Politics in the Pulpit
[1] As the old salt Henry Horn once said to a class here at
Luther Seminary: Preach the Word of God in the service, and
then during the adult forum there can be political talk. The
same sermon will very likely propel a full panoply of political
opinions in the congregation. God is working, but not how I might
prefer. We after all do have a theology of the right and left
hand of God that can trust in him to use his hidden left hand to
work out his purposes in the world. The will of God is hidden, and
inscrutable to us mere mortals. All we can do is trust that
underneath it all, God is working out his dreaded purposes,
regardless of our convictions. The preacher who knows how God
would vote in a certain election is going to reveal an almost
fathomless shallowness which I do not care to hear. The record of
these kind of prophets, with some few notable exceptions, is not
good which we can see especially in the wretched preaching our
greatest, and most theologically profound, President, Abraham
Lincoln, had to endure from the preachers of his day. The preachers
look pretty embarrassing today in hindsight.
[2] Secondly, political preaching doesn't really work very
well: the true believers applaud the courageous stand of the
preacher, the opponents of the politics of the preacher are driven
further away from the preacher and his or her position. Of
course, we should feed the hunger, help the homeless, visit those
in prison, and help the widow and orphan. But there are many
ways to do this-one does not need to support a certain political
party in order to do these things. Both parties have
proposals to meet these perennial problems of the human
condition. I would much rather argue about which way is
better in the political arena than in the pew. Politics
is much cleaner when it is waged in the political sphere, than when
it is waged in the church where people do not know how to fight
very well. As politicians always tell me, at least in the
secular world of business and government, you can argue your points
and be quite strong, and still get along. That's not the
model that is very often used in the church where fighting is
considered evil, and yet theological or social disagreements cause
permanent alienation between people. What I need from the
preacher is Jesus, not Adam Smith or Marx.