Tuesday, October 28, 2014

COME NOVEMBER 5th


October 28, 2014 

I have listened with what I must admit is a somewhat cynical disposition to the recent discussions concerning all the implications of next week’s national elections.  A great deal of drum beating is going on over how, if the Republicans regain the Senate and hold on to the House, things will change.  My sincere wish is that such would be the case, my expectation is that little or nothing will actually occur.

Why?  Because if we change “leaders” but we don’t change the fundamental moral character of those leaders, why should we expect different results?  I honestly wish there existed a tremendous difference in the moral centers of John Boehner and Mitch McConnell vs. those of Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid.  Unfortunately, what we are presented with is four career politicians whose single minded interest is either holding onto power or stripping the other party of theirs.  Does anyone really believe if the Republicans replace the Democrats in the Senate there is suddenly going to be a genuine move toward passing and enforcing laws which are based on Biblical morality rather than pragmatic politics?   

But why should we be surprised that venal, self-seeking, narcissistic individuals are going to advance legislative agendas based on anything other than, ultimately, what the polls say will get them elected or re-elected?  And, what is stunningly heartbreaking, every one of these legislators have been voted into high office by the good citizens of the United States.  Painfully, we are getting exactly the representation in Washington that we, as a people, deserve.

Sometime in the past twenty or thirty years, a critical change has occurred in how Americans select and view their elected officials.  I remember as a youngster much was made of a candidate’s moral character.  His reputation for honesty and moral purity was important.  Sure, there were exceptions, but they were just that, not the rule.

But as our country moved away from God officially and publicly, with rulings against prayer in public school and an overt movement toward declaring what had been immoral moral, such as the legalization of homosexual practices and of abortion on demand, there came a concomitant slide in the public’s view of a politician’s moral character. 

A revealing moment for me in just how far that slide had gone occurred during Bill Clinton’s presidency. When it was revealed that Clinton had carried on a sexual affair with Monica Lewinsky in the White House itself, and subsequently lied about it, the public opinion polls that followed were telling.  Approximately a third of the American public felt the President should be impeached, another third felt like his competency as President was more important than his moral failure, in other words, the economy was moving well, foreign policy seemed under control, so what did it matter if he had an affair with a woman half his age and lied about it, and another third saw the affair as irrelevant, he was likeable and should remain as President.

This expression of public opinion revealed just how far American’s expectations of their leaders had changed.  In a kind of official unofficial way, it was now permissible for a man to be a moral reprobate if he was perceived to be doing his job.  Two thirds of the citizens of the United States of America were now of the opinion that a man’s moral character was not a critical factor in whether or not he should hold high office.  That severance of character from competence has since extracted, and will continue to extract, a price which our country can ill afford to pay.

The idea that a politician’s character has nothing to do with the decisions they make and legislation they support is utterly ridiculous.  Of course it does.  I find it difficult to believe that people want nothing to do with a dishonest auto mechanic or plumber, but will elect and re-elect proven liars and thieves to public office.  This incredible dichotomy is both discouraging and damaging in multiple ways.

With few exceptions, and thank God there does remain a few, most politicians of either political stripe in Washington are not people of Christian faith practicing what they believe.  For the most part, it is quite the opposite.  Their morality is rooted in the mores of the moment.  As I have watched with dismay politician after politician cave and “evolve” on the issue of gay marriage, it has simply revealed how many genuinely lack a moral center.  And this, unfortunately, applies to members of both parties.

Regardless of how the elections turn out on November 4th, my expectations of any positive moral changes in how Washington will govern this country remain low.   I have no reason to believe that men and women driven by personal ambition and outsized ego are going to make decisions on the future direction of this country that will turn things around.  Two thirds of the American public, according to the latest polls, feel like this country is headed in the wrong direction.  Yet, they will return to office or elect more politicians whose character, or lack thereof, got us here in the first place. 

Of course, now that I think about it, it’s about as consistent as bemoaning the number of drunken drivers on the road and then legalizing marijuana, or complaining about the number of unwed mothers even as we answer the issue with contraceptives for twelve year olds and instruction manuals on sexual techniques.  Has this country completely lost its collective mind?  Is there no longer any recognition of cause and effect?  I have heard all my life that one of the best definitions of insanity is to keep on doing the same thing and expect different results.  If we keep sending people of the same moral fiber to Washington, why should we expect anything to change, except for the worse?

I sincerely hope I’m wrong.  I pray for this country every day.  I hope we will see a moral revival in our national leadership that will move this country back in the godly direction it desperately needs.  If that happens I will joyfully eat crow and celebrate the turnaround. 

But I’m not really holding my breath for any big changes come November 5th.       

 

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