It's coming. Judgement day for America. This time it's not God judging us, but rather us making our judgement about what we want for our nation, our economy, the middle east, our children. Many say the choice is clear, but in our media driven, shaken situation, such bravado is naive.
The choice, as I see it, is between an articulate, handsome, symbolic story of overcoming prejudice and hatred, and a safe, predictable, kind of "white bread" version of what has always been the mainstays of freedom. McCain is without a doubt tried and true. He will not change, we know what we are getting, and he'll continue the stubborn hearted fight against what many believe is the challenge of the next century--fanatical islam terrorism.
Obama on the other hand heralds a season of change. Everyone at war is ready for change, as Robert E. Lee said, "its good that war is so aweful, lest we begin to like it." But Obama is promising to change more than the middle east (heard that before), he will change healthcare, the economy, politics in washington, energy, early reading, etc. etc. Problem is that people believe him, and don't stop to ask the question who's gonna pay for all this change.
If we could just stop and second and mention some things we might not want to change. Having no attacks on American soil, I'd like that not to change. Faith-based initiatives, I'd like that not to change. Stimulus packages--kind of like them. Seeing the world through a lens that calls evil evil, and good good, timeless stuff that I hope doesn't change after the election.
The judgement I'm afraid no one articulates is whether we want to have a king, or not. Samuel told the people they could have the handsomist, most articulate king of anyone but just realize that your sons will be in his army, you daughters in his concumbine, your health in his system, and your wallet at his discretion. But God says give the people what they want. Judge carefully.
Sunday, November 2, 2008
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)