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“participation in the political process or lack thereof—and the principles we employ—greatly affect our neighbors. Politics can be a matter of freedom or imprisonment, free speech or censorship, housing or homelessness, life or death. Politics is an essential aspect of modern life. It is how we govern ourselves, and it plays a major role in how we organize ourselves as a society. Political actions have started wars and defined certain people as property, but they’ve also fed the hungry and provided care for the sick. Christians must be faithful and thoughtful in how we choose to wield our influence and political power.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“In politics, civility shows itself in respect for disagreement and in granting others the right to express it. Civility shows itself when we acknowledge the best in our political opponents' line of thinking and the best in our political opponents themselves. Civility is mercy and forgiveness. It is a form of public grace.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“All incivility is, at its root, preceded by dehumanization. Incivility is toxic because it stems from a lapse in the recognition of human dignity: recognition of the dignity of others or recognition of one's own dignity.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“The colorblind ideology that says “I don’t see race” should not be embraced by Christians. When we choose to look past race, we also choose to avert our eyes from the many ways that even well-meaning people and institutions engage in practices that reproduce and reinforce negative outcomes such as segregation, disadvantages for minorities in the job market, and the portrayal of whiteness as superior in public communications and entertainment. The simple fact is that if we can’t see and discuss the issue of race, we cannot solve the problems that racism causes.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“Love for others should compel us to advocate for justice on their behalf just as we would do for ourselves. When we're confronted with a societal problem we must consider the best solution out of love, compassion, and justice.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“Christianity is not just about going to church. It's a way of seeing and understanding the world around us that should affect everything we do. In other words, Christianity is both a lifestyle and a worldview.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“Our partners often try to convince us that our opponents are so evil—and the moment is so urgent—that to question the group’s tactics or refuse to endorse its strategies is to do a great disservice to the cause. This is “ends justify the means” thinking that we as Christians cannot accept. Under no circumstances should Christians blindly follow our partners or overlook immorality and bad tactics or strategies for the sake of the movement.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“As Christians, we have to be careful about how we label people. When we portray others in a demeaning light, we sin against them and reveal our own lack of wisdom (Proverbs 11:12). Discrediting a group might help us win an argument, but if it belittles our neighbor, it's wrong.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“Christians can choose a political party, but we can’t choose between love and truth. We can’t fully embrace movements that dismiss justice or undermine moral order.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“Consequently, we swing between disorder and overly harsh rules, roles, and systems that trample on humanity’s God-given rights.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“Frederick Douglass, the Christian abolitionist, orator, and writer, understood this quite well. In a lecture in Rochester, New York, he said, “I would unite with anybody to do right and with nobody to do wrong.”17 That quote may seem trite until you understand the context in which Douglass said it. He was explaining that he would partner with the American Anti-Slavery Society to abolish slavery, but he would not partner in their effort to abolish the American government as a whole. They believed the US Constitution was a slaveholding document and that they needed to abolish the Union itself for the sake of emancipation. Douglass disagreed. He understood the flaws in the US Constitution and the blind spots of the founders, but he believed the Constitution opened the door and provided the apparatus to abolish slavery. He said, “To dissolve the Union, as a means to abolish slavery, is about as wise as it would be to burn up this city in order to get the thieves out of it.”18 No one could credibly claim that Douglass didn’t understand the issue or wasn’t taking it seriously enough. He had himself been a slave, was separated from his family, and was physically beaten in this demonic institution of slavery, yet Douglass refused to surrender his critical thinking just to appease his partners. This took an incredible amount of fortitude and vision. Remember Douglass the next time your political partners demand that you go along to get along. This man of faith understood that the means of achieving emancipation were not to be overlooked—and history proved him right. Efforts go wrong when people who know better become yes men or women. We hurt the cause most when we fail to be its moral anchor and moral compass.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“Indeed, we should be careful to ensure that we do not invoke moral order only in regard to issues that don't affect us directly. Christians should be sure that they first apply any standard to themselves and those ideas most personal to them before thinking about how that standard affects others (Matthew 7:5).”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“Showing kindness means being able to unconditionally accept people for who they are without approving of their choices, even if we believe those choices are outside of God’s will according to our understanding of God’s Word.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“Be certain that you’re not more eager to invoke God’s moral order for others than you are for yourself.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“In Micah 6:8, we find what has been called the Great Requirement: He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does the LORD require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your God. Just as the Great Commandment requires us to actively love our neighbors, the Great Requirement commands us to further the cause of justice.