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Thank you, President Trump

Discussion in 'Political Debate & Discussion' started by MrW, Oct 29, 2024 at 8:30 AM.

  1. MrW

    MrW Well-Known Member

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    For half a century, abortion was legal in 50 States, even though it was not in the Constitution and actually violates it by depriving persons of life and liberty without due process.

    Thanks to President Trump, it is now illegal in thirteen States, and eight more have restrictions. I would rather have that than legalize it nationally.

    Some people think if it’s legal, it’s moral. If Harris assumes the presidency, abortion will be legal nationwide, including the thirteen that now do not allow it.

    If my vote would have only made it illegal in my State alone, I would be glad to vote.

    President Trump will not make it illegal in 50 States, but leave it to each State.

    Harris WILL make it legal in all 50.

    I WILL vote for President Trump.
     
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  2. MrW

    MrW Well-Known Member

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    To me, Christian belief should be practical, of value and use in this present world, since we do exist in the moment. A faith that does not exercise the privilege of voting for the best rulers available on the slate, is impractical, useless in this present world for ought but unending debates. As James said, “Faith without works is dead…”; it is hollow, a corpse of no present benefit.
     
    #2 MrW, Oct 29, 2024 at 3:35 PM
    Last edited: Oct 29, 2024 at 3:47 PM
  3. Dr. Bob

    Dr. Bob Administrator
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    Agree. Hated to move this, but its focus is on the candidate and not the issue of abortion so forced to.
     
  4. JonC

    JonC Moderator
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    I disagree (obviously).

    A faith that does not exercise voting is simply a faith that doesn't exercise voting (just like one who votes, well, votes).

    It is no more impractical than desiring to change the World through secular politics.

    Your mistake here is in assuming that a Christian can only work by supporting a party seeking to dominate a worldly kingdom.

    This is wrong. It is illogical.

    For one, you condemn Jesus, His Disciples, the Early Church, and every Christian prior to 4th Century as having no works and holding an impractical faith.

    Although Jesus, the Apostles, the Early Church, and believers until the 4th century AD refused to engage the World via political systems they did have works.

    Second, you demean the works of believers that are not secular or political. All of those who plant churches, who spread the gospel, who work to actually prevent abortion, who work in prisons, who feed the poor, who work with the homeless, who reach out to gay communities, who work with people addicted to drugs......you say those are not really works but supporting a political candidate is a work.


    My view is that every believers should prayerfully follow their conscience.

    I also believe that you commit a sin against God by calling the work of Christ, of the Apostles, of the Early Church, of Christians before the Catholic Church, of fellower workers in the field, "impractical" and encourage them to violate their conscience and sin.


    There are good reasons to vote for a godly candidate and a godly party.

    BUT there are also good reasons to abstain from politics.


    Your declaration that only ones support for a political candidate is counted as a "work" is wrong for another reason.

    Voting is not work. It is voicing support for a political party to work (whether good or bad).

    In church, voting to start a community outreach is not a work. Working in that ministry is a work.



    This is one reason I am very worried about the GOP. Many, like you, @MrW , have replaced doing kingdom work with voting for a political candidate. You are choosing a secular power to replace "Christ in you" (actual Christian works).

    If you want to vote then vote. If you dont want to, then don't.

    But stop pretending that supporting the GOP is required for one to have a practical faith. Stop pretending that voting for a political candidate is not only a work but the only work that counts.
     
  5. JonC

    JonC Moderator
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    For clarity-

    You agree that a believer who abstains from supporting a secular political party has an impractical, useless faith that is hollow, a corpse of no present benefit?


    If so, I have to ask:

    What about Christians who evangelize, who teach Scripture, who preach, who feed the poor, reach out to actually prevent women from choosing abortion, who witness to and help the homeless, but abstain from supporting a secular political party?


    I agree there are good reasons to vote. But there are good reasons to abstain as well (I truely believe one must pray and follow their conscience).
     
  6. JonC

    JonC Moderator
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    BTW...I'm glad Roe vs Wade was overturned. I wish it would have the result of reducing abortions. But even though it doesn't actually reduce the number of babies murdered, it needed to be overturned.
     
  7. JonC

    JonC Moderator
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    I am glad Roe vs Wade was overturned. But there are a few problems with your post.

    1. Unborn children are not, unfortunately, protected under the US Constitution. One has to be "born or naturalized" (14th Ammendment).

    2. You reference the Declaration of Independence, not the US Constitution.

    3. Overturning Roe vs Wade did nothing, nor will it, reduce the number of abortions. In fact, abortions have slightly increased since Roe vs Wade was overturned.

    The reason is changing abortion law does not change the heart of a person. The Democrats proved this as they have organizations that will fly (at no cost) women seeking abortions where prohibited to obtain an abortion free of charge. Others simoly drive across state lines, or obtain an abortion illegally.


    There are non-voting (and voting) Christians who actually work to save the lives of these babies where politics cannot. We work with families to adopt, work with pregnant women to give them a better choice, care for these women, provide resources....much more work than simoly voting, but this type of work actually reduces abortion.


    You have to remember that, while there are reasons to vote, there are reasons to abstain.

