In the debate
among Christians about who should be the Republican nominee for
president, the discussion is unfortunately informed more often by
the Gospel According to O’Reilly and the Book of Limbaugh rather
than the Bible. I have therefore undertaken in this article to apply
Biblical principles to four issues that are under discussion in
this year’s presidential campaign, which are or should be important
to Christians, including foreign policy, life, education, and monetary
policy. I conclude that Ron Paul’s positions are by far the most
consistent with Biblical principles and indeed that the other candidates
have decidedly unbiblical views on these issues.
Before proceeding,
please note that I have entitled this article "A
Biblical Case…" because I am sure there are other applicable
Scriptures and perhaps other better Biblical arguments to make on
this subject, but I offer the arguments below in an attempt to help
my Christian brothers sort out to what extent the candidates conform
to Biblical principles on the four issues that are addressed in
this article.
- Foreign Policy Matthew 7:12 (ESV) – "So whatever you wish that others would do to you, do also to them, for this is the Law and the Prophets."
- Life Psalm 139:13 (ESV) – "You knitted me together in my mother’s womb."
- Education Eph. 6:4 (ESV) – "Fathers, do not provoke your children to anger, but bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord." (emphasis added)
- Sound Money and Ending the Federal Reserve
Matthew 5:9 (ESV) – "Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God."
Romans 12:18 (ESV) – "If possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all."
Hebrews 12:14 (ESV) – "Strive for peace with everyone, and for the holiness without which no one will see the Lord."
Duet. 5:17 (ESV) – "You shall not murder."
Therefore, applying the commands God gave, as quoted above, Christians should urge their government to do to other nations what they wish other nations would do to them. Christians in the U.S. no doubt would like their own country to be free from invasion, attack, assassinations, covert operations, or other violent and subversive interventions by other countries’ governments, so they should advocate a foreign policy that will not involve invasion, attack, assassinations, covert operations or other violent and subversive operations by the US government in other countries, and they should support candidates for office who will oppose such unbiblical practices.
Moreover, Christians should not advocate an interventionist foreign policy that will inevitably produce unjust wars, the killing of innocents, and the subversion and overthrow of other countries’ governments, because to do so would be to thwart the command of the Apostle Paul in Romans 12:18 to live peaceably with all. Indeed, not only do interventionist actions violate Paul’s command in themselves, but they also provoke violent responses and thus perpetuate conflict, as the United States has experienced a number of times. Such responses are known by a term the CIA coined: "blowback ". It illustrates the truth that violence begets more violence, and as Jesus said in Matthew 26:52 (NIV), "[A] ll who draw the sword will die by the sword."
Furthermore, a foreign policy that advocates aggressive wars (that is, wars that involve the invasion of other countries and not the repelling of an invasion of the U.S.) is anathema to the Sixth Commandment, which prohibits murder. Wars of aggression are unjust (as the Nazi leaders learned from the Allies in the trials at Nuremburg), thus making the killing associated with them unjustified (even the killing of enemy combatants) and therefore murderous. Even just wars become unjust when the means by which the war is conducted are unjust, as in the killing of innocents.
In addition, because rulers are not exempt from the commands of God, they too must abide by the law of the land in accordance with Romans 13. The law of the land in the U.S. is the Constitution, which gives limited powers to the executive branch and only allows for war in the event that Congress has issued a declaration of war. No war since WWII has been a declared war, which means that all wars since that time have been unconstitutional and illegal, in violation of Romans 13.
Second, if we were to operate on the principle that the U.S. must overthrow repressive dictators, there would be no end to war until our own country collapsed economically, because contrary to popular belief, wars destroy wealth, not only for those whose lives and property are destroyed, but also for those who pay for the destruction (e.g., U.S. taxpayers).
Third, the best way to influence a country is through open and free trade, which leads to the exchange of ideas. As Ron Paul has said, "Ideas are very important to the shaping of society. In fact, they are more powerful than bombings or armies or guns. And this is because ideas are capable of spreading without limit. They are behind the choices we make. They can transform the world in a way that governments and armies cannot. Fighting for liberty with ideas makes more sense to me than fighting with guns or politics or political power. With ideas, we can make real change that lasts." China provides a great example of this principle. The U.S. opened relations with China in the early 1970s, and since that time, owing to trade and the consequent exchange of ideas, China has liberalized more and more, and the people of China have prospered. Of course, China is not yet a beacon of liberty, but the point is that it changed for the better without the use of sanctions or bombs. It is no longer Mao’s China.
The lesson is clear: The U.S. should stop installing and supporting repressive governments, stop overthrowing and attempting to overthrow other governments, and instead pursue peaceful commercial relations with other countries. (Note: This is precisely what George Washington's foreign policy was.)
Ron Paul is the only candidate who advocates a Biblical and Constitutional foreign policy. He is not an isolationist. Rather, he advocates peaceful commercial relations with all and denies the right of the U.S. government to intervene in the political affairs of other countries. His foreign policy is essentially the Golden Rule given by Jesus in Matthew 7:12, as applied to governments (remember, governments are just groups of men). Moreover, Ron Paul would refuse to go to war without a declaration of war by Congress, thus upholding the Constitution and the idea that political leaders are not above the law.
