Question, If you found yourself living in a small town in Utah where the majority of people were muslim, and there were two muslims running for county recorder...would you...
a. Not vote?
b. Not vote, and consider any Christian who did vote for either candidate to be in sin, even though the county needs a recorder to keep records?
c. Vote for whichever one of them you thought would do the best job, because the county needs a recorder?
By not voting for either candidate, are you not yourself allowing one of their platforms to enlarge...by default, as it were?
I hope you won't see my response as confrontational but here is how I would respond and why I am struggling with this decision.
Your analogy falls short for me and here is why. My chief concern with a practicing Mormon in the White House and the subsequent increase in legitimacy and prestige of Mormonism is because Mormonism is a wolf in sheep's clothing more than any other religion this side of JW. Every Mormon I have every known describes themselves and their religion as “Christian too”. When you consider the shallowness of religious acumen among the unchurched and even many of the laity in our churches, they are ripe for this deception should Romney win. No, there won’t be mass conversions among Baptists who post on this message board but there will be an increase in conversions among confused or weak people with a Evangelical heritage (grandmother was a Baptist?). Trying to draw a parallel with Islam, Hindus or atheists doesn’t hold up for me because they don’t claim to be Christian. Even drawing a parallel with Catholicism isn’t even close to this in my view.
I have to lean heavily on my Calvinistic inclinations toward God’s sovereignty in calling the elect and in placing leaders in government to help me justify a vote for this kind of deception. If I were truly arminian I couldn’t do it. I would write in Mike Huckabee. I may anyway because I am responsible for my actions.
Having said all that there are three reasons why I am flirting with voting for Romney.
1. I lean toward a Calvinistic view of Soteriology
2. I do not think how he will govern will be significantly different than how an Evangelical would govern with the same basic political/economic philosophy as a baseline
3. I think the damage has already been done with his party nomination and the strong Evangelical support he is getting
We better start teaching our church members, our kids and our friends about the differences between Christianity and Mormonism and we better make sure they understand why it matters.