How should
we as the church be involved in society and politics?
Some think
we should boldly re-assert Christian laws and heritage in
this "Christian land". But, like it or not, Christendom
has passed and our society more closely reflects the situation
of those to whom Peter writes that we are "aliens and
strangers" in a "pagan" world. Ours is an
increasingly pluralist society.
Others think
we should not be involved in politics at all. They believe
that as citizens of God's kingdom we should abstain from
"worldly affairs". The "sacred" gospel
should not mix with "secular" government.
But this
detached view doesn't square with reality. For no Christian
can consistently maintain that one shouldn't get involved
in government issues whilst, say, vilifying the water tax
or battling over reform in post-primary education. A little
honesty shows there are political issues on which all of
us take an active stance, be it only at the ballot box.
Reality demonstrates that society and politics affect us
and that we want to affect them, although all too often
this is only when it hits us personally.
Can we with
integrity say that there are areas of life that are sacred,
which God is interested in, and other areas that are secular,
in which we express our vested interest? Are we aliens and
strangers at some points, yet living with the pagans at
others?
Surely there
is no time when the Christian is not a Christian and can
put aside the values of the Kingdom of God. There is no
area of life where the Spirit is not the Spirit and is thus
disinterested. When is the Church not the Church? Never.
This is
Peter's message to us. The Church has two full-time characteristics.
It is both alien in the world and yet among the world to
witness for God. There are no spheres which lie beyond the
interest of the Church. It operates everywhere seeking to
embody the "alien" values of the Kingdom of God.
Whilst we
are not of the world - the values of God's Kingdom are radically
different - we are in the world, for the world, and a witness
to the world (that "they may see your good deeds and
glorify God"). We are not called merely to defend Christian
values in our private territory, but be the church in the
public square.
The Church
has a prophetic role - not detachment but engagement. This
does not mean moralising or seeking to legislate our values
over an unwilling majority; nor justifying worldly values
with spurious theology. It means engaging with society through
its institutions and policy-makers, seeking to speak and
live the truth in love and with justice - "living such
good lives among the pagans".
This challenges
all of us in at least two ways. First, we are all too eager
to engage on particular issues that hit home - for example,
the water rates and grammar schools. But are our views really
motivated by Kingdom values or by worldly self-interest?
And second,
given that kingdom values affect every area of life on earth,
what are the big issues and the more useful and public ways
to put forward the values of the Kingdom in society, for
the benefit of the world and the glory of God?
Recent research
from the Centre for Contemporary Christianity in Ireland
indicates a lack of engagement between churches and government
policy-makers in Northern Ireland. We must not let ourselves
be perceived as those who only speak up in defence of our
private morality. We are in the public square - not for
our own sake, but for the sake of the world.
Ben Walker