Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
More on Putting Politics in its Place
More on Putting Politics in its Place
Jul 1, 2026 9:59 AM

Last week Jordan Ballor and I offered short addresses to the crowd that gathered for Acton on Tap in Grand Rapids. This is an essay that closely mirrors ments from the event. It’s a sermon of sorts, and a personal testimonial too.

— — — — — —

Remarks on the “Limit of Politics” for Acton on Tap:

I love elections. Elections produce drama, conflict, and intrigue. It produces statements like this by the former Louisiana governor and federal convict Edwin Edwards: “The only way I can lose this election is if I’m caught in bed with either a dead girl or a live boy.”

When I was in high school and college my biggest dream besides being a Congressman with an office full of young SEC cheerleader interns, was to be a campaign super consultant, just like two heroes of mine Ed Rollins and Lee Atwater. I idolized them through books and television. You should read Bareknuckles and Backrooms by Ed Rollins and the bio of Lee Atwater titled Bad Boy to get some of the behind the scenes ugliness, conflict, and humor of American politics.

As my parents could tell you I could name all the candidates who were running for president in 1988. I knew what they stood for, where they were from, and what scandals were attributed to them. I knew what Gary Hart was doing with Donna Rice. In kindergarten I advocated for Ronald Reagan in the classroom and even remember kicking over a Walter Mondale sign.

When I was wrapping up with college the dream never died. I had worked in campaigns and I decided to intern in a Washington congressional office after interning in my congressman’s district office. Well, when I got up to D.C. it wasn’t that awesome. There was one particular nasty woman who gave me hell. I saw a lot of back stabbing and bitterness. I saw first hand some of my heroes were lushes who walked around the capital with bourbon on their breath and bloodshot eyes. And that was at 10 a.m.

My best friend that summer was 15 years older than me and a former Air Force navigator who was in law school and also my roommate. And that’s because growing up as a military brat I could relate to him and simply because he wasn’t a jerk. Washington is a lonely place. Harry Truman once quipped, “If you want a friend in Washington, get a dog.”

I remember feeling very heart broken and discouraged that summer. I think one day I got yelled at over something trivial and inconsequential, and, while walking through the famed Statuary Hall in the Capital Rotunda, I saw the statue of Father Damien of Molokai who literally gave his life for the lepers on the island of Molokai. My eyes welled with tears and I was once again reminded there are servants who greatly contrast other servants. The statue was recognizable to me because I use to live in Hawaii and a bigger statue is at the Capital Building in Honolulu. It was a reminder that there was shallowness within our political system and the country – and really the redemptive promise of the work of the Lord and our faith is the only thing that can transcend that.

Soon after that I met a family from a rural South Georgia on the metro. And I said I would give them a tour of the Capital and it was a breath of fresh air. These were real Americans, kind, considerate, faithful Christians, not drunk on the orb of power and treachery.

The congressman I worked for, Gene Taylor (D-Miss) did help to reinforce something timeless and virtuous.

One day I was dispatched with the duty of locating him in the Rayburn House office building. The reason was simple; the Secretary of the Navy was waiting for him in his office. Some of the staff was panic stricken and mildly embarrassed because they could not ascertain his whereabouts and he was terribly late for the meeting. Congressman Taylor was not frequently attached at the hip with his cellular phone or pager. I remember looking in all the places you would look for a House member in the Rayburn building and not being able to locate him. After I had given up, I preceded to walk up the stairs and found him talking with a maintenance worker in the stairwell.

I told him that the Secretary of the Navy was in his office and he nodded his head and introduced me to his friend, whom he treated like a celebrity, bragging up the individual’s fishing skills. While I did not always agree with the positions or votes he recorded on issues, Gene Taylor always reinforced the significance of treating people the same. He also taught me a valuable life lesson when he told me:

You know why I’m friends with the capital police, the maintenance workers, and mon fisherman down at the harbor? It’s because they will continue to be my friends when I am no longer a congressman.

I think that’s an important reminder that the Church should not give up its witness during this hour. And I think the Church can actually learn something from tea parties too. I see a lot of tea party members and groups engaged in this critical election hour. I don’t see the same kind of urgency from the Church. Where is the urgency for lost souls, for the unborn, for the marginalized and hurting? Why should we cede so many problems to Caesar?

I say this to the orthodox believing Christians, with no disrespect to anybody who might be a Latter Day Saint. But I think in many ways it’s almost appropriate that the spiritual leader of tea parties and really just a de facto spiritual leader at this time is a Mormon, because the Christian Church in a lot of ways is sleeping as I see it.

One of the great heritages of John Wesley and Methodism, which was in many ways a movement based on broader social change, is that within any first step of social change, whether it was abolition, reforming drunkenness, prison reform, or helping the poor, was conversion. In historical Methodism the change of heart was primary. And that is not the case anymore with a lot of Methodism today, which is truly sad. Methodism proves as a classic example because the bureaucracy (not the laity) has lost a lot of its witness because it has e too politicized. Bishops and agencies advocate for progressive policies above all else, and even create idols out of their political witness.

Transitioning back to Washington, I think ultimately what we see out of Washington is a call and a warning for us to be energized by the hour. And that’s why grassroots activism is so important. It starts in the home; it starts in the family, and in munity. The family is the primary inculcator of the moral culture in a society.

I remember seeing a clip on one of the 24 hour news channels poking fun at a tea party rally in Mississippi, because it was wholly religious. Tea parties are obviously different in different parts of the country, but what I saw in large part was sort of a mix between a Baptist revival with sermons and praise and worship music and a call for everybody to repent for national sins, not just Republican and Democrats. By making fun of it, the talking heads thought they were making fun of more simple minded people who dreamed of theocracy. But I saw it primarily as a deep recognition that our problems transcend the political and are entrenched in the very social fabric of the nation.

