What (or who) is driving history?
Saturday, September 06, 2008


The presidential campaign season has become an all-consuming affair for many in this country (and particularly for the national media). We were distracted by the Beijing Olympics for awhile, but now that those have passed and the Democratic and Republican National Conventions have redirected our attention, it seems that all eyes are trained on the issue of who our next president will be.
I have friends who are wholehearted Obama supporters and friends who are wholehearted McCain supporters. My own column work and blogging makes me interested in the genre of op-ed writing, so I read a lot of columnists from both the liberal and conservative persuasions as well. (Come to think of it, that would make for an interesting blog post in and of itself: Who are the best op-ed columnists out there?). Inevitably, as we draw closer to the election, the extremist tendency in everyone's views seems to get dialed up.
And here's what gets me about the points of view that I hear in person and read in print -- in the polarized atmosphere of the campaign season, people on both the left and the right tend to view their own party's candidate through rose-colored glasses while seeing the other's side's guy as a laughable, almost-inconceivably bad choice for president. In the process, the Democrats think a President Obama would restore dignity to the Oval Office, repair our damaged reputation overseas, bring in universal healthcare, balance the budget, end the war, and rewrite the tax code to be more just. Meanwhile, Republicans thing a President McCain would reform the damaged Republican party, enable true bipartisan legislative work, protect us from Islamic extremism, face down a resurgent Russia, keep spending low and taxes lower, and make government less intrusive. As the expectations of each side for its candidate get higher, the demonization of the other side gets more intense.
I had a conversation with a good friend today who reminded me of a frequent refrain in the work of John Howard Yoder: The real force driving the world is not the United States of America; it is not freedom & democracy; it is not capitalism; and it is certainly not Barack Obama or John McCain. It is, rather, Jesus Christ. And the body politic that Jesus leads is no nation-state. It is the church.
I don't want to suggest that your vote is not important. And I don't think it is inconsequential that Obama might make a serious difference in the healthcare crisis in this country, or that a McCain appointment to the Supreme Court might bring us one step closer to ending the abortion holocaust in this country. But it is vitally necessary that Christians put this presidential campaign into the proper perspective.
In He Came Preaching Peace (1985), Yoder writes,
"[T]he primacy of Christians' loyalty will show in our sense of ultimate values. In the minds of many serious people, what really matters about human history is the creation of institutions which will create and distribute material abundance, and will guarantee human rights. This is what we read about in the history books. These things do matter. And generally Christians do much to help achieve them. But what matters most, the real reason that God lets time go on, is his calling together of his own people through the witness of the gospel. Not buildlng and protecting a bigger and better democracy, but building the church is God's purpose; not the defeat of communism, or of hunger, but the proclamation of his kingdom and the welding of all kinds of men and women into one new body is what we are here for. Kings and empires have come and gone in times past and shall continue to come and go until the day of Christ's appearing. For Christians to seek any government's interest - even the security and power of peaceable and freedom-loving democracy - at the cost of the lives and security of our brothers and sisters around the world, would be selfishness and idolatry, however much glorified by patriotic preachers and poets.
"Not only in Abraham's time was it a testing of faith to be called by God to abandon all else out of loyalty to that 'city whose builder and maker is God' (Hebrews 11:10). Even more today, when nationalism has become a religion for millions, will the true depth and reality of the Christian profession of church people be tested when they must choose between their earthly and their eternal loyalties.
"What is our allegiance? It is to that people 'elect from every nation, yet one o'er all the earth.' Our nationality? Christian."
Labels: Barack Obama, Discipleship, John Howard Yoder, John McCain, Nationalism, Politics

4 Comments:
McCain's picture is "first" - that is, on the left. It looks odd; usually Obama's picture is first.
Subtle suggestion from the media?
That's funny. I hadn't even thought about who I put on which side. To make the pictures look balanced, I had to make them both facing from the outside in. But those were actually the first two decent pictures I found!
McCain is part of the silent generation-between the GI generation that fought in WWII and the Boomers. McCain is the same age as my father, 72. I am a Boomer.
We Boomers tend to be the argumentative always right fools starting and maintaining all the arguments. Hopefully no matter who wins the Presidency, the winner will spend more time listening and attempting to govern from the middle than our current specimen.
We should meet the other as Christ's disciples and not as advocates for a political creed. Maybe this way we would listen more and argue less.
Charles Kennedy
Thanks for pointing that out, Charles. I realized I had mis-identified McCain after I wrote a post sometime ago that suggested that Hilary Clinton and McCain were paradigmatic boomers from the left and the right. I had forgotten that McCain actually predates the baby boom, putting him as a member of the Silents.
That makes it a doubly interesting matchup, in my mind. McCain is easily old enough to be Obama's father. For whatever reason, both political parties rejected the numerous Boomer candidates that were running.
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