Friday, December 22, 2017
Lesser of Two Evils Again
An Aussie Christian blogger I hadn't run across before said (in another context) that a quote by Spurgeon appeared often on social media during last year's presidential campaign: "Of two evils choose neither."
I'd not seen the Spurgeon quote before: perhaps because I go on facebook no more often than I stroll through a sewer, and deliberately avoided it during the election season. But Spurgeon's quote stated fairly well the conclusion I came to at that time, after hearing many Christian friends rationalize their vote for Trump by the "lesser of two evils" thinking. So I set out to verify Spurgeon's quote.
In his "The Salt-Cellars," p. 297, Spurgeon did indeed write, "Of two evils choose neither. Don't choose the least, but let all evils alone." (He credits that wisdom to "John Ploughman:" but in the introduction to his book of that name, says "John Ploughman" is his pseudonym.)
(One blogger claimed that the quote was being misused to discourage people from voting, because Spurgeon taught that people should vote. He also claimed that what was being posted on social media was a different quote by a contemporary writer, John Marcavage: "Of two evils choose neither. Christians must turn from the endless cycle of voting for the lesser of evils and expecting an unrighteous act to produce a righteous result. From a communist to a cultist, choosing the lesser of two evils is still evil, and never should we do evil that good may come.”
I find Marcavage's thought preferable to Spurgeon's, since it also warns against the related "do evil that good may come" teaching...another false rationale many Christian friends gave for voting for Trump...condemned in Romans 3:8. But whether or not being misused, my purpose was only to verify Spurgeon's quote was genuine before I used it, and it was.)
I had come to the same conclusion as Spurgeon: though the way I put it was that operating by "lesser of two evils" thinking always results in our choosing evil, knowing it IS evil.
The enemy is infinitely subtle in his deceptions. The “father of lies” has practiced his “skill” on human beings since the Garden of Eden, and he's incredibly more successful at it than any of us are at keeping ourselves from deception. Any of us can be deceived by him to make a wrong choice.
By definition, we are deceived any time we trust ourselves to make a decision without exercising, and heeding, the Spirit’s discernment: a foolishness which opens us to greater deception, which deception always produces sin.
We don't ordinarily sin because we deliberately choose to do evil; rather, that we choose to do what we are mistaken in believing is good. The template for producing sin is that we are persuaded, and convince ourselves, that some evil is, or could be, or would be, actually “good.” That's where the enemy ordinarily operates.
And very successfully. With Eve in the Garden, for example, when he persuaded her that disobeying God would confer God-like knowledge. With many "Christian Conservatives," for example, when he persuaded them that electing Trump would result in "conservative" Supreme Court justices, who would outlaw abortion. Again, see scripture's condemnation of this "do evil to do good" rationalization in Romans 3:8.
But choosing an evil because it is a "lesser" evil is a different order of sin, greater than being led to do evil by our (hopefully momentary) spiritual blindness that it is good. When we choose "the lesser of two evils," we willfully choose evil...knowing it IS evil.
If we believe circumstances exist in which we "have to" do evil, we acknowledge that satan is the effectual ruler of all things, and God is powerless against him. God lied to us, saying He gave us a choice between good and evil, if satan can create situations in which no choice for good exists, and yet we "have to" choose.
Our beloved brother Tim ("Onesimus") in Australia made a comment that seemed to cap all my thinking about the deep consequences of believing the "lesser of two evils" deception. He pointed out yesterday that what he sees happening in America (and having an even-closer view than he does, I'd whole-heartedly agree with him) is more than mistaken moral vision, greater even that foolish resignation at “having to” do evil.
What Tim saw, and saw truly, is that the "active support and promotion" of evil manifested in many American Christians' "political activism" is a quantum step beyond being deceived by the enemy, to joining the enemy.
I've been concerned at seeing that very thing among Christians I know. Christians who last year reluctantly voted for Trump as "the lesser of two evils" evidenced they could still recognize evil. But many of them...perhaps because their pride will not let them admit they did wrong...have now become staunch defenders of his daily lies, and his evil-intentioned actions.
That so-called "Evangelical base," professing to follow Christ while (sometimes even by) "active support and promotion" of evils committed by members of "their" politicians and "their" political faction, are becoming increasingly hardened in their rationalizing, acceptance, and love of evil. The enemy is increasingly successful, through political deception, in creating a "church" bearing Christ's name which serves evil.
There is no reason to believe the enemy will abandon the tactic which has worked so well for him. We should expect he will continue to practice it, in hopes of leading more Christians astray. Christians who have their hearts set on following Christ must be even more alert and discerning about the deceptions the enemy will continue to try to insinuate into our thinking through politics in the coming days.
"Happy is he who does not condemn himself in what he approves." -- Romans 14:22
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