A major political development is taking place under the
radar that could make a difference in 2016 and beyond. It involves evangelicals and Catholics who
are moving to overlook their religious differences to act as one on important
issues.
Dr. Jay Richards, a prominent Catholic writer, works with
influential evangelicals to push the two faiths closer together. “These two people groups, these two religious
bodies in the United States in many ways hold the solution to renewing our
culture,” he told CBN News. He believes that hasn’t happened yet … because
of a failure to see how much they have in common and can gain by joining
forces. “Part of the reason that Christians
have become so un-influential in American culture is because we exist and live
in 10,000 individual little ghettoes, little silos,” he explained. “It doesn’t mean we’re necessarily now
fighting each other. It means we’re not
working together.”
But Americans have come a long way from when a Catholic
politician’s faith worked against him and made it hard for him to even get
elected. Today, you see prominent
Christians like Catholic Sen. Marco Rubio and evangelical Sen. Ted Cruz
supported equally by each other’s religious group.
Richards is working with evangelical leader James Robison to
reach both Catholics and evangelicals. “There’s
a lot of mixing,” Richards said. “Some
of my closest Catholic friends are Cruz supporters. And some of my best evangelical friends are
Rubio supporters. So I think that’s
actually very healthy. These things aren’t
dividing up over these religious differences.”
If even more conservative religious groups could start
working in unity, Richards believes it could halt the downward spiral of a
nation that appears to be growing more anti-Christian by the year. “What we do, how we vote, actually matters,”
he told CBN News. “We actually have some responsibility for
these things.” He goes on to say, “And
so I hope we’ll use, frankly, the attacks on Christianity and religious freedom
as an opportunity to come together, to think strategically, to say, ‘Okay, how
do we create a public and effective witness when we come together in the public
square?’ ”
Imagine it: As a united force, Catholics and evangelicals
would form, by far, the largest voting bloc in the United States.
Rev. Dr.
Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain
(Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor,
Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel
And yet most Catholics vote Democrat (Liberal). It doesn't make any sense but they keep voting even through the left stands against almost everything they believe.
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