    Some Christians will not support the GOP because they cannot in good conscience support the normalization of homosexuality or SSM. Some will not support Trump because of his chatacter. Some will not vote because they do not want to compromise their witness. Some abstain (like me) because we believe that we should work in the World but not become a part of the World to do that work.

    I hope Trump wins, for the sake of our nation.

    But I will not pretend that the GOP will reduce abortions. All that is accomplished is these babies are murdered out of your sight, but they are still killed.

    And I cannot pretend that by supporting Trump I would be supporting Trump doing what he says he will do (to include the normalization of homosexuality).


    Trump says the GOP is the party of inclusion (gay, straight, pro-choice, pro-life, Christian, Muslim, Mormon....conservative, of course). I would rather work to actually decrease abortions than support such an inclusive power to make laws that have no effect but move abortions out of sight and hear this inclusive power take credit for something so hollow - something that lacks power - and see Christians give glory to the GOP for nothing but a slogan.
     
  8. MrW

    MrW Well-Known Member

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    No sir. I quoted from the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
     
  9. MrW

    MrW Well-Known Member

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    And Harris is far worse.
     
  10. JonC

    JonC Moderator
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    The problem is the 14th Ammendment does not address unborn children as persons or citizens under the jurisdiction of government.

    I wish this were not so. I suppose if it were changed there would be issues of citizenship at conception.

    But people are people regardless of age.
     
  11. JonC

    JonC Moderator
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    I agree that Harris is worse on those issues.

    The DNC is dangerous to the nation. It's platform is demonic. Where the DNC wears its identity as a wolf with pride the GOP is a wolf in sheep's clothing.

    The fact that you label brethren who work in the Kindgom, who witness to the gay community, who work to actually reduce abortions, who feed the hungry and help the poor, who evangelize to the lost, who preach and teach the gospel of Jesus Christ, who work in prisions, who plant churches....etc....as doing no work and holding a hollow faith if they do not support a secular political party is proof that our churches have lost their First Love and become lukewarm.

    You have proven the danger of the GOP to our faith in your condemnation of Christians who devoted their lives to Kingdom work yet abstain from worldly politics.
     
  12. MrW

    MrW Well-Known Member

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    It’s precisely because of my love for the Lord Jesus and for my neighbor (two greatest commandments) that I make sure I vote straight Republican and in every election. I’m sure God expects me to do the best I can, and while Republicans stink, they smell much, much better than dems.

    I don’t want to be like the servant who buried his talent and thus had his part with the unbelievers, but I want to “occupy till my Lord returns” from the far country where He has gone to receive a kingdom.

    Another perspective:

    THE #1 REASON I VOTED FOR TRUMP

    James L. Melton

    There has never been a flawless politician for the simple reason that there has never been a man to run for office who wasn't a product of a fallen, sin-cursed race. Anyone can create a list of negatives, or perceived negatives, against anyone, and by focusing on such a list continually, anyone can make anyone look like a devil. That's why Donald Trump is a devil in the eyes of many.

    By contrast, anyone can also make anyone look like an angel by focusing only on the positives or the perceived positives. That's why people like Obama, the Clintons, the Kennedys and MLK, Jr. are god-like figures in the eyes of millions.

    Well, Donald Trump is neither angel nor devil, and I did not vote for him because anyone convinced me that he is. I did not vote for him just because he isn't Harris or Biden. I did not vote for him just because someone told me that he's a Christian or because he sells and signs Bibles. No, my reason for voting for Trump is very simple and very fundamental: I believe the man LOVES AMERICA more than he loves himself. He clearly loves himself, but after watching the man closely for the past ten years, I'm convinced that he loves America more.

    I also believed that President Reagan loved America, and I've never regretted voting for him. In fact, with every passing year, I become more pleased that I did. We live in a different world today, and in a very different country, but Donald Trump loves the America that he grew up in and built his career in, and he seeks to reclaim that America for everyone. Like many of us, he loves what our country used to be more than what it has become, and he wants to turn back the clock and strengthen our nation with the solid principles of the past. The man has already spent four years showing us what he will do as President, and I like what I saw. That's love for America, not politics, and that's why Donald Trump gets my vote.

    "Hatred stirreth up strifes: but love covereth all sins." (Pro. 10:12)

    biblebaptistpublications.org
     
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  13. JonC

    JonC Moderator
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    I am not concerned about why you, or anybody, votes.

    I am, however, concerned that you declared the faith of all Christians who abstain from voting as "hollow, a corpse of no present benefit."

    I am concerned that you accuse those believers works as "impractical" and "useless in this present world".

    The reason is I have seen Christians who follow their conscience by abstaining from participating in secular politics working for the Kingdom in the name of Christ.

    I have seen them preventing abortions through their ministry, feeding the hungry, reaching out with the gospel of Jesus, working in prison ministrues, proclaiming the gospel, planting churches, ministering to the homekess, etc.

    For you to say that these things are "impractical", of no use, and their faith is "hollow, a corpse of no present benefit" is the most ungodly thing I have seen from a professing believer.
     
  14. percho

    percho Well-Known Member
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    You have a right to vote
    You also have a right not to vote

    To each his own.

    Do not expect to much from government either way!
     
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