You may have
already heard about Justice Sunday, an event planned
by Family Research Council and several other Christian groups. It
will be a simulcast this Sunday night, shown in a thousand
churches, in which well be asking Christians to call their
senators next week and demand that the rules of the Senate be
changed, so that judges can no longer be filibustered.
The mere
announcement of this simulcast created a firestorm. Senators
Kennedy (D-Mass.) and Reid (D-Nev.), among others, want to know
what right people of faith have to speak out on this area.
My response
is, what good reason could there be for people of faith not
to get involved in public issues? Augustine said, We are to
be the best of citizens, because we do out of love for God
what others do only because they are required to. That includes
speaking out on issues of importance in the public square.
And who
injected religion into this debate over judges in the first
place? When Alabama Attorney General Bill Pryorone of the
most decent men I have known in my life and a great public
servantwas nominated for the Eleventh Circuit Court, his
nomination was filibustered to death. Why? Because, as a
believing Catholic, he is pro-life and made no excuses for his
position. It was blatant bigotry on the part of filibustering
senators.
So it was as
well with Judge Charles Pickering, from Mississippi, when he was
nominated for the Eleventh Circuit. One of Pickerings
offenses, according to groups that opposed him, was to tell a
defendant after he was sentenced that he ought to look up Chuck
Colsons Prison Fellowship when he got to prison and
straighten his life out. For that and other equally heinous
charges, he was denied his seat on the Appellate Court.
All of this
is reminiscent of what happened in England in the latter part of
the eighteenth century. William Wilberforce was conducting the
campaign against the slave trade when Lord Melbourne stood on the
floor of the Parliament and said, Things have