Today on Fox News Brian Kilmeade joked, On November 5, 2024, we will see whose side is GOD on." This statement shows what Republicans have believed and stood on for years; that GOD belongs to them. They campaign on the idea of if you are NOT a Republican, then you are against God like the Democrats. It is almost a TEST for them in determining if you are a Christian or not. Any behavior that is objectional should always be overlooked as long as the person espouse THEIR Christian message of being AGAINST the sins they deem IMPORTANT. Sins such as abortion, homosexuality, and transgender people top the list of Republican as battle for righteousness. The only criminals they are willing to acknowledge are illegal aliens and crimes committed by people of color. Mass shooters even get a pass because they have the right to own a gun/assault rifle and are usually white with a Republican leaning and agenda. Manifestos and social media posts are littered with false information presented by Republican leaning news commentators.
HAS POLITICS TURNED INTO A TEST OF CHRISTIANITY? SHOULD EVERYTHING BE TURNED INTO A TEST OF CHRISTIANITY? AND IF SO, WHO IS THE TESTER GIVING THE SCORE OF PASSING?
Republicans will use GOD as they feel fit to do. Not long ago, there is a clarion call for all Christians to head to Texas for a day of fasting and prayer by Govenor Rick Perry on August 6, 2011. Christian radio commentator Brian fisher has said lawsuits filed by atheists against a governor calling for a day of prayer (because they believe it infringes on separation of church and state) is just another case proving liberals HATE God.
With so much verbal animosity going on in the public sphere (cable news and radio) between Republicans and Democrats; my mind cannot help but think about the Civil War.
Clear lines were drawn between the North and the South during the Civil War. The president was caught between a rock and a hard place and the one sure person each side could aim their venom and feel a sense they were comrades against a common enemy (a scapegoat for all anger and frustration; relevant or not), was President Lincoln.
One question historians have posed since the Civil War was the CLAIM OF GOD BY BOTH FACTIONS. How could this be possible? Could God be on the side of both the North and the South? And I wondered, with Brian Fisher's assumption that all democrats hate God aside - can both Republicans and Democrats have a CLAIM OF GOD while being vicious enemies each fighting for victory in politics? The Brian Fisher comment happened in 2011 and Brian Kilmeade's comment happened May 31, 2022. Is it true, God CHOOSES a side between Republicans and Democrats?
I address this very point in my book, in chapter two of my book "The Politics of Prayer." Here is an excerpt from the chapter dedicated to the topic (the book sites reference for quotes and other material):
"Involvement in politics is part of being a citizen of the United States. It is a privilege to participate in the Democratic process and I encourage every American citizen to become active in local and national elections and affect policy changes. The point I want to stress in this chapter is we are not on one side or another of politics, but we are on God’s side. Stanley Hauerwas reminds the Christian that there is a temptation, once the Christian becomes involved in politics, for leaders and people in general to convince one another that they alone are on God’s side, while those that disagree with them are completely evil. Christians can confuse political power with faithful witness."
One year, while watching a program about the Civil War on the History Channel, I was amazed to realize both generals of the North and the South prayed to God for victory. Both of the generals were earnest and persistent in their religious request to be the victor of God for a cause they each believed in their souls. If God answered the prayers of the general of the South would that mean all of the participants of the opposition were evil and deserved to die? If God answered the prayers of the general of the North would that mean all of the participants of the opposition were evil and deserved death? Was one group Christian and the other group sinners? How could two groups with differing views on slavery both pray to God, and both claim to be Christian?
In “The Bible and Slavery” (Religion and the American Civil War), Mark Noll asserts that the availability and widespread access and limitless use of the Bible in a society where each individual was concerned with their own growth and prosperity; framed by the conflict of slavery – ultimately led to war. Both North and South would turn to the Bible as the ultimate source in answering the dilemma of slavery, but in radically opposite manners. Northerners appealed to the spirit of the Bible (liberalism) in opposing slavery, whereas southerners appealed to the letter of the Bible (literalism) in defending slavery. These competing biblical claims helped shape public perceptions that led to secession and war.
Robert McKenzie said that Mark Noll’s views on the Civil War were those believing there to be a theological crisis and referred to Abraham Lincoln’s observation in his second inaugural address. Lincoln stated that both the North and the South had read the SAME Bible in which America had relied upon to build America’s Republican civilization. Noll would assert that the Bible was not as unifying for an overwhelmingly Christian people as they had believed.
People can remember when Donald Trump held up a Bible outside St. John's Church across from Lafayette Park in Washington D.C. on June 1, 2020. This act signified to his followers that he was a Christian, on the side of good. Once again allowing people to have the choice between GOOD and EVIL instead of actual actions which were far from Christian. Trump pointed to GOD, instead of his actions. Political policies and the breaking of laws were no longer the issue.
• Belief that America was preparing the way for the kingdom of God on earth helped to inspire the loyalty of both the Union soldiers and those on the home front.
• The conviction that blood needed to be shed in order for the nation to be reborn undoubtedly stiffened the resolve of bluecoats and civilians alike to endure unprecedented
• Staggering losses.
• Without the churches' growing conviction that the hand of Providence was indicating the need to end slavery; it is unlikely that the government would eventually have embraced full emancipation as a war aim.
Protestant churches, in particular helped in the effort of Reconstruction in the years following the war. Reconstruction was based on the ideals of the so-called Radical Republicans (the Democratic party now). This was a Reconstruction in which the vote would be available (in the language of the Fifteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution) to all regardless of "race, color, or previous condition of servitude.
Drew Gilpin Faust, in The Creation of Confederate Nationalism: Ideology and Identity in the Civil War South (1988), argues that religion played a central role in the shaping of a southern nationalism which both defended and criticized the South. It is clear that Southerners were certain God was on their side and they would be victorious because they were His chosen people.
There is no doubt the average Confederate soldier was devoutly Christian. They came from families strongly influenced by the camp meetings of the Great Revival that had swept thru Kentucky, Tennessee, and the Carolinas in the early parts of the nineteenth century. Most were of Methodist, Baptist, or Presbyterian heritage. Many carried their Bibles from home into battle as well as a Soldier's Prayer Book.
For the Confederate soldier the basis of their faith can be found collectively as The Roman Road printed in 1861:
The Roman Road to Salvation:
Romans 3:23 (KJV) For all have sinned and come short of the glory of God.
Romans 6:23 (KJV) For the wages of sin is death; But the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.
Romans 5:8 (KJV) But God commendeth his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.
Romans 10:9 (KJV) That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved.
Romans 10:13 (KJV) For whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.
Romans 10:10 (KJV) For with the heart man believeth unto righteousness; and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation. The Soldier's Prayer Book was a pocket-sized book that contained a collection of prayers for different occasions as well as assorted hymns and psalms.
When people begin to choose political sides and equate Christianity with those choices, there is the danger or temptation of turning a cause, as righteous as it may be, into a test of Christianity by man. God has given the criterion for who is and is not a Christian. Christianity cannot be judged by deeds alone even though actions are good indicators of one’s religious belief. I have heard many Christians state “I am a die-hard-Republican” or “I am a die-hard-Democrat” or “I am a die-hard-Patriot.” It would be music to God’s ears if they would say “I am a die-hard-Christian.”
So, as the country becomes more divided between political parties, we must remember, this is nothing new. Our nation fought brother against brother and believed in their cause, philosophy, moral conviction or whatever label they wanted to use to justify the battle. And sadly, each decided God was on their side and GOD became the ultimate weapon in the man-made war. I encourage people to learn history because it has a tendency to repeat itself.
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