During the time of Jeremiah the prophet, there came
to reign in Israel the most righteous king the nation ever had.
His name was Josiah (2 Kings 23). He pulled down all the idolatrous
places of worship, he removed the occult practices, he purified
the Temple, and he reinstituted just laws in the land. He was the
hope of the righteous remnant in the nation, who daily cried out
to God that they might once again see justice and God's glory restored
to Judah.
Josiah was a righteous king who followed soon after his grandfather, Manasseh,
one of the most abominable kings in history. Manasseh sounds very familiar to
us today. He instituted child sacrifice as a religious practice for the nation
(2 Kings 21: 11-16). He set up occult idols in the Temple in the name of God.
He promoted all sorts of evil in the name of political expediency. If we were
to compare him to current leadership in our nation, we find the same practices:
abortion in the name of personal liberty; homosexuality in the name of Christian
charity; and moral compromise in the name of political expediency. And like a
Temple full of idols, much of the Church in the United States is so badly compromised
that it does not stand against these political and moral misrepresentations of
the will of God. Church leaders embrace and endorse perversion in the name of
Christ, and the people are willing to ignore moral issues and vote for selfish,
personal gain. There is a vocal minority that, like a remnant, raises issues
of conscience, but they are safely outnumbered by a complacent majority. And
so, Manasseh's policies continue to direct the course of the nation.
As the 1996 presidential election (USA) approaches, the remnant Church is tempted
to place its hopes once again in the political process, capitalizing on perceived
gains of the 1994. The hope is that with a conservative Congress and a conservative
President, the moral agenda of the nation might once again be addressed. Laws
could be passed that restrict abortion, reign in the Supreme Court, reverse the
gains of the homosexual lobby, and lessen the burden of taxation on the family.
This hope is for a restoration of righteousness in the country through the means
of the political process. Unfortunately, conservatives and liberals alike have
fallen for the same deception, believing that government can save the nation.
In the 1960's, liberals sought to institute a Great Society. Through government
programs which redistributed wealth they hoped to end poverty and racism. Through
busing and education they hoped to end discrimination. The problem the liberals
encountered with their dreams of utopia is that government could not, by passing
laws or social engineering, change the heart of humanity. Racism still exists
in the human soul, and no amount of government finger wagging can remove it.
The Great Society did not end poverty, and increased taxation only indebted the
rest of the populace. The idea that our government could save the nation through
huge federal spending programs seemed to be rejected as a naive and failed hope
with the conservative backlash of 1992.
Now, however, conservative Christians seem to be pinning their hopes to the
same false expectation: that the nation's problems can be solved by a return
to moral government through federal legislation. The thought is, "If we can just
elect some moral leaders, we can solve this nation's problems." But we
should learn a lesson from Josiah's reign. Although he was the most righteous
king who ever lived in Judah, his reforms were imposed upon the people from
the top down. Rather than an expression of the majority of the populace, his
reforms were actually welcomed only by a small, a truly devoted remnant. The
hearts of the people were not challenged nor convinced by the change of leadership.
They merely endured the change of kings and governments with disinterest. And
as soon as Josiah died, the nation reverted to its former practices, and the
gains he achieved were quickly lost.
The danger conservative Christians face is that even though they may elect a
majority for a season, the laws and reforms they put in place will not last if
they are not also the reflection of the will of the people. Instead, they will
quickly see a backlash that reverses any gains they make. These gains will be
especially vulnerable if conservative economic reforms fail to create a general
prosperity. Indeed, the Republican majority in Congress already seems to be threatened
by their failure to win the hearts of the populace with a conservative economic
message . A reaction against a left wing, Democratic excess is not the same thing
as endorsement of the moral and economic agenda of the Conservative Right. The
gains so far achieved are tenuous at best. The lesson of history is simple. If
the remnant Church wants to see a long lasting gain in a restoration of righteousness
in the nation, it must do much more than seek a change in the political arena
or merely seek the passage of new laws. A top down imposition of legalisms will
do no more than create a resentment in the populace - a resentment that will
result in an even greater backlash. As liberal laws failed to end racism in the
human heart, so conservative laws will fail to change hearts committed to abortion
and homsexual rights. Any long lasting gain is dependent upon a revival that
changes the hearts of the vast majority of the American people, so that they
desire righteousness. Then the laws that are passed become a reflection of the
will of the majority and they are easily sustained for generations.
The Church has, by and large, failed its calling and so it seeks a remedy in
a substitute savior: politics. Instead of going to God, who is surely able to
deliver, it is falling prey to the same deception of liberalism: salvation by
government program. Yet there is a promise in scripture that if the Church in
America will repent of its complacency and self indulgence and seek the face
of God and pray, then God will deliver the land in which his people dwell:
"...if my people who are called by my name humble themselves, and pray and
seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven,
and will forgive their sin and heal their land" (2 Chronicles 7:14, RSV).
If the Church will do what it is supposed to do, then God will send revival and
the character of the nation will conform to the righteous will of God. Passing
just laws will be easy, and the rejection of sin will be common place. Not only
will sin be illegal, but it will become so socially unacceptable, that the threatened
ostracism of the community will do far more to maintain righteous behavior in
the people than the passsage of any laws. It is so important then, that the Church
seeks its salvation in the only One who can deliver, Jesus Christ. And whatever
gains its works for in the temporal arena, the Church should recognize that politics
is, at best, only a means that can be used well if all the other requirements
for revival are met.