It occurred to me just now, with Atheists insisting we separate politics from religion, maybe we should be insisting they separate politics from irreligion!
I am being a bit facetious I know, but there is a serious point lurking beneath. What we are really talking about here is worldview. As a Christian I have a religious worldview, as an Atheist they have an irreligious worldview, and I can no more separate myself from my worldview than they can from theirs. Our worldviews guide our goals, they shape our decisions, they inform our ethics. Politics involves ethical decisions, how can I possibly disentagle my religious ethics from political decisions? This is the problem.
Now, to follow my line of arguement its important to understand that I regard the separation of politics and religion as a very different issue to the separation of church and state. Church and state is a much narrower topic, it has much more to do with institutional relationships, and on that topic I completely agree that there should be separation. In fact I would remind any Atheists reading this that anabaptists and baptists, in who’s shadow I stand, have championed separation of church and state for centuries. So, no, I am not talking about that, I am talking about the broader issues.
So this leads me back to my original statement. If Atheists can’t separate their understanding of the world from their action in the world, why should they expect us to do any different? It is a rediculous expectation. What we should respect is democracy and freedom of speach. In a democracy, you’re free to try and convince the community, I am free to try and convince the community, and the community decides. If you reject that system you’re rejecting democracy. If that’s the case, come out and honestly admit it.







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