- Mar 13, 2004
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I read an tweet about a young man in southern california that said this:
"I just turned 18, and can legally vote for the first time....and all I get is Hillary or Trump."
Is not Voting a sin even if there are not Good Candidates?
This question comes up often,
I take the stance of Billy Graham's son Franklin Graham who says
"vote for the least heathen"
Recognizing no one is perfect does not get us out of our civic duty to God and Country both- to vote.
Now about sin.
There are sins of commission, or doing the wrong thing.
and sins of omission, which is NOT doing the right thing.
Both in the Bible.
sins of omission are found in the book of James:
Is voting a good thing?
Yes.
So then not doing it, is a sin of omission.
So we need to repent as a country of this sin.
Now a little thing that disturbs me.
Christians can be odd ducks.
but when given a legal and proper way to battle the enemy (voting), they say....oh no, ...that's for the state, not the church!...the secular, not the sacred!
What does this tell the world about Christians?
Not very intelligent, the group is.
And I know, I ARE ONE.
Again, we need to repent and Follow God.
Even if we don't believe in God, we still need to repent, because there is still a law of nature in us.
Here is a good quote I read this morning:
"I just turned 18, and can legally vote for the first time....and all I get is Hillary or Trump."
Is not Voting a sin even if there are not Good Candidates?
This question comes up often,
I take the stance of Billy Graham's son Franklin Graham who says
"vote for the least heathen"
Recognizing no one is perfect does not get us out of our civic duty to God and Country both- to vote.
Now about sin.
There are sins of commission, or doing the wrong thing.
and sins of omission, which is NOT doing the right thing.
Both in the Bible.
sins of omission are found in the book of James:
James 4:17 (NKJV)
17 Therefore, to him who knows to do good and does not do it, to him it is sin.
17 Therefore, to him who knows to do good and does not do it, to him it is sin.
Is voting a good thing?
Yes.
So then not doing it, is a sin of omission.
So we need to repent as a country of this sin.
Now a little thing that disturbs me.
Christians can be odd ducks.
- they will prep for the worse.
- they will bunker down for armageddon.
- they will arm themselves to the teeth, against tyranny.
but when given a legal and proper way to battle the enemy (voting), they say....oh no, ...that's for the state, not the church!...the secular, not the sacred!
What does this tell the world about Christians?
Not very intelligent, the group is.
And I know, I ARE ONE.
Again, we need to repent and Follow God.
Even if we don't believe in God, we still need to repent, because there is still a law of nature in us.
Here is a good quote I read this morning:
"THERE is a simple formula which, if we would apply it in all our daily affairs, would make us intelligent and keep us out of trouble: Always think, say and do what is right; refuse to think, say or do what is wrong. ...
The formula contains so much elementary truth that the average person tends instinctively to accept it. Whether he has ever thought of it as a formula or not, he tends to base his life on it. He talks about doing the right thing, getting the right answer, living right, taking time to be right, and so on through a long string of familiar phrases.
He is gifted with an inborn persistent desire to be right in whatever he thinks, says and does, and it is a desire he cannot lightly disregard.
He tries to be right in the logical sense, because only thus can he satisfy his intelligence. He tries to be right in the expedient sense, because only thus can he satisfy his desires. He tries to be right in the moral sense, because only thus can he satisfy his conscience. He knows these three kinds of right comprise the simultaneous ingredients of absolute right, and he gets confused when there is seeming contradiction among them. He gets confused because he has instinctive recognition that they cannot really be contradictory. Despite anything he says to the contrary in his moments of error when he hotly tries to prove a point that is not true, he has instinctive recognition that his failure to achieve absolute right offers simultaneous evidence against his intelligence, against his sense of expediency, and against his morals."
-Richard Weatherill, in His book "the Tower of Babel"
(my summary of the Above)-Based on the inward law of nature, we tend not to cut in line, and feel remorse when we do. That same remorse happens when we don't give voting an honest effort. Even if we are a non believer in the Bible's morals, this law of nature exists in every human from birth. The formula contains so much elementary truth that the average person tends instinctively to accept it. Whether he has ever thought of it as a formula or not, he tends to base his life on it. He talks about doing the right thing, getting the right answer, living right, taking time to be right, and so on through a long string of familiar phrases.
He is gifted with an inborn persistent desire to be right in whatever he thinks, says and does, and it is a desire he cannot lightly disregard.
He tries to be right in the logical sense, because only thus can he satisfy his intelligence. He tries to be right in the expedient sense, because only thus can he satisfy his desires. He tries to be right in the moral sense, because only thus can he satisfy his conscience. He knows these three kinds of right comprise the simultaneous ingredients of absolute right, and he gets confused when there is seeming contradiction among them. He gets confused because he has instinctive recognition that they cannot really be contradictory. Despite anything he says to the contrary in his moments of error when he hotly tries to prove a point that is not true, he has instinctive recognition that his failure to achieve absolute right offers simultaneous evidence against his intelligence, against his sense of expediency, and against his morals."
-Richard Weatherill, in His book "the Tower of Babel"
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