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This is New Years Eve, a time to reflect back on the year endingwhich Im sure most Christians do with great gratitude. Many of us believe that God was with us in providing political leadership that will continue to support causes we believe so deeply in. And God has seen us through a year of war and international turmoil, a year in which we were spared further terrorist attacks.
But New Years Eve is also the occasion for looking ahead and making resolutionsresolutions that most of us never keep.
Well, I will make mine, and Im going to do my best to stick with them. I see the new year as a time of great hopefulness. Though well face a major contest getting the Federal Marriage Amendment through the Senate, our cause has been strengthened greatly by having a president who is committed to fight for it and by the referenda in eleven states in which the people spoke so clearly. We also have more pro-life members of the House and Senate. We wont win all of our battles, but were likely to make progress in a number of areas.
We also, however, face a sobering question. Evangelicals have come back into the limelight. Talking heads are commenting on the increasing power of values voters and conservative Christians. And to listen to some Christians, one gets the idea that this is the time for our political payback.
So the question is this: Can we handle success and increased influence with grace and prudence?
The sad fact is that all Christians are susceptible to worldly wiles. In fact, sad to say, the Church has managed to shoot itself in the foot almost every time it has achieved power in society.
So what we need most right now is a bracing dose of humility. Were not a labor union, lining up for our share of the spoils after the election. We are the Church. Our job is to bring biblical truth to bear in society; to win people to Christ; and to promote righteousness and justice. We serve the King of kings, no mere temporal king.
The Apostle Peter tells us always to be prepared to give a reason for the hope that is within us, but with gentleness and reverence. And we are to keep a clear conscience so that when people slander us, they may become ashamed of their slander. Though we are commanded to engage in the political process, we are to do so lovingly, as citizens concerned for the common good. Trying to do that is my first resolution.
The second one is to reread Francis Schaeffers classic The Mark of the Christian. In this book, the great intellectual makes a simple point: Without love, we cant possibly affect the world around us. Our task in the year ahead is to love one another, love fellow citizens, and promote the common good, whether by reaching out to the lost in the prisons, fighting international sexual trafficking, or helping AIDS victims in Africa. A book I read last month by Alan Hertzke, Freeing Gods Children, tells the story of how evangelicals have changed foreign policy in these critical areas of human rights. Its a great book, and I recommend it.
I pray that 2005 will be a year when we confound human wisdom, when we handle our increased power and influence with gentleness and reverence, and when people who are ugly toward us are won over because they see our good behaviornot a bad set of New Years resolutions.
And, oh yes: Have a wonderfully blessed 2005.
Copyright © 2004 Prison Fellowship. Used with permission.