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Pastor Chris White says to all of you: HELLO MY FRIENDS. May the Lord bless you today.
HOLA MIS AMIGOS. Que el Señor los bendiga.
Christians are frequently
accused of trying to impose their values or their beliefs on others. The
oft-heard accusation is that Christians are trying to “shove their religion
down our throats.” In addressing this question, we must also address the
implied accusation that Christians are an authoritarian group that seeks to impinge
on the rights of others. Of course, there have been tyrants who were professed
Christians, but true followers of Jesus Christ do not seek to infringe on
anyone’s basic human rights. The same God who granted volition to the believer
also granted volition to the unbeliever.
God extends His general blessings to everyone (Matthew 5:45);
therefore, freedom for all is a Christian value. Man is a special creation of
God (Genesis 1:27);
therefore, human dignity and respect for the individual are Christian values.
The application of these values in Western society has benefited everyone.
After all, who enjoys more freedom: the atheist in America, or the Christian in
Communist China?
Some say that it is wrong to try to “legislate morality.” We say that it is
impossible not to. Every law “imposes” someone’s moral “values” on someone
else. A law that prohibits murder, for example, imposes a belief that murder is
wrong and upholds the Christian tenet that human life has intrinsic worth.
Doubtless, society is better off with such a law in place.
Almost everyone agrees that murder, adultery, stealing, lying, and greed are
wrong. Most people agree that respecting one’s parents is right. This sense of
right and wrong, woven into the fabric of our society, reflects six of the
Bible’s Ten Commandments. Those
who object to the “imposition” of Judeo-Christian values should perhaps work to
repeal the laws against murder, perjury, and theft.
Christians don’t want to impose their values, but they do recognize that, in
every society, someone’s values must reign supreme. The question is whose
values will predominate? There is no such thing as a neutral value system.
Therefore, Christians work to advance their values in the sincere belief that,
in a world of competing convictions, Christian values best promote the general
welfare and preserve the domestic tranquility.
Christians don’t want to impose their values, but they do see the importance of
having an authority higher than ourselves. Societies which attempt to produce a
moral code based solely on human rationale can be manipulated by whoever has
the most votes or the most weapons. Whether it’s the case of a humanistic
despot such as Joseph Stalin or a collective tyranny such as the French
Revolution, the exclusion of Christian principles leads to less freedom, not
more.
Christians don’t want to impose their values, but they do want to live
peaceably in whatever society they dwell (Romans 12:18; 1 Timothy 2:2).
Christians are obligated to do good to all (1 Corinthians 6:10) and
to pray for everyone (1 Timothy 2:1).
Christ taught His followers to return blessing for cursing (Matthew 5:44), a
teaching which He modeled perfectly (1 Peter 2:23).
There are some who wish for a purely “secular” society where religion is
relegated to its cloister and all Christian opinion is silenced. To those
individuals, we offer these reminders:
1) Christians in a constitutional republic have as much right to be involved in
the political process as anyone else. This means they may vote, rally, lobby,
caucus, and hold office just like any other American—all the while promoting laws
that reflect their own values. Christians do not seek to subvert the political
process; they engage it, as it is the right of every American.
2) Christians in a pluralistic society have as much right to voice their
opinions as anyone else. This means they may broadcast, write, speak, publish,
and create art as they will—all the while voicing their own view of morality.
Christians are sometimes accused of censorship, on the basis that they have
criticized a certain book or have objected to their tax dollars funding
anti-Christian speech, but they are not burning books. The reality is that
freedom of expression is a Christian value.
3) Christians in a religiously free society have as much right to live out
their beliefs as anyone else. This means they may preach and teach the gospel
and live according to the Bible and their conscience. When a Christian says,
“You must be born again” (John 3:7), he
is not trying to impose his values; he is speaking the truth, which anyone is
free to accept or reject.
There is no doubt that when Christians share the joy that comes from faith in
Christ, some see that as an attempt to impose Christianity on others. But the
truth is that as Christians, we know that we have the antidote for human misery
in this life and an eternity in hell in the next. To not share that cure with
others, as we are commanded by Christ to do (Matthew 28:18-20),
would be like knowing the cure for cancer and refusing to share it with the
rest of the world. We can’t force our beliefs on anyone; all we can do is offer
them the cure and pray they will accept it. If some see that effort as
“imposing” our beliefs on them, that is a matter of their perception, not a
reflection of reality.
Thank you to Got Questions Ministries
© Copyright 2002-2019 Got Questions Ministries. All rights reserved.

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