If you're not watching the political scene in our country, you're disconnected.
As an Orthodox priest, I am not permitted to share with you anything other than that which the Church holds as relating to what is present before us - not to attempt to bias opinion one way or the other. And so, it is with great care and much prayer that I structure this message.
We've heard from many that they are ever more disappointed in our political system, that the choices presented to us in each election cycle seem ever more unpalatable. There have been comments to the effect (and I'm sure you've heard them), "I can't vote for either of these two," or, "I guess I'll have to vote third party" (whatever that may mean), or, "I'm just not going to go and vote."
And so, we enter this cycle already with a perspective of defeat. We have taken the information available to us into our own hands, decided the options given us to be wanting, and chosen to not choose, to remove ourselves from the process because "the process is corrupt." In short, we've placed ourselves into the judgment seat, and are washing our hands of the process....
Please look at what we've just said to ourselves, and to our Lord. "I give up!" Where in this is our turning to Him for guidance? Where in this is our trust that He has a plan, that we are part of that plan, and that we have a responsibility (indeed, a divine one) to seek His will - even in choices we cannot ourselves resolve. Where is our understanding that our Lord does things like change defeat into victory?
He has a plan. His plan includes us. He has given us a great privilege to live in a country in which we still have the ability to select a candidate, imperfect though he or she may be.
I can hear you ask, "Father, how do we make such a choice? It's impossible!"
First, with God, all things are possible. Next, we approach the choice with great fear and trembling, knowing that in our own sinfulness and with our own God-given talents, we are not capable of seeing what our Lord sees, of knowing what He knows.
But we are capable of turning to Him in prayer, seeking His guidance, asking that by His intervention we will be enabled to make the choice acceptable to Him. There is a wonderful prayer from the Great Compline service in which we pray, "O Lord of Hosts, be with us, for we have no other help in times of adversity but You. O Lord of Hosts, have mercy on us!"
Our beloved country has turned our collective backs on our Lord for far too long. We have eliminated Him from our schools, our courts, our public gathering places. We have too long tolerated sin as choice, error as a lifestyle. And while we love all humanity (recognizing our own sins, and our place as 'greatest among sinners'), we accept evil in our midst, because we've been told (not by the Church) that this is what a civilized society does.
If we can find it within our hearts to turn to the Lord for His guidance, to ask in humble and sincere prayer that He guide us and our country to conform to His divine will, our insecurities over something like an election will melt away. And perhaps in the process we'll find ourselves changing the minds of the people around us to also seek and conform to God's will in our lives! Can you imagine that day when our Lord blesses our faithfulness and multiplies His work by growing His Church in this country?
What is the point of this discussion? As citizens of a country that once held the highest of standards in terms of living godly lives, in seeking His will throughout times of adversity and need, those of us who find ourselves in the society surrounding us today owe it not only to our parents and grandparents, but to our children and our grandchildren, to take up the responsibility given us, to pray intently to our Lord to reveal to us His will, to "do our homework," to study all we can about the virtues and liabilities of the candidates presented to us, and then, believing that our prayers will be answered, do our civic duty and vote for the most godly choice we find. If you call it, "the lesser of two evils," you automatically accept defeat. Rather, call it "the better of two alternatives," and then turn the one elected over into His hands, for ultimately that is where all civil authority lay, blessed by our Lord to serve His people.
No one said this would be easy. It may be disheartening and discouraging at times. Will the one elected conform her or him self to the will of God in their service to this country? God knows! You know that the answer to that question is not always edifying. But as those who follow the will of God, who call ourselves by His name, we have a responsibility to seek and to do His will. Saint Peter taught it this way:
Therefore gird up the loins of your mind, be sober, and rest your hope fully upon the grace that is to be brought to you at the revelation of Jesus Christ; as obedient children, not conforming yourselves to the former lusts, as in your ignorance; but as He who called you is holy, you also be holy in all your conduct, because it is written, “Be holy, for I am holy” (1 Peter 1:13).
Don't "not vote"! Don't waste your vote! Seek His will, and then trust the rest to His divine care - for us, His people!
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