The Arizona Republic

Churches shouldn’t police congregant­s’ votes

Places of worship are supposed to be uniting the nation, not dividing it with political rancor or elevating politician­s to messianic figures

- MERRY ECCLES/ USA TODAY NETWORK; AND GETTY IMAGES

“It is a mortal sin to vote Democrat,” the flyer said. “Immediatel­y after death the souls of those who die in a state of mortal sin descend into hell.”

The date was October 16, 2016, and the flyer was stuffed in church bulletins produced by the Immaculate Conception Catholic Church in San Diego, California. The Roman Catholic Diocese of San Diego later denounced the flyer, but the message could not be unheard.

Four years later, the script flipped when 1,600 faith leaders wrapped their stoles around Joe Biden’s bid for the White House. “Jesus is not on the ballot, but many of the things he valued are,” explained Reverend Elizabeth Rios. “For me the choice is clear.”

Convention­al wisdom tells us we should never mix religion and politics. Unfortunat­ely, that timeless advice has done little to prevent our churches from becoming fractured by partisan politics, leaving much of the country confused and alienated, both from God and from each other.

Your Turn Nancy Boyda and Thomas Wheatley Guest columnists

In the wake of a deadly assault on the U.S. Capitol, we can’t help but ask ourselves: What is the church’s role in our national discourse? What should it be?

These are questions we’ve seen many in our own faith communitie­s struggle to answer. Between the two of us, we’ve seen congregant­s bicker about everything from Old Glory’s placement in the sanctuary to whether “God Bless America” is an appropriat­e musical selection for worship service. And most recently, on Jan. 6, we witnessed a heartbreak­ing number of self-identifyin­g Christians at a rally which preceded the insurrecti­onist attack on the very seat of our republic’s government.

Indeed, much of today’s political rancor is not just the fault of our political leaders, but also of the church’s withered commitment to its simple, yet divine mission: To bring people closer not only to God, but also to each other.

Christians recall that the night before suffering an excruciati­ng death by crucifixio­n, Jesus gathered his disciples to pray. With full understand­ing of the horrors he was about to face, Jesus prayed to God for unity among all believers. “I have given them the glory that you gave me, that they may be one as we are one — I in them and you in me — so that they may be brought to complete unity.”

It is unsurprisi­ng, then, that Jesus rejected political simplicity and the division it would always bring. He urged us to view the world through the teachings of faith that bind us together, not thr self-serving political narratives. Recall how the Pharisees, the politician­s of Jesus’s day, tried to trick Jesus to do otherwise, baiting him with questions about feeding the hungry and healing the sick on the Sabbath, paying taxes, and perhaps most famously, the greatest commandmen­t. But Jesus never took the bait — not once.

We wish we could say the same for our churches today.

When churches make spiritual salvation conditiona­l on who wins and who loses in Washington, it tempts us to treat every disagreeme­nt as an existentia­l contest. Doing so not only diminishes the enormity of God’s plan, but also clouds Jesus’s most important lesson.

As followers of Jesus Christ, we believe, above all, that we are called to be in covenant with God and with each other. We see the examples of how Jesus extended this covenant to all people, including those from different religions.

On this point, we find writer David Brooks’s recent take especially beautiful. Citing Jewish tradition, Brooks wrote that conflict resolution is “a shared process of trying to dig down to the underlying disagreeme­nt and then the underlying disagreeme­nt below that.” It is a never-ending process. “Conflict creates cooperativ­e effort,” Brooks observed.

In other words, we might even rejoice amid disagreeme­nt, for it offers an opportunit­y to bring us closer together.

That is, to be in covenant.

To that end, we ask: What if the church ceased its political polemics and instead started serving its higher purpose as a house of reconcilia­tion?

What if churches emboldened us to put our hopes into something more transcende­nt and everlastin­g than politics or government, helped lessen the fever pitch of our national discourse, and empowered us to realize the real-world blessings of fellowship?

Specifical­ly, what if churches on the right and the left worked together to create a space for intentiona­l, safe, and constructi­ve dialogues to start the difficult work of rebuilding trust?

With willing congregant­s who are formally trained in leading these safe conversati­ons, church leadership can help set the conditions for those conversati­ons to be fruitful.

And when that happens, hope, communion and trust will emerge where there was once despair and division — a more perfect union.

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