(As an aside, Does any of the discussion about Iran’s nuclear program sound familiar? The people who are beating the war drums against Iran for its supposed nuclear-weapons program are the very same people who lied the country into war against Iraq in 2003 on the false premise that Iraq possessed "weapons of mass destruction," notwithstanding abundant evidence at the time that no such weapons program existed. They led us into one crippling disaster, and hundreds of thousands of people lost their lives. Why should we follow them into the abyss this time?)
Lastly, neither Santorum, Gingrich, nor Romney have any qualms about a president initiating war without a declaration of war from Congress. This means that they are willing to violate the Constitution that they would be sworn to uphold. Christians cannot support someone who would violate the law of the land without themselves violating Romans 13.
Much more could be said about the immorality and illegality of the foreign policy of Santorum, Gingrich and Romney, and the disaster that would be unleashed on the world if one of them were to become president, but the reasons above are sufficient to show that none of the candidates other than Ron Paul can be said to comply with the Biblical mandates quoted above; indeed the other candidates advocate the exact opposite of those commands.
For those who are not yet convinced about the foreign policy argument, please watch the following videos. The first is Ron Paul talking about a Biblical basis for foreign policy. The second is a striking video of Ron Paul’s predictions in 2002 about the consequences at home and abroad of the prevailing U.S. interventionist foreign policy – and how they have largely come true.
Christians, it is not sufficient to say that the world is a violent place, that there are wicked people who are intent on the destruction of the United States, and that our country must destroy them before they destroy it. That view ignores what the U.S. government has been doing in the world for the last 70 (or more) years, and it is more akin to the Golden Rule according to Boss Hogg ("Do unto others before they do unto you.") rather than the Golden Rule according to Jesus. If you are going to support an interventionist foreign policy, you must find Biblical support for it. I submit to you that there is none.
Duet. 5:17 (ESV) – "You shall not murder."
As an OB/GYN, Ron Paul delivered more than 4,000 babies and saved many lives by counseling women considering abortions not to abort their babies. He supports a bill called the Sanctity of Life Act, which would define life as beginning at conception.
Since at least 2004, when the Republicans controlled both houses of Congress and the Presidency, Ron Paul has been introducing each year a bill known as the We The People Act, which would effectively overturn Roe v. Wade with a simple majority vote in Congress, by prohibiting federal courts from having jurisdiction over abortion-related cases and making federal-court decisions on that issue non-binding on state courts. This would return the issue to the states (which is where it should be under the Constitution), enabling individual states to prohibit abortions. How many thousands of lives would have been saved if the Republicans, who claim to be pro-life, would have passed this bill when they had the power to do so?
Rick Santorum, by contrast, did not support the We The People Act, but he did VOTE FOR FUNDING FOR PLANNED PARENTHOOD, and he has supported rabidly pro-abortion candidates for office, including the notorious Arlen Specter and Christine Todd Whitman, while they were running against pro-life candidates. How can a person claim to be pro-life and still vote for and support those things? Moreover, how can a person claim to uphold the law of the land and vote to fund Planned Parenthood, when there is no authority in the Constitution to do so? This is lawlessness.
Newt Gingrich has previously supported federal funding of abortions in cases of incest, rape, or to save the life of the mother. Even if you think abortion in such cases should be legal, there is no basis in the Constitution for providing federal funding for abortions. Gingrich also sponsored the Global Warming Prevention Act of 1989, which would have, among other things, eliminated the federal ban Ronald Reagan imposed against funding international groups that perform abortions.
Mitt Romney is notorious for his conveniently timed flip-flops on abortion. As recently as 2002, when he was running for governor of Massachusetts, Romney signed a Planned Parenthood questionnaire stating that he supported a woman’s so-called right to choose. Ted Kennedy summed up Romney well when he said that Romney wasn't pro-choice or anti-choice, he was multiple choice.
Deut. 6:6-7 – "And these words that I command you today shall be on your heart. 7 You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise." (emphasis added).
God gives children to their parents and charges their parents with the responsibility to raise and educate them (i.e., to bring them up in the discipline and instruction of the Lord). Nowhere in Scripture is the government given any authority or responsibility to educate children.
Ron Paul supports the biblical role of parents in educating their children and opposes the encroachment by the government in the parents’ freedom to educate their children as they see fit. He believes that no country can remain free when the government has more influence over the knowledge and values transmitted to children than parents do. Ron Paul would uphold the law of the land on this issue – the Constitution – which gives no authority whatsoever to the federal government to meddle in matters of education. Ron Paul would work to eliminate the disastrous Department of Education, and he has also introduced legislation that would give homeschoolers a tax credit (not a welfare voucher with strings) of $5,000 per child for educational expenses. He also has promised to veto any bill that encroaches on homeschooling parents’ rights. Homeschooling Christians will not find a greater friend in this campaign than Ron Paul.
