Editor Ben Domenech of "The City," a journal of Baptist Univ of Houston,
asked me to write a short essay right after the presidential election,
reflecting on things, as part of a forum he was putting together. I said
that I wouldn't be any good at that because I generally avoid politics. He
asked me to write about that, and so here is the essay I sent him this past
September.

Hope you have a very blessed Christmas!

*****

All the articles surrounding this one are hot off the keyboard, written in
the days since the election. This one goes back a ways. When editor Ben
Domenech asked me to contribute to this forum, I told him that I was utterly
unqualified. I try not to follow politics.



That probably sounds unpatriotic, as well as irresponsible, for someone who
is grateful to have been born an American citizen. But I find that the
verbal sparring in print and on line, the "yelling shows" on TV, aren't
healthy for me.  Tiny news, transitory news, captures too much of my
attention. I get restless, looking for the next "fix" of urgency to come
along. I get to identifying with one camp or another, and feel stung by the
attacks they sustain, and feel smug when our side gets off a good one. It's
just not good.



I can avoid politics this way because I have astute friends who follow it,
and by listening to them I can develop an opinion of my own. But I've also
found that it is OK not to have an opinion on everything. Very little in
world affairs depends on my opinion. In a crisis, the new president is not
going to phone me to find out what to do. We live in such a culture of
argument that we get the impression we need a fully-referenced position on
every single thing that glides along the TV news ticker. But for the vast
majority of items in today's news, it's all right to say, "Thanks, that's
all I needed to know." You won't be called on to give a speech about it
tomorrow.



I've been thinking a lot lately about St. Paul's word to the Thessalonians
that they should "pray constantly" (I Thess. 5:17). I noticed that he makes
a similar point to the Romans, Ephesians, and Colossians (Rom. 12:12, Eph.
6:18, Col. 4:2). He wanted to communicate this to four different
communities, so he must have thought it was important. He also must have
thought it was possible. And if you're going to try to keep your mind in
constant prayer, the first step must be to sit your attention squarely down
in front of the Lord Jesus Christ and train it to stay there. Something that
agitates the mind, especially something that stimulates the desire to do
verbal battle, is going to be like tinfoil to a magpie.



I appreciate that there are those who work diligently and creatively in the
political fields. Their hard work gives me the freedom to put my attention
elsewhere. I hope that, as I learn to keep a simple prayer going, like
background music, all the time, I'll develop a better sense of what to pray
for-prayers that are less selfish, I hope, and more in line with God's will.
It surely can't do any harm for there to be one more person praying about
all these things.


********
Frederica Mathewes-Green
www.frederica.com
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