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Showing posts from January, 2026

Christian Government—What Would That Even Look Like?

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We’ve seen many attempts to claim Christianity as the official religion of a country, going back much further than Project2025 to the Roman Empire under Constantine. That didn’t work out very well from the standpoint of Christian faith and following Jesus. Then again, Constantine was not attempting to construct a government based on following Jesus’ teachings. He just wanted Christianity to give his governance a stamp of approval. Following Jesus was not his starting point. Power was his starting point. He merely wanted to wield Christianity as one more tool to expand the scope of his power. But what did Jesus say regarding power? While the gospels rarely use the specific term power, it refers to Jesus being empowered and able to do various things. Those things are healing, casting out demons, laying down his own life, granting life, granting protection for his followers, resurrecting the dead, forgiving, assisting the tempted, doing good, and creating. None of that ha...

Immigration—Legality, Justice, and Morality:

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Comparing immigration in today’s world to the lived reality of Ancient Israel is a difficult exercise. There are so many aspects to the issues that make it almost impossible to equate the one to the other. First of all, there is no equivalency for legal and illegal immigration in Ancient Israel and surrounding lands. Abraham was semi-nomadic. Deuteronomy calls him “a wandering Aramean.” He leaves the land of his birth with his father, then travels on far beyond where his father stopped to take up more permanent residence. There is no legal process for being allowed entry or exit from one region to the next. The closest we might get to legal permissions is in terms of Abraham’s purchase of land from the established residents. Indeed, that cave and attached field he buys as a burial place is the only land over which he ever takes ownership. For the rest, it is simply a case of working out access to water and fields for pasturing his herds. Abraham is hardly the only migrant me...