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Opting Out Is Not An Option

Family Policy Matters / NC Family Policy
The Cross Radio
July 22, 2019 9:54 am

Opting Out Is Not An Option

Family Policy Matters / NC Family Policy

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July 22, 2019 9:54 am

This week on Family Policy Matters, NC Family Communications Director Traci DeVette Griggs talks with Dan Darling, pastor and Vice President of Communications for the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention, in Part 1 of this 2-part series. Darling discusses the importance of people of faith being involved in public policy and advocating for justice in our nation and the world.

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Government of the people by the people. So no harsher powers were voted through our poison in any way that we can influence it. We will be held accountable for that as well so I don't think there's an option for us to sort of not care about the laws that govern our communities and our country.

This is family policy numbers. A weekly radio show and podcast from NC family designed to better inform listeners about the critical issues of the day and encourage you to be voices of persuasion for family values in your communities. Thanks for joining us this week for family policy matter, I'm Tracy to that Gregg's communications director at NC family sitting in this week for John Reston when public policy gets uglier difficult. Many Christians are tempted to opt out to retreat to their churches and just concentrate on evangelism. I think we can all agree that our top priority. As Christians is to make disciples. However, in addition, as citizens of a country where we elect our leaders and where we have input in setting public policy.

We are held responsible for what those policies are abdicating that responsibility is really not an option will most of us know that, but it's always helpful to be reminded so today were joined by Dan Darling up pastor and VP of communications at the ethics and religious liberty commission of the Southern Baptist convention and working to discuss why American Christians have a duty to stay involved in the public policy arena.

Dan welcome to family policy matters.

Good to be with you guys are grateful for the really important work. You all are doing unknown or tomorrow. Thank you, Dan. Why should we as Christians care about secular laws and the number is number one euro laws ultimately are essentially how we order ourselves of the society, you know how given society ordered itself laws affect the flourishing of our neighbors over to love our neighbors as ourselves in our laws reflect the way that we think about our neighbors so you know people say that you can't legislate morality but every law is a reflection of a morality so if you have lost frictions against murder laws against embezzlement usually is decided that those two things are you know or are you making a moral statement by saying those two things are wrong and that we be one of laws that protect the vulnerable from crimes committed against them in that way. So I think we should care about the laws. I also think because we are citizens of a representative republic. When we read Romans 13, for instance, about the way that God delegates power to civil authorities and how God will judge civil authorities based on the how they rule, and in the welfare of their people not just talking, particularly in our society about those who are of our politicians are leaders, but in some ways he's talking to us as well because we have a share in the power were government of the people by the people for the people. So you know our share of power through our voters through our you know all voice in any way that we can influence it. We will be held accountable for that as well so that I don't think there's an option for us to sort of not care about the laws that govern our communities and our country. So what specific biblical principles. Do you feel like regulate our involvement in the relationship between religion and government, you just mentioned. Romans 13 any other things you can think of that we can take in the consideration want to get a basic level, the idea of human dignity that every person is created in the image of God in every person's dignity and worth.

And so, at the very basic level, we want to create societies that recognize laws that protect vulnerable image bearers from being exploited or assaulted laws that see reflect the dignity of of image bear so I think that at the very basic level, something that we should care about the Bible is a very robust vision for human decay. Starting in Genesis order talks about how every person is made in the image of God all the way through King David describing in Psalm 139 that every human being is knit in the womb of their mothers created with the care and concern, but by God and so you know laws that recognize.think is something that Christian should work for justice so how do we see the Bible's call for us to bring justice reflected in a way that would then influence how we look at public policy. While I think we should care about justice injustices really when you look to the Scriptures. Justices mentioned quite a bit of justice is you know many ways equated with righteousness. This idea that you know what is right what is just what reflects the glory of God in many ways its use as a kind of a way to describe the inner inequity or imbalances in society making things right. Justices about setting things right. We have a God of justice, so Christians should care about about justice and I think our specific application is it's it's merely you know where the areas in our civil society where the vulnerable are being exploited or assaulted Werther's gaps in terms of their ability to flourish. I think we should we should care about that now. There's ways that the word justice can be loaded when when it when you talk about social justice and he'll sometimes hear that people hear that word and think automatically sort of Marxism and all that but I don't think we should let that term be hijacked by the left-leaning ideologies.

