Charles Spurgeon said, "Every God-fearing man should give his vote with as much devotion as he prays.” What are the biggest issues for a Christian in this election?
Welcome to Politics by Faith, brought to you by the Patriot Gold Group. Should Christians vote? We quoted Charles Spurgeon yesterday. He said, We are now called upon to exercise one of the privileges and duties, which go with liberty, let no man be neglectful in it. Every God-fearing man should give his vote with as much devotion as he prays.
He later said, We are not for the religious questions involved. We should not concern ourselves to any great extent with the doings of the polling booths, but we're not for the religious questions, which means there are religious questions involved. This isn't just about tax policy. I believe Hosea 8, 4 says, they set up kings, but not by me.
They made princes, but I did not acknowledge them." Boyce has a Bible commentary that says, to choose leaders without the direction of God is not only sinful, it's foolish. Those who follow their own wisdom and the choice of their leaders inevitably get what they deserve. To go back to the... oh I got one more here. This is R.C. Sproul. Here we go, R.C. Sproul. Here we go. He said, any candidate who supports abortion by law has completely abrogated his responsibility as a governor
by failing to protect and maintain the sanctity of human life. So I will not ever vote for a candidate for any office, including dog catcher, who's pro-abortion.
We had a woman call in today
who didn't know what to do with Trump or Kamala. And I said, what issues important to you? She said abortion. I was like, well, Kamala supports up to 40 weeks. And Donald Trump, whatever his view personally on abortion, has done more than any person for the pro-life cause ever in the White House, any president
ever. So what's the option? What are you talking about? What are you debating exactly? So these are big religious questions that are in front of us as well. I heard an interview with Ralph Reed.
He's from the Faith and Freedom Coalition and he brought up a couple of issues that they believe are the most important when it comes to this election. Abortion, voting against promoting trans and LGBTQ blah, blah, blah in our schools, education in general, freedom of speech is freedom to worship, human trafficking, being against that and just a pro-family platform in general.
That's it. Those are those are big ones for me and let's stop this freight train that is progressivism in our country and we can make a major dent in that through the White House. So the Faith and Freedom Coalition, they're now big get out the vote campaign people. They have knocked just that group alone just Faith and Freedom Coalition has knocked on half of the doors that the entire Republican Party knocked on four years ago.
And this is one group, it's just the Faith and Freedom Coalition, let alone all the other groups that are doing it as well with their own door knocking campaigns. Ralph Reed says we're focused primarily on the low propensity, self-identified evangelical voter modeled pro-life social conservatives who have voted in one or fewer of the last three elections. Okay, so who's the person who's pro-life evangelical social conservative who's voted in 0 or 1 in the last three elections.
And that's the doors they're knocking on. I could see that person too. I could understand that person. He says, the Faith and Freedom Coalition estimates that between 25 and 27 percent of the electorate are self-identified evangelical conservative Christians with devout mass attending Catholics compromising another 10 to 11 percent. I think that seems a little high but let's go with it. So he says 38 percent, 38 percent of the electorate falls into the category of
evangelical conservative Christian. That's a lot of doors to knock on. In 2020 Trump got 84 percent of the evangelical vote. He says if you turn to Roman Catholics, which is huge in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Michigan, then you're above 50%. And he said some Catholics voted for Biden because he was Catholic, even though he's pro-abortion, but why would that person who maybe didn't like Biden in other ways, but well he's Catholic like I am,
I'll vote for the Catholic, why would that person vote for Kamala? There's nothing there. So what good is the door knocking? They did an after action analysis in 2022 and 2024 primaries. They said that of the low propensity voter who are visited with at least two door knocks, the turnout can increase between 5 and 11%. So he's looking at Georgia where you have 1.9 million of these social conservatives.
535,000 of them are low propensity voters, only voted one in the last three elections. If they can knock on every one of those doors,
well they said that actually we're only gonna knock
on 400,000, some of them are in such rural areas it's harder to get to. So we're gonna focus on 400,000 of them. We're gonna give them two door knocks and we're gonna bump up that vote by 5%. We're gonna get 5% of those people to vote.
That's 20,000 votes. If they get 10% turnout because of those votes, that's 40,000 votes. Trump lost Georgia in 2020 by 12,000 votes. If you're an evangelical Christian, you got to vote. You got to vote. And for me, abortion is my top issue.
I just named off a couple of other ones that are in this realm of, you know Christian and morality and religion that can make a difference who the president is. We got 18 days now until the election is over. 18 days to vote. If you're in a state where you can vote early, do it. Lock in your vote. We opened up the episode with can Christians vote or should Christians vote? I believe the answer is yes. I'm curious if you think the answer is no if you could steal me on the argument whether you agree with that or not Why do you think Christians should not vote? Oh, of course, we should do all the other things, right?
The Bible says to pray for your leaders no doubt But why does that mean you shouldn't also vote for who you want the president to be? I don't see that connection So why have so many Christians not voted in the past elections, it's not like half of Christians have not voted. What's that about? We'll talk about that tomorrow. Mike Slater dot locals dot com. We'll talk about that tomorrow. Mike Slater dot locals dot com. Transcript, commercial free website. Mike Slater dot locals dot com.