of servants God used in top governmental positions to further His kingdom. The centurion’s servant (Matt. 8:5-13), Zaccheus the tax collector (Luke 19:1-10), and Cornelius the centurion (Acts 10) all continued in public service even after they experienced the healing or saving power of Christ. (As far as we know, the Roman proconsul Sergius Paulus also remained in office after he was converted [Acts 13:4-12].)

QuoteThe issue again is one of priority. The greatest temporal good we can accomplish through political involvement cannot compare to what the Lord can accomplish through us in the eternal work of His kingdom. Just as God called ancient Israel (Ex. 19:6), He has called the church to be a kingdom of priests, not a kingdom of political activists. The apostle Peter instructs us, “But you are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, His own special people, that you may proclaim the praises of Him who called you out of darkness into His marvelous light” (1 Pet. 2:9).

Jesus, as we would expect, perfectly maintained His Father’s perspective on these matters even though He lived in a society that was every bit as pagan and corrupt as today’s culture. In many ways it was much worse than any of us in Western nations has ever faced. Cruel tyrants and dictators ruled throughout the region, the institution of slavery was firmly entrenched—everything was the antithesis of democracy. King Herod, the Idumean vassal of Rome who ruled Samaria and Judea, epitomized the godless kind of autocratic rule: “Then Herod, when he saw that he was deceived by the wise men [concerning the whereabouts of the baby Jesus], was exceedingly angry; and he sent forth and put to death all the male children who were in Bethlehem and in all its districts, from two years old and under” (Matt. 2:16).

Few of us have experienced the sort of economic and legal oppression that the Romans applied to the Jews of Jesus’ day. Tax rates were exorbitant and additional government-sanctioned abuses by the tax collectors exacerbated the financial burden on the people. The Jews in Palestine were afforded almost no civil rights and were treated as an underprivileged minority that could not make an appeal against legal injustices. As a result, some Jews were in constant outward rebellion against Rome.

Fanatical nationalists, known as Zealots, ignored their tax obligations and violently opposed the government. They believed that even recognizing a Gentile ruler was wrong (see Deuteronomy 17:15, “You may not set a foreigner over you, who is not your brother”). Many Zealots became assassins, performing acts of terrorism and violence against both the Romans and other Jews whom they viewed as traitors.

It is also true that the Roman social system was built on slavery. The reality of serious abuses of slaves is part of the historical record. Yet neither Jesus nor any of the apostles attempted to abolish slavery. Instead, they commanded slaves to be obedient and used slavery as a metaphor for believers who were to submit to their Lord and Master.

QuoteJesus’ earthly ministry took place right in the midst of that difficult social and political atmosphere. Many of His followers, including the Twelve, to varying degrees expected Him to free them from Rome’s oppressive rule. But our Lord did not come as a political deliverer or social reformer. He never issued a call for such changes, even by peaceful means. Unlike many late twentieth-century evangelicals, Jesus did not rally supporters to some grandiose attempt to “capture the culture” for biblical morality or greater political and religious freedoms.

Christ, however, was not devoid of care and concern for the daily pain and hardships people endured in their personal lives. The Gospels record His great empathy and compassion for sinners. He applied those attitudes in a tangible, practical way by healing thousands of people of every kind of disease and affliction, often at great personal sacrifice to Himself.

Still, as beneficial and appreciated as His ministry to others’ physical needs was, it was not Jesus’ first priority. His divine calling was to speak to the hearts and souls of individual men and women. He proclaimed the good news of redemption that could reconcile them to the Father and grant them eternal life. That message far surpasses any agenda for political, social, or economic reform that can preoccupy us. Christ did not come to promote some new social agenda or establish a new moral order. He did come to establish a new spiritual order, the body of believers from throughout the ages that constitutes His church. He did not come to earth to make the old creation moral through social and governmental reform, but to make new creatures holy through the saving power of the gospel and the transforming work of the Holy Spirit. And our Lord and Savior has commanded us to continue His ministry, with His supreme priorities in view, with the goal that we might advance His kingdom: “All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on earth. Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all things that I have commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age” (Matt. 28:18-20).

In the truest sense, the moral, social, and political state of a people is irrelevant to the advance of the gospel. Jesus said that His kingdom was not of this world (John 18:36).

7 Responses to “Christians and Politics (Part 3)”

  1. on 19 Oct 2006 at 4:23 am Steven

    Dr. John,

    Thank you so much. When the grace of God enabled me to repent and obey His precious gospel, I fell in love with scripture. What I understood in scripture is exactly as you lay out here: That ours is a proclamation of the Gospel, becuase we know the failure in full reliance on men and institutions to redeem hearts in place of, and contrast with this Gospel. As a young person, I just wanted to say thanks, you have been a tremendous guide in this faith we share.

  2. on 19 Oct 2006 at 4:28 am Andrew

    “The greatest temporal good we can accomplish through political involvement cannot compare to what the Lord can accomplish through us in the eternal work of His kingdom.”

    AMEN!

