| Bush
Flunks as a Christian
By Leutisha Stills
OpEdNews.Com
First of all, I freely and proudly declare I am a
Christian. I also freely declare that I am a proud liberal in the
old-fashioned sense of the word.
By stating this, I am prefacing my remarks.
While it is not for me to case aspersions of Bush's
Christian beliefs, as one who studies my Bible daily, I can cite that the
Bible admonishes a Christian to compare other Christian's actions to what
the Bible teaches before accepting it as gospel. In this respect, using
literal application, it is sad to say that Bush's actions to date, has not
augered well for others who may be deciding whether or not to give their
lives to Jesus.
When the Bible teaches you that "In so far as it
depends on you, live in peace with everyone" (Romans 12:18) then a
Christian who really believes that scripture would call GeeDubya on every
action that led to the Iraqi war and subsequent messes every since he flew
onto that aircraft carrier a year ago and declared "Mission
Accomplished". How can you strive to live in peace with everyone,
when you're making inflammatory statements, such as "If you disagree
with me, you're unpatriotic" or "Bring it On!" or calling
nations of color "Evildoers". How are you striving to live at
peace when you're provoking Middle Eastern countries like Iran, Korea and
Syria by labeling them "axis of evil"?
The Bible also teaches us to "Honor they father and
thy mother". Well, when George decided to go bomb Saddam, he
disrespected his father when a reporter asked if he consulted him, and he
said, "He's the wrong father. I answer to a Higher Father..."
Yes, but God expects us not only to consult with HIM, but He gave us
earthly parents to provide wisdom as well, and who better than the man who
tried to bomb Saddam 20 years before? What does that teach us as
Christians?
The Bible teaches that we are to "feed the hungry,
not oppress the poor and downtrodden" and it also teaches that we
obtain wealth and riches to bless others in addition to ourselves; that we
are to think of the needs of others more than our own. The policies that
have been forced through Congress by an aggressive and zealously Religious
Right Republican Party that bulldozed over wimpy Democrats (DLC comes to
mind) if one studies their Bible, are completely opposite of what the Lord
taught. Jesus Himself set the example when He fed the hungry and
ministered to the poor and downtrodden. "Blessed are the poor in
Spirit, for they shall see God."
(Matthew 5) So where is the compassion that is supposed
to be coming from GeeDubya, when he allows Enron a free pass after they
bankrupted thousands of their employees? Or the outsourcing of
manufacturing jobs overseas?
Leaving every child behind in favor of school vouchers?
Turning a budget surplus into a deficit? The Patriot Act? The inhumane
treatment of prisoners at Gitmo and in Iraq?
In the Book of Daniel (Daniel 4:28-33) the king
Nebuchadnezzar began to think so much of himself to the point he
considered himself on equal with God, let alone being God Himself. Sounds
like messianic complex, doesn't it? Anyway, God, because He is God, didn't
appreciate a mere mortal trying to consider himself God's peer. As a
result, God allowed Nebuchanezzar to decend into insanity, where he ate
grass like an animal and wondered around for seven years, until
Nebuchadnezzar had a moment of sanity and declared he had to bow down to
God, too. While I don't know if the President is going in that direction,
if he's studying his Bible, he would do well to remember King
Nebuchadnezzar's plight.
Many Christians are enanmoured of the fact that the
President has taken stances on abortion and gay marriage. We know what the
Bible teaches, so I won't go into the debate on that issue; my point is,
his position would be all well and good if I didn't get the sense that
he's really not being sincere about his beliefs. I think they are a matter
of convenience and points of distraction to make sure we are not looking
at or closely examining the other areas of his Christian life that
are...lacking. While his stances are biblicly sound, the heart has to
match the stand, otherwise it's being hypocritical. I also believe that
Bush will cite his Christianity as a point of intimidation to keep people
from questioning his motives. You cannot cherry pick what sin you will
denounce and what sin is acceptable. Either all of it is denouced or
accepted - there's no middle ground here. As a Christian, I just don't
like how he uses God as the excuse to send this country into a degree of
shame and degradation from which there's no recovery.
Leutisha Stills Oakland, California leutishastills@hotmail.com
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