

- Close-minded racists
- Homophobes and
- Anti-abortionist assassins.
DEAR LORD THIS YEAR YOU TOOK MY FAVORITE ACTOR PATRICK SWAYZIE. YOU TOOK MY FAVORITE ACTRESS FARAH FAWCETT. YOU TOOK MY FAVORITE SINGER MICHAEL JACKSON. I JUST WANTED TO LET YOU KNOW MY FAVORITE PRESIDENT IS BARACK OBAMA. AMEN.
There is simply no defense for this kind of joke" harmless or not and certainly not for any purportedly Christian prayer. Colson rightly contends that Christians are instead to be praying for our leaders and holding them in high regard." And the danger for conservatives is that such idiocy provides fodder to those on the Left who are zealous to demonize their opponents. Even so lost in all these caricatures of which we are all all-too-often guilty is the vast complex and muddled middle of American politics a middle that represents the bulk of both major parties. This middle remains politically cynical and disenchanted with the kind of polarizing language used by both parties. If political discourse is to become constructive as Colson hopes we all need to refine our thinking to more sympathetically and accurately represent the positions of those with whom we often disagree. Indeed this kind of tolerance in the best sense is a critical virtue of statesmanship a virtue in short supply nowadays. So if we were to sympathetically describe the characteristics of the Tea Party movement we might point to the explicit positions articulated at the center of the movements consensus. As the Contract from America for instance puts it the Tea Parties are about the principles of individual liberty limited government and economic freedom." Note here the emphasis is on limited" government which is not to say that the Tea Partiers are anti" government. This is an important distinction and one that Colson largely glosses over. Ray Nothstine provides a compelling outline for how the Tea Parties might awaken Americas moral culture." Nothstine is properly points to the most praiseworthy aspects of the civil rights movement as a model for appropriate civil protest. True social change comes not from laws or politics but from renewal of our personal familial and ecclesiastical commitments. For Christians in particular our public statements and private thoughts should conform to the biblical standard: You shall not give false testimony against your neighbor" (Ex. 20:16 NIV). In a classic exposition of this commandment the Heidelberg Catechism rightly teaches that part of what God requires of the Christian is to as far as possible defend and promote the honor and reputation of my neighbor." We ought to mourn that so very little of our public discourse meets this standard. The mark of the Christian is not ultimately in the love shown to those who love us but in the love shown to our enemies and opponents. Colson is at pains to protect the nations political consensus. But its not clear that there is in fact any consensus to protect. If we are to rebuild such unity however it will be on the basis of principled disagreement civil discourse and genuine care for others our opponents most of all.