I think justice is a very biblical term that we should we should care about. So if we care about it. As Christians, what we do when we are faced with unjust laws. Why think we should what we should do is try to work to do to change them. I mean, this is kind of part of the privilege we have at living in a representative republic that we have a an opportunity to make our voices heard. We can speak out on issues but we can also work to talk to our leaders and try to influence him to pass good legislation that rights those injustices that creates better laws and better legislation. We can use the ballot box and vote for people who will vote based on the right you know principles that will commit to making better laws that are more just you principles you take one particular shoe like the abortion issue.

You know that's that's an issue worked the current law of the land today as it stands is that the on all unborn people and in most states more people from conception to birth really are unprotected from from death that they are not considered full human beings.

This report is a concern for human beings believe that injustice and what the Scripture says there human beings. Image got so we as citizens of this Republic of representative republic. We should work hard to create laws that recognize the dignity of the unborn.

I don't think laws are all we need to do. I don't think that speaks that's the full extent of our activism. I think two other peers in terms of changing hearts and minds in terms of spreading the gospel in terms of discipleship, making arguments in the public square, but I think laws are big part of that so I think we should work to change laws are unjust listening to Stanley policy matters radio show and cast from the same family you can sign up to receive and to listen to the show online resources that will need ongoing persuasion. Anyone our website had family watching so we hear people say quite often that religious liberty or religion is fine within the church walls. But we don't have a right to bring a religion into government discussions, or perhaps in discussions about law and policy. What why is this a dangerous trap for believers to to allow that kind of language to be used, but also what we do in the face of that, you know, I think. Obviously laws can do everything right.

You know you could pass while you still have the dress accused of crimes but I think laws which reflect morality and they they help. I think rightly order a society, you know, I think the founders understood that you need both law you need the rule of law you need liberty, but you also need the condo mediating institutions like the church and in other institutions that outperform people in ways that laws can and can't really terrific book right now by Tim Carney called the elite elite in America and one of things she does as he walks are some of the data that he know the whole whole range of social ills that follow. When civil society is disrupted in communities when you don't have important particular people attending church, but also other metrics like marriage and and and other things like that so I think all those things work to really help people for such hearing you say that that the partnership between people of faith in their church and public policy is can be a really good partnership can be in a number so there's different callings right so you know not everyone, not every Christian is called to be a legislator, not every Christian is called to be an optimist, and in terms that interpret the let the level of making and creating public policy, but many are we. We need people at all levels of society.

We need Christians and and and every sector really kind of applying the gospel to their calling.

We need we do need good people in government when you need people in congressional staffs and in all these agencies to help create good policy and good call. We need people who are activists who we need people who are thinkers and scholars that say like thinking to really think deeply and long term about some really intractable problems and how we can solve them.

So I think I think the relationship would come course, Christians and government Christian hope all is really important. You know there's there's there's a thought that he know because we want separation of church and state, which means we want the government to stay out of the church's business in terms of, you know, infringing on the churches right to to practice religion freely. Sometimes we interpret that to mean the opposite, that the means Christians should not be involved in levels of government. Christian should not apply the faith of their work or to their public policy, and I think really that's up you know number one I don't think it's even possible.

Good everybody that comes to the table when it comes to government policy has a worldview. It has a face system and so I think it's just the person that is that the site is really wrong. So I think it's really important for Christian to be involved. All levels of society. I do think that the most important thing that happens every week, though, is what happens when people gather in church so as Christians, even though were involved in all levels of society, even though what were doing Texas what were doing is more than what were doing on Sundays. Nevertheless's of gathering weekly as is the people of God is always the most important thing that's happening that we can write decent people that are involved in public policy understand, or maybe minimize the power of prayer that is brought to these issues and we were commanded specifically to pray for our government leaders. Yeah I think so. I really think so and in and listen all of us who are involved in this public policy issues are involved on a day-to-day basis. Thinking about these things is very easy for us to to forget that were not all-powerful. That strategy and policy are vital and important, but ultimately our biggest and most important duty is to pray to to acknowledge our dependence on the Lord, that we cannot do our jobs. We cannot do what God has called us to do without being dependent on the Lord and I think you know I personally believe that our spiritual disciplines shape us for our life in the world so you can't have one without the other.

I think it's you know God calls us to mission in the world, but he also calls us to maintain a healthy spiritual disciplines of hearing the word prayer, reading our Bibles of of of walking with him and those things form us in powerful ways that that enable us to do the work is called us to do and do it in a healthy dependence on him have been listening to family policy matters, a weekly radio show and podcast from NC family.

This is been part one of the two-part show with Dan Darling, VP of communications with the ethics and religious liberty commission of the Southern Baptist convention. Be sure to tune in next week to hear part two to listen to the show online, and for more resources on how you can be a voice of persuasion in your community. This website NC family.org and follow us on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter