NOTA
– Bene!
by
Christopher Manion
by Christopher Manion
DIGG THIS
…. None of
the Above.
Many evangelical
leaders on the "religious right" are well aware that the
Bush administration and the Republican congress have stiffed them
on their signal issues –marriage, abortion, corruption, pornography,
and morals in general.
But word has
it that those same leaders are nonetheless urging their grass-roots
members – who constitute an indispensable ingredient in the GOP’s
victory plan – to vote on Tuesday.
The interesting
wrinkle is this: knowing full well that the religious right is fed
up with the whole rotten bipartisan gang in Washington, the leaders
are not pretending to support Bush or his party. Instead, they are
emphasizing the dire consequences of not voting, or of voting for
the Democrats.
Until recent
years, the routine position of millions of dispensationalist evangelicals
(DE’s) – a twist on a longstanding Christian heresy that "dispenses"
Christians from politics because (a) it is the realm of the devil,
and (b) Christians have to be preparing for the Rapture, the imminent
Second Coming of Jesus Christ.
So they didn’t
participate in politics – until Jimmy Carter sent the IRS after
thousands of independent Christian schools some 30 years ago. What
the school prayer controversies of the sixties and the abortion
battles of the early seventies couldn’t do, Carter did. The DE’s
were energized, and then organized (an interesting sidebar: most
of the organizers were Catholics).
Ever since,
the "religious right" has been a political powerful faction
that has usually and dependably voted Republican. But these folks
have been motivated primarily by the "family issues" –
abortion, education, marriage, and pornography. This time around,
however, the administration and the congress have done precious
little for those issues. So the evangelical leaders are urging their
members to action on other grounds: namely, that it is their Christian
duty to vote.
Now, I know
we’re supposed to render unto Caesar, but who said we had to vote
for him?
For many evangelicals,
philosophy and logic were once considered tools of the devil, designed
to weaken the Christian’s faith in the truths revealed by Sacred
Scripture. "Sola Scriptura" (scripture alone) became a
powerful rallying cry. Whatever the theological status of logic
these days, it’s clear that many evangelicals are being urged to
hold their collective nose and vote for the "lesser of two
evils."
Hmmmm. Well,
a long line of sound theologians have properly observed that the
lesser of two evils is still evil.
What is a good
Christian to do?
In the realm
of practical wisdom, the most obvious and even desirable candidate
missing from every ballot is "NOTA" – None Of The Above.
Since the early
1990s, both major parties have strived (successfully) to make it
virtually impossible for competitors to run on a third-party ticket.
That circumstance has, no doubt, led to the concentration of corruption
in the GOP that has accelerated so markedly in recent years.
A quick glance
at Federalist 57 will indicate that the frequent election of the
members of the House of Representatives, coupled with their constant
proximity with their virtuous constituents, is the best guarantee
of a virtuous congress that will act for the common good.
Can anyone
recognize those qualities in the congress today – in any individual
Representative, at least, if not in either party or in the entire
body?
Of course,
party leaders and operatives, often referred to as "hacks,"
will often launch into paeans of praise for the virtues of compromise,
the moderating influence of the two-party system (as opposed, say,
to the proportional system of representation that was the ruin of
the Weimar Republic), and the danger of "extremes."
Which brings
to mind the visit to Notre Dame in the fall of 1964 of Barry Goldwater’s
running mate, Bill Miller, an ND alumnus who, shall we say, received
a chilly reception in the land of the LBJ-Irish caucus.
A reporter
badgered Miller about Goldwater’s famous phrase in his acceptance
speech at Cow Palace just three months before: "Extremism in
the defense of liberty is no vice… moderation in the pursuit of
justice is no virtue."
Miller listened
patiently, and then asked the reporter, "Are you married?"
"Yes,"
the young man answered, somewhat flustered.
"Would
your wife rather you were extremely faithful to her, or only moderately
faithful?"
End of press
conference.
Those were
the days before the "religious right" became a political
term, of pride or of derision. But it brings to mind that moderation,
when it involves embracing the lesser of two evils, still dictates
that we embrace an evil – an act the Christian is never permitted
to commit, even in the pursuit of a possible future good.
In this of
all years, candidates of both parties must be breathing sighs of
relief – privately, of course – that everyone who votes next Tuesday
will have to vote for somebody. Those who refuse to vote
for the lesser of two evils won’t count, because they will not be
counted.
Whatever happens
on election day, the congress will continue to stumble down the
path of evil. And, because evil has its own momentum, it will not
just stand still. Its own internal dynamic demands that it make
things worse.
As a friend
put it long ago, "the only way you can coast is downhill."
The party bosses
ask evangelicals (and the rest of us) to "hold our nose"
and vote for the lesser evil. But they know that, if we hold our
noses long enough, we will die. A nation that has to hold its nose
because of the stench emanating from its political class is a nation
that will either throw the bums out, or die of asphyxiation.
November
6, 2006
Christopher
Manion [send him mail] is
president of Manion Music,
LLC, which produces copyrighted, royalty-free music collections
for telecommunications media and commercial and hospitality sites
that use background music or music-on-hold. He writes from the Shenandoah
Valley.
Copyright
© Christopher Manion 2006. All Rights reserved.
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