And your ears shall hear a word behind you, saying, “This is the way, walk in it,” when you turn to the right or when you turn to the left. Then you will defile your carved idols overlaid with silver and your gold-plated metal images. You will scatter them as unclean things. You will say to them, “Be gone!” (Isaiah 30:21–22)

There is a lot of talk today about the Republicans, the Democrats, the Independents (well, not so much about them). Such talk is even dominating conversations within parts of the church. Now, don’t worry, this is not a post about politics or political parties or who’s right or wrong. This is a post about walking the narrow path that Jesus defined.

For followers of Christ, our authority is (or should be) the Bible. We accept the Bible as God’s written Word and our authority on belief, faith, and practice. Having established that, the question must be asked, “Why do we see so many Christians violating the fundamental spirit and implications of this passage?” Before we answer that question, though, we need to look at the passage itself.

This passage is a promise originally given to Israel. As we know, Israel consistently failed to keep the covenant that God gave them. Though the Lord was very patient with Israel and continually called them to return to Him, eventually Israel was sent into exile. This promise is part of a larger promise to bring Israel back to the land God gave them. It must have seemed at this time in history that God had hidden His face completely from Israel and rejected His people. Yet, He promised to no longer hide His face. In fact, He promised to hear their cry and be gracious to them, and more. He promised to speak to them and guide them.

What does this passage, spoken to Israel, have to say to us today? There are several things we can take from this passage.

God Still Speaks

As the church, we are also God’s people. Because we have the Holy Spirit living inside us, we can be assured that God desires to speak to us and in fact does speak to us. There are many avenues through which He speaks to us in addition to the Holy Spirit: the Bible (His written word), circumstance, and others, to name a few. To deny that God speaks to His people is to deny the very desire of His heart and the nature of His relationship with His people.

God Has His Own Way

Notice in the passage above God tells Israel, “This is the way, walk in it.” God has decreed a specific way for us to walk. Isaiah 55:9 tells us, “For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts.” God’s ways are not like man’s ways. His ways are spiritual; man’s way is worldly, carnal. As ones called to follow Jesus, we are to walk in His ways and shed (and shun) worldly ways of acting and thinking. 

Not only is God’s way higher than man’s way, but God’s way is straight, meaning in line with His will and decrees. Notice in the passage above that God says, “Your ears shall hear a word behind you, saying, “This is the way, walk in it,” when you turn to the right or when you turn to the left.” We can’t miss the implication that we are not to walk either on the left or the right, but walk in God’s path. To take that a step further, walking in God’s path means one does not bow to worldly agendas on the left or the right.

The Heart of the Matter

If you’ve read much of this blog, you know I try to stay away from directly engaging in political discussions, with limited exceptions. And even here, this post is not about any particular political issues. It is, as I said at the beginning, about the gospel and our commitment to it. So, let’s talk about this whole right/left thing. Is this not essentially the same party spirit we see Paul denouncing to the church of Corinth? They were lining up behind their favorite teachers, preachers, and apostles (and many parts of the church continue to be plagued with that).

At least in Corinth, they were lining up behind people who, for the most part, were committed to the gospel. It is often said (or at least asked) in Christian circles how one can be a Christian and vote for or support such-and-such party or so-and-so candidate. The truth is–and this may be a hard truth for many of you to swallow–political parties by and large could care less about advancing the gospel. Yet, the advancement of the gospel–seeing men and women come to Christ and seeing the resulting change in society–is precisely what the Christian is called to.

Former atheist David Brooks defines politics by saying “politics is usually a competition between partial truths.” So, the questions must be asked: Why would a Christian blindly follow a political party that, instead of promoting the gospel, has largely been silent and even sympathetic towards people who committed violent acts toward the government? The Bible has one word for that: rebellion. Now, I know the number one answer most many evangelicals will give–because said political party is supposedly “pro-life.” But can a person or group truly be said to be pro-life (meaning “life-affirming”) in the face of that silence and sympathy as well as other policies that ar far from life-affirming? On the other hand, why would a Christian blindly follow a party that, though they often have commendable compassion for the hurting, needy, and poor (classes of people the Lord cares deeply about), they show outright hostility to the message of the gospel, especially when it comes to certain issues? 

The truth is, as I said above, that political parties have no interest in promoting gospel change–because that requires the gospel. And that requires submitting to God and His authority of their lives. And that is something that fallen man refuses to do apart from an intervention by the Spirit. This, then, is the heart of the matter–a stubborn refusal to life life on God’s terms and instead seek our significance and security apart from Him. The Bible has a word for that also:  idolatry. But notice one final thing in our passage above. God says, “Then you will defile your carved idols overlaid with silver and your gold-plated metal images. You will scatter them as unclean things. You will say to them, ‘Be gone!’” When is “then”? When we are walking God’s path, not the path of a man or worldly group–including but not limited to political parties.

Let’s face it, every political party has an agenda–a vision, if you will. And that agenda has nothing to do with the message of Jesus Christ. Am I advocating that Christians get out of politics and political discussions entirely? Of course not–at least not yet. There will come a time, as I’ve said, when the Christian voice will be silenced in the nation. It’s coming sooner than many of us would wish. What I am advocating for, however, is that the church be the church, instead of a political arm. We as disciples are called to walk the path of Jesus, neither turning (bowing) to the right or the left. We are called to be disciples of Christ, not disciples of any worldly organization. We can live the two-handedness of the gospel (proclaiming the message as well as living it out) without swerving to one side or the other.

We have the answers that the world needs, church. Why would we embrace worldly thinking, ways, and methods? The answer is in Christ. Not politics.


One response to “God’s Path or Man’s Party”

  1. rosajonesfloyd Avatar
    rosajonesfloyd

    This is so good and true. The truth is, the church is God’s chosen gospel-spreading entity. When we prioritize a message over the gospel, or when we look to an entity other than the church as necessary for the spread of the Gospel, we so easily fall into idolatry. The truth is, while we are told to pray for leaders and that good government is *helpful* for the spread of the gospel, it is absolutely not *essential*. In fact, the last word of the book of Acts is “unhindered” – and that was recording the spread of the Gospel from Paul’s imprisonment!

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