For more commentary on this week's readings, see the Reflections on the Lectionary page, which
includes Lose's current Living by the Word column as well as past magazine
and blog content. For full-text access to all articles, subscribe to the
Century.

I have found this year's Republican primaries fascinating,
particularly the shifting fortunes of the candidates. While Mitt Romney has
been more or less the frontrunner of his ambivalent party, the rest of the
field has been one crazy jumble of surges and falls from grace. It's political
spectacle at its most interesting, if not necessarily its best.

But through all the tumult and rise and fall of candidates,
I have no clear idea of what is in the foreground for any of them. What I know
is that they all want desperately to be elected, that they definitely don't
like President Obama and that they are willing on any given day to slash at
each other. What they actually stand for, however, seems vague at best.

We've managed to put the drama of getting elected in the
foreground, while the reason candidates want to be elected (and what they'd
actually do in office) has fallen into the background. Meanwhile, people of all
ranks and standing who are suffering--from powerful people like Naaman to the
vulnerable like the leper--seem all but forgotten.

Is it fair to expect candidates to tell us what's in the
foreground for them? Would you vote for someone who said, "This is what I'm
about," and didn't waiver?

And is it wise to talk politics of any kind in the pulpit?
If we can't, or don't, have we given the impression that faith has nothing to
say to our political lives? Or are we simply respecting that Christians can
approach solving problems from different political points of view?

David J. Lose

David J. Lose is director of the Center for Biblical Preaching at Luther Seminary, and author of Making Sense of the Christian Faith (Augsburg Fortress).

All articles »