Beware when politicians talk about "compassion," especially when they hold a
"Compassion Forum" to do it, which is what they did at the appropriately
named Messiah College near Harrisburg, Pa. Politicians identify with the
messianic because they think they are God's gift to America.
The forum attracted Democratic presidential candidates Barack Obama and
Hillary Clinton, but not Republican John McCain, who apparently saw it for
what it was: an attempt by the Democrats to get back in the religion game.
You've got to hand it to Clinton and Obama. They did their Sunday school
homework. They quoted Bible verses and told religious stories like it was
testimony time at an old-fashioned revival meeting. "Yes indeed, brothers
and sisters. We Democrats have seen the light. We once were blind secular
humanists, but now we see into the electoral Promised Land! Vote for us and
we will deliver you from the sin of ever having voted for a Republican!"
This is nothing new, of course. As recently as George W. Bush and as far
back as the founding of the nation, politicians have invoked God in favor of
their candidacy and policies. But God can't simultaneously approve of one
political party or policy and its opposite. Abraham Lincoln gave us the best
line on the idea of a schizophrenic deity when he said about Northern and
Southern religious people in his Second Inaugural Address: "Both read the
same Bible, and pray to the same God; and each invokes His aid against the
other."
Does God favor the Democrats' proposal for an Iraq pullout? How could he if
President Bush hears the voice of God and takes a different path? What was
that you said, Mr. Lincoln, about a house divided not being able to stand?
Oh yes, you were quoting Scripture, too, but you also once made a larger
point; something about it being less important that God is on our side than
if we are on God's side.
Before government hijacked charity in the form of the New Deal and Great
Society, compassion and charity began at home. People were to feed the
hungry, clothe the naked, visit prisoners, care for widows and orphans and
love their enemies. Those were biblical commands to individuals, not
government. Democratic politicians see things differently. Apparently
believing there aren't enough caring people, they want compassion to
originate in Washington, depriving it of its true meaning. They define
compassion as big and ever-growing government and a guaranteed check forever
with no expectation - or requirement - the recipient will ever better his or
her circumstances.
Traditionally, Republican compassion has encouraged private charity with
government picking up the leftovers of what religious and other charitable
institutions were unable to do. President Bush, through his "faith-based
initiative," took this one step further by subsidizing religious groups with
federal money. This removes the responsibility and privilege from
individuals and turns it over to government. When that happens, religious
organizations become one more constituency in the never-ending campaign for
political support. Once, evangelicals "prayed it in" when they needed money.
Now too many of them ask government to "send it in."
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