We were confronted with
the undeniable reality this week. What we learned on Wednesday
morning is more important than who the next president will be. It was
something many of us had already suspected, that the culture we live
in has changed. One article pointed out, “The changing U.S.
electorate split in two Tuesday, not only along lines of political
party and ideology but also by race and ethnicity, gender and marital
status, region and religion, education and age.” The divisions are
even sharper than they were four years ago. Republican pollster Whit
Ayres says, "We have never had a more polarized electorate."1
Dr. Mohler noted that “millions of Americans went to the polls and
voted according to a contrary worldview." What does that mean
for us as believing families? He goes on to say, "I think this
was an evangelical disaster." He is right, and says “there's a
danger that evangelicals won't see this larger lesson.” Mohler
points out, “The popular vote reveals a deeply divided nation. The
nation is divided politically, but that divide points to a division
at the level of worldview.”2
He illustrates the
point in an article published November 7, “The 2012 election makes
clear that Americans are divided over fundamental questions.
Americans are divided into camps that define and see the world in
fundamentally different terms. The election did not cause this
division, it merely revealed it. This deep division at the level of
worldview is an even greater challenge for the church. The electorate
is becoming more secular. Recent studies have indicated that the
single greatest predictor of voting patterns is the frequency of
church attendance.” 79% of those voting for Romney attend
religious service as much as once a week, while 60% of those voting
for Obama never attend any religious service. “Far fewer Americans
now attend church, and a recent study indicated that fully 20% of all
Americans identify with no religious preference at all. The
secularizing of the electorate will have monumental consequences.”3
Clearly, we face a new
moral landscape in America, and a worldview challenge that is far
greater than any political challenge. Christians must never see
political action as an end, but only as a means. Our main concern is
the Gospel of Jesus Christ. This is, however, an urgent call to
action. Maybe Jimmy Scroggins, Senior Pastor of The First Baptist
Church of West Palm Beach, tweeted it best, “This election ought to
force evangelicals to change identities. Abandon 'moral majority'
mindset & embrace living as 'missional minority.'”
The culture we live in
is different, and now we know it. We ought to be raising our children
according to this mindset, and training them to live in a throughly
secular humanist culture. As I have already said this week, even
though we are not the stumbling block, the culture will stumble over
the gospel. When the culture stumbles over the gospel and is lost in
the confusion of their own sinfulness, and we are faithful to
confront the confusion and lostness with the truth of the gospel, in
love, then we will receive persecution. It will come, and we
must be prepared to receive it as a blessing from God. We must see it
as a confirmation of our righteousness in Christ; that we are being
held up by God, like Job before Satan, and sifted out like Peter. We
must see that God has used it throughout history to strengthen His
people and expand His kingdom; from Noah to Abraham, to the nation of
Israel, to Christ himself, to the Church. When we have no other hope
for rescue, and nothing else in which to trust, it causes us to look
more to Christ and to rely on Him, for He is all we have. And, it is
the remnant who trust in Christ that God always uses as a means to
deliver his people and to draw a lost and dying world to himself. I
have found that I, almost strangely, am already looking more to
Christ. This has been the effect throughout history, and today I
understand anew.
1http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2012/11/07/analysis-nation-moves-further-apart/1688031/
2http://www.npr.org/blogs/itsallpolitics/2012/11/08/164711265/for-religious-conservatives-election-was-a-disaster
3http://www.albertmohler.com/2012/11/07/aftermath-lessons-from-the-2012-election/