I am trying to cement a voting strategy. I think I have a candidate: Ron Paul. I have long thought that I should not vote for a candidate that (as I said in an email the other night) I would not let my daughter marry. Look! my daughter is six, and he is only about 70 years her senior, love is blind! But, seriously, I am not convinced that if they were more appropriately matched I would be willing to see my daughter marry him.
Based on his YouTube Videos that he ostensibly endorsed, I think his libertarianism outweighs his Trinitarianism:
- I found a button on one of them that shows him and around his head is the phrase “Oh my God I’m Winning”—Taking the Lord’s Name in vain.
- His record-breaking fund-raising effort was initiated on the 234th anniversary of the Boston Tea Party:
- That was a Sunday—breaking the sabbath.
- The Tea Party was seditious act that led to a terrible revolt—the Bible likens rebellion to witchcraft.
Ron Paul is an appealing candidate in the most plain terms. But he is primarily a constitutionalist and a libertarian. He seems more moral than I presume a Southern Baptist pastor would be. But he has already shown substantial shortcomings in his recent activities for the reformed believer. I am a willing recipient of libertarianism, not a proponent. I am opposed to it practically, because it is generally held that those things that are left to an individual’s conscience or more appropriately state’s rights are things that are morally incumbent upon us to prohibit: abortion, sabbath breaking, adultery, etc. But I like that it leaves me free to practice what I believe without fear of reprisal.
I have not thought all of this out. From here, I am tempted to vote for him, to be sure. But I cannot endorse him whole-heartedly, and that is something I think I ought to be able to do before I vote for someone. While talking with my wife on the way home from church this evening, she asked me: would you vote for a Presbyterian (RPCNA) for president? I answered that I did not know. There are two real questions I am left with:
- Is it a Christian’s duty to vote?
- If so, based on what?
- What are the criteria a candidate must meet in order to be worthy of a Christian’s vote?
If you have the answers to these questions, I would definitely like to hear them. Please email me (david.eldridge@darkroastwebs.com).
Recent Comments