  3. on 19 Oct 2006 at 6:21 am Jim

    Comment on the show:

    I was very disappointed at the amount of time given to this segment. I hope King does another program. Pastor John did a great job of uphoding the Word and the Gospel message.

    I thought Pastor John stood for the gospel w/o being antagonistic to the two gay men. The other pastor seemed to me to be more unapproachable if one of the men would want to have more discussion of their sin.

    The opening statement from Pastor John concerning Jesus’ kingdom is in harmony with his stand on political activism.

    I am excited that Pastor John has been used by God in this public arena. I know I appreciate his example of humility with confidence amidst such emotional topics.

    Jim

  4. on 19 Oct 2006 at 6:22 am Scott

    “In the truest sense, the moral, social, and political state of a people is irrelevant to the advance of the gospel. Jesus said that His kingdom was not of this world (John 18:36).”

    How easy it is for us to forget this! Thank you!

  5. on 19 Oct 2006 at 9:10 am Nate B.

    Here are John MacArthur’s excerpts from the Larry King Show… To read the entire transcript, click here.

    KING: John MacArthur, as an evangelical Christian, how do you look at all this [the Republican Party’s potential bias against homosexuals]?

    JOHN MACARTHUR: Well, I think Jesus put it simply when he said, “My kingdom is not of this world.” And I think what happens in the Republican party or the Democratic party or the United States Congress, the United States government is really irrelevant to the advancement of the Kingdom of God.

    The message of Jesus is to go unto under all the world to make disciples, not make Republicans. and I think our message is a message that Jesus died and rose again to save us from our sins and death Hell. And that is the message. And evangelicals have convoluted message, sublimated that message to a political agenda, they have missed the point.

    And in many ways we have turned the mission field into the enemy. Homosexuals are not our enemy. They are our mission field, like any other or all other sinners are.

    MACARTHUR: Well, there’s no question that you can’t enter the Kingdom of God … if you’re practicing homosexuality.

    KING: Should this be a political — should the Bible be involved in a political dispute?

    MACARTHUR: Well, we’re talking about two things here. On the one hand, we’re talking about who can be or not be in the Republican party. So just exactly which sinners are we going to exclude? Which ones? Are we going to throw out all the people who have been unfaithful to their wife? All the people who have cheated on their income tax? All the people who have falsified their reports, their expense reports? Are we going to take out all the people who watch pornography, broken any other kind of law? Just exactly where do we go with this morality thing? We’re not going to have anybody in any party because we’re all sinners. That’s one issue. We’re talking about party politics, and you can pick your party in America. You pay your taxes and you’re an American citizen.

    KING: Again, we promise to focus a lot more on this in limited time. We have an e-mail question from Jenny in Chicago. “Why do so many Republicans seem repulsed by the gay lifestyle?”

    MACARTHUR: And the answer to that is because the Bible clearly says that homosexuality is a sin.

    KING: But it says thievery is a sin.

    MACARTHUR: Well, sure. Thievery’s a sin. A lot of sin. Fornication is a sin. Adultery is a sin.

    KING: So why pick that one out?

    MACARTHUR: I think there’s an element of it that is so apparently abnormal, that is so perverse. The Bible always presents it as the end of the perversion line. You go from there to bestiality. Look at Romans Chapter 1, you start out with sexual immorality, then a society declines to…

    (CROSSTALK)

    SAMMON: Reverend, as a Catholic, I’m really offended listening to you. You’re so busy looking for specific words in the Bible that you actually miss the message of the Gospel. We’re supposed to love each other and love ourselves and love each other. And you’re really missing the core mission of the Gospel.

    MACARTHUR: Well, let me tell you this, that I have no problem loving you. I have no problem expressing that love to you, and my message of love to you as a friend who cares about you, is that, if you are a homosexual, Jesus Christ can forgive that sin just like he forgave all my sins, and he can forgive you and give you eternal life in heaven through his death and resurrection. And that’s the message of the Gospel.

    SULLIVAN: There are many things that Jesus needs to forgive me for, but being gay isn’t one of them. It’s the way he created me.

    MACARTHUR: Well, it is [a sin] according to the Bible.

  6. on 19 Oct 2006 at 9:43 am jsb

    If I could make one suggestion to John, it would be to eschew references to “bestiality” when discussing homosexuality on Larry King and the like. It is a word that drowns out the most important point, which is one of authority. The guests said God made them this way, etc. The key issue then is what gives them authority to say that? People need to be made to answer that question. There is so little time on these shows; this authority issue seems to me to be the place to concentrate for the viewing audience. Otherwise, it’s one side saying “perversion” and the other side saying, “God made me this way.”

    Other than that small cavil, it is so great to hear the gospel presented on a forum like King’s. John’s presence is always welcome.

  7. on 20 Oct 2006 at 7:17 am Nancy Likes

    When I visited Grace Church in 2001, John said “Truth is the most important thing in the universe.” And everytime I’ve heard or seen him since then, he’s always stood for truth….God’s Word….and it will not return void……to God be the glory!

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