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“People are paying attention to how Christians operate in political life. They want to know if faith makes a difference in how to think about politics, in how to carry out those duties of citizenship”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“Slander is when we move from arguing about effects to arguing about intent, which is a way to undermine the standing of those we are arguing with in the public square.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“But Christians must never assume the best of ourselves. Ours must always be the prayer of Psalm 139:23: “Search me, God.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“Orwell believed the English language was in decline, partially because of “political causes.” In his estimation language was suffering because “political speech and writing are largely a defence of the indefensible. . . . Politics itself is a mass of lies, evasion, folly [and] hatred.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“If we want to see more civility, we ourselves must be even more emphatic about our support for sound democratic processes and a fair, impartial government. Injustice does not justify incivility, but it is reasonable for incivility to spring forth from injustice. People who are proponents of civility but quietists on everything else are, in fact, a great threat to civility. They are silent on voter disenfranchisement, but quick to urge the disenfranchised to be civil in how they express their disagreement. They are silent on the inequities and injustices in our criminal justice system, but are more than happy to retweet videos of protesters blocking highways or cursing at pedestrians. We can hardly encourage civility if we undermine a healthy civic life.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“In a section of Orwell’s essay labeled “Meaningless Words,” he explains how in politics words “are often used in a consciously dishonest way. That is, the person who uses them has his own private definition, but allows the hearer to think he means something quite different.”11 Orwell lists words such as patriotic, freedom, equality, and progressive as being particularly prone to deceptive use.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“This kind of rhetoric can be important and meaningful if it is used to hold an elected leader accountable. However, if we as Christians are listening to politicians in order to be flattered or to personally identify with a politician, then we will be easily manipulated.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“Our purpose in civic engagement is not to make our own names great but to make known the greatness of the One who sends us. Our great desire is to be agents of the will of God in the earth, distribution centers for the love of God toward his creation.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“Political leaders often talk as if their side is for all that is good and true, and the other side is for death and destruction. But civic decisions become too easy when we as Christians pretend politics is simply a battle between angels and demons. The implication is that we don’t have to parse the details of their proposals or weigh the alternatives, we just need to know what position the “right side” is taking. This makes for a simple and powerful narrative, but in a broken world, neither side is completely good. There weren’t any perfect groups of people in the Bible (Romans 3:23), and there is only one perfect human, Jesus Christ (Isaiah 53:9). That fact still stands today. That isn’t to say that both sides of any given issue are equal or that one side can’t be clearly wrong, but a quick look at the record of any party or tribe will dispel all misconceptions about their infallibility. Indeed, sometimes political opponents are plainly misguided or even ill intended, and we as Christians would be remiss not to correct them. However, we must be able to disagree and work against those with opposing beliefs without dehumanizing them. When we label other groups evil, stupid, or irredeemable—or deny their pain—we strip them of their human dignity and make ourselves and others less likely to show them concern and compassion.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“To avoid or dismiss political engagement is to forgo an important opportunity to help our neighbors and to promote the righteousness and justice that are the foundation of God’s throne (Psalm 89:14).”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“We must confront racism with humility and grace, with a posture of self-examination, not self-defense, remembering that God demands something of all of us (Exodus 20), even if we've been the victim. As Christians we ought to have a much clearer view of our own depravity and need for mercy. That awareness of sin in our lives and in our own cultures must drive us to a posture of humility, first toward God and then by extension to our fellow humans (Ephesians 5:21). Furthermore, being aware of the profound mercy and forgiveness of God, we should find grace to confront our personal and cultural issues knowing that we serve a God of love who intends to cleanse us from sin rather than to destroy us because of it (1 John 1:9).”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“In actual fact the deep racial divides in our nation present one of the greatest opportunities for the American church. Racism is in the church, but it is not unique to the church. It’s the gospel that is unique to the church—the truth that the divine power of Almighty God reaches even across the deepest of cultural divides (Romans 1:16).”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“America's current political system separates love from truth, compassion from conviction, and social justice from moral order as if they're somehow at odds with one another. People who support social justice issues generally don't support traditional views of morality and vice versa. But there's no clear reason why those two stances should be separate. It's just presented to us as the only way, and we accept it.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“To love others as we love ourselves is to give them the care and consideration that we’d provide for ourselves and our loved ones. If we were negatively impacted by injustice, we would advocate for ourselves; according to Scripture, we should also advocate and stand up for others (Isaiah 1:17).”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement
“Some Christians are more willing to defend their ideological tribe than the Christian faith. It’s imperative that Christians are deliberate about avoiding partisan and ideological indoctrination. We also compromise our faith when we look to political tribes for validation simply because we want to belong. Our partisan and ideological affiliations should never become religious in nature.”
Justin Giboney, Compassion (&) Conviction: The AND Campaign's Guide to Faithful Civic Engagement

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