Rick Santorum, on the other hand, apparently does not have a problem with disregarding the Constitution when it comes to education, given that voted for the No Child Left
Newt Gingrich worked with Jimmy Carter to create the Federal Department of Education, notwithstanding the lack of any Constitutional authority for such a thing, and one of his noted accomplishments in the House was the dramatic increase in the department’s budget that the Republicans passed. As for homeschooling, Newt’s idea of "protect[ing] the rights of homeschooled children" is "ensuring they have the same access to taxpayer funded, extra-curricular educational opportunities as any public school student." What?! Who cares about that? We simply want to be left alone. Newt also proposes education welfare programs, including a "Pell Grant-style system" for grades K-12, which would get all participating schools – public, private, and homeschools – on the public dole and under government control. He also wants to make sure children are being adequately indoctrinated into the government’s view of American history, which would have to be done by some sort of federal mandate or funding threat. More government, more government, more government.
The proposals and records of Santorum, Gingrich, and Romney show that they have little or no regard for the law of the land or for the fact that government has no Biblical authority to raise and indoctrinate children.
Lev. 19:36
(ESV) – " You shall have just balances, just weights…"
Deut. 25:15
(ESV) – "A full and fair weight you shall have, a full and
fair measure you shall have, that your days may be long in the land
that the Lord your God is giving you."
Proverbs 11:1
(ESV) – "A false balance is an abomination to the Lord, but
a just weight is his delight."
Micah 6:11
(ESV) – "Shall I acquit the man with wicked scales and with
a bag of deceitful weights?"
Deut. 5:19
(ESV) – "[Y]ou shall not steal."
In Biblical
times, weights and balances were what people used to measure how
much goods were worth for purposes of purchases and sales. Using
improperly weighted scales was a way to steal wealth and purchasing
power from others. The modern equivalent to weights and balances
would be money, and the modern equivalent to stealing purchasing
power from others would be the use of paper money (1) that is unbacked
by any real asset and (2) that can be and is created out of thin
air for the benefit of those in power.
When government
prints more money, there are then more dollars in the system chasing
after the same amount of goods. Prices inevitably rise, thus robbing
people of their purchasing power. However, because not everyone
in society will immediately realize the fact that more money has
been printed and the effect it will have, prices do not rise immediately
or uniformly. In fact, it may take a while for the new money to
work itself through the system. Those who receive the new money
first benefit the most because the prices of goods and services
will not have risen yet. These beneficiaries would include the federal
government and investment bankers like Goldman Sachs. People at
the end of the chain, like retirees and those on fixed incomes,
receive no benefit and in fact lose purchasing power because of
the rise in prices. In other words, with more money chasing the
same goods, people on fixed incomes will find that their money will
buy fewer goods. Thus, the fiat-money system transfers wealth (i.e.,
purchasing power) from the poor and middle class to the politicians
and their financiers. Under this system, the U.S. dollar has lost
more than 90% of its value since 1971, when Richard Nixon finally
severed the dollar from the gold standard. This is a dishonest system,
equivalent to unfair weights and measures.
Ron Paul
is the only candidate who understands the immorality and unconstitutionality
of this monetary system. In fact, he wrote a book against the system,
called End
the Fed. Ron Paul advocates a return
to honest, sound, Constitutional money (i.e., money backed by
gold and silver).
The other
candidates generally do not even talk about monetary policy, but
when they do, their statements show that they will largely perpetuate
the status quo. Rick Santorum believes that we need inflation,
that is, we need our purchasing power to be stolen from us. See
this video at about 2:40. His views are taken apart by Tom Woods
in this
video.
Mitt Romney’s
biggest
donor is Goldman Sachs, one of the chief beneficiaries of the
fiat-money system.. Thus, he is unlikely to do anything about this
immoral monetary system.
Newt Gingrich
talks about auditing
the Federal Reserve, which is good, but he does not go far enough.
Auditing the Fed will reveal to some extent how much the Federal
Reserve is used to enrich the Wall Street banks, but what we need
is honest money. Gingrich has nothing to say about that.
Conclusion
In this article,
I have not discussed the fact that Ron Paul is the only
evangelical Christian in this race (Santorum and Gingrich are
Catholics and Romney is a Mormon). Nor have I discussed Ron Paul’s
high moral character (e.g., honest, consistent, married to the same
wife for 55 years vs. Gingrich’s three wives and alleged open-marriage
proposal, etc.). Much more could be said on those issues. However,
on the four issues I have identified, which are or should be of
great importance to Christians, there is only one man among the
four remaining contenders whose approach approximates the Biblical
approach – Ron Paul. The other three candidates will grow government,
will launch more murderous wars, will ignore or be ineffective in
dealing with the abortion issue, will continue the expansion of
the government’s involvement in education, and will do nothing about
the monetary system that is systematically robbing you of purchasing
power and giving it to investment banks. I therefore urge my Christian
brothers to abandon Romney, Santorum, and Gingrich and support Ron
Paul. Oh, and by the way, he
can beat Obama.
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