Because if you have a debt problem, why are you going to demand fiscal sanity from your leaders? If you don’t have a problem with infidelity, why would you care if your leaders could care less either?

The Civil Rights leader and former politician Andrew Young gives us guidance here. His book Uneasy Burden is a big reason for my calling to seminary and served as an inspiration to serving in ministry. The theme of his book and his work in the civil rights movement was from Luke 12: “From everyone who has been given much, much will be demanded; and from the one who has been entrusted with much, much more will be asked.” What witness do you want to give wherever God places you and whatever circumstances arise? How can you contrast your witness with the lowest forms of gutter politics?

So it is natural that a hedonistic culture is going to chase after quick fix political solutions to problems that plague them. The Church can respond because it does have answers to the deeper problems that plaque our nation and plague our soul. And it is up to all of you to stand up and offer a witness this day. If the people are virtuous, government can do some good things, but the people will do more good.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Distributism Is the Future (That Few People Want)
Over the years, many of us here at Acton have been engaged in long-running(and mostly congenial) feud with distributists. Family squabbles can often be the most heated, and that is true of this rivalry between the Christianchampions of distributism and the Christian champions of free markets here at the Acton Institute. We fight among ourselves because we have an awful lot mon. For example, we share the afocus on encouraging subsidiarity, self-sufficiency, and entrepreneurship. We also share arespect for rule...
Why It Was Always Going to Be Tubman on Our Money
Last Summer I predicted that Harriet Tubman would be replacing Alexander Hamilton on the $10 bill. I was almost right. She’ll be replacing Andrew Jackson. The U.S. Treasury announced last year that the $10 bill is the next paper currency scheduled for a major redesign — a process that takes years because of the anti-counterfeiting technology involved — and will feature a “notable woman.” The new ten will be unveiled in 2020, the 100th anniversary of the passage of the...
Video: Freedom and the Poverty Industry
Kris Mauren, executive director of the Acton Institute, kicks off the second season of the Free Market Series, a television program for American and Canadian audiences produced by The World Show in partnership with the Montreal Economic Institute and broadcast on PBS affiliates. In Episode 1, Mauren takes apart the “fatally flawed poverty industry” and talks about Acton’s Poverty Inc. documentary. Interview notes: Many people imagine that free markets are synonymous with self-interest and greed, but for Kris Mauren, freedom...
Religious shareholders attack ExxonMobil’s reputation, worry about oil giant’s ‘reputational risk’
The Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility, shareholder activists of the corporate God-fly variety, are gearing up for the May 25 ExxonMobil Corporation annual general meeting. The ICCR agenda isn’t about maximizing shareholder value, but seems far more intent on reducing it. For the record, your writer possesses no financial stake in ExxonMobil, but if he did it’s certain he’d be upset mightily at ICCR’s efforts to hobble the industry giant and send stock prices plummeting even further. The religious-left activists...
What Christians (Should) Mean When We Talk About Conscience
A new Pew Research surveyfinds that the majority of American Catholics (73 percent)say they rely “a great deal” on their own conscience when facing difficult moral problems. Conscience was turned to more often than the three other sources — Catholic Church’s teachings (21 percent), the Bible (15 percent) or the pope (11 percent) bined. While it never really went away, conscience is making eback among Christians. Over the past few years, the term conscience has been increasingly referenced in debates...
The ‘Tragedy’ of the (Boston) Common
Boston Common Asset Management bills itself as “a leader in global sustainability initiatives.” Why would an investment portfolio pany label itself with the appellation “Common” when it carries such negative baggage? As it turns out, BCAM embraces mon” as something positive. From the BCAM website: Beginning in 1634, the Boston Common served as mon pasture for cattle grazing. As a public good, the Common was a space owned by no one but essential to all. We chose the name Boston...
Time and Eternity: The Abiding Profit
“The temporal achievements of science, technology, inventions and the like also have a divine significance,” writesAbraham Kuyper in this week’s Acton Commentary, an excerpt fromCommon Grace: God’s Gifts for a Fallen World. With the destruction of this present form of the world, will the fruit mon grace be destroyed forever, or will that rich and multiform development for mon grace has equipped and will yet equip our human race also bear fruit for the kingdom of glory as that will...
Shave a Yak, Save a Planet: How to Choose a Climate Change Policy
Since today is Earth Day you’ll be hearing even more discussions than usual about the problem of anthropocentric climate change. What you aren’t likely to hear is sufficient consideration of the question, “What kind of problem is it?” Many people claim that it is an environmental problem. Some claim that it is a technological, scientific, or even moral problem. Others vigorously contend that is it not a “problem” at all. I believe that, first and foremost, anthropocentric climate change is...
Radio Free Acton: Magatte Wade on African Entrepreneurship
This week on Radio Free Acton, Magatte Wade joins us to discuss the challenges and rewards of being an entrepreneur in Africa. Too often, people in the West tend to think of Africa as a place to send aid rather than a place to engage in trade. Magatte is working to change that attitude while building her pany, Tiossan, as well asthe local economy in her native Senegal. Wadewill be joining us as a plenary speaker at Acton University in...
Ben Sasse on the Path to Ordered Liberty
Americans are growing in their distrust of the U.S. government and its leaders, with polls typically showing approval of Congress somewhere around 11%. As Senator Ben Sasse put it in his first remarks to the U.S. Senate, “The people despise us all.” “No one in this body thinks the Senate is laser-focused on the most pressing issues facing the nation,” he said, “No one. Some of us lament this; some are angered by it; many are resigned to it; some...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved