Sunday, February 03, 2019

 

Sunday Reflection: Faith and Politics

I have a piece in the Waco paper today about one weird conundrum in our politics today: we get so tied up in the horse race aspect of elections and personality elements about candidates (ie, whether or not they are "tough") that too often we devalue actual policy-- the meat and potatoes of what politics is supposed to really be about. You can read the whole thing here.

Part of what seems to be off-limits is this: How a candidate's faith might influence what he or she does in office. It's a tricky subject (and has been since John F. Kennedy ran for president, at least). Broaching the subject is to invite religious bias into the conversation, we fear.

But that fear may stop us from asking important questions, and learning what politicians will do if elected. It even encourages dishonesty, as people running for office often feel compelled to disavow the influence of their faith. Sometimes, I suspect, that disavowal is not true.

And I probably don't want it to be true of the candidates I favor. It seems that the stock answer to the question I pose is to assert that faith will not affect performance of the job if elected. But if that is true... what kind of faith is that? I have trouble respecting someone who claims a faith, and then sidelines it in making the most important professional decisions.



Comments:
Sorry Mark, but I'd much rather politicians evidence their faith by their actions than by invocation in their speeches. I hear platitudes, cliche's, hypocrisy and bullshit. I think its rare that a candidate's profession of faith is any reflection of their true values. Candidates, please do not tell me about how devotion to your religion guides your decision-making if your policies and actions prove otherwise. Best to stick with the ideas presented in Mark's editorial. Policy over personality. Real consequences over perceptions.

 
I was trying to say that-- that politicians should be upfront about their baliefs, then act consistent with them. Everyone has principles, and if that is the source of a politician's principles, that's ok... we can agree or not. But, yeah, it is mostly bs to appease or appeal to people who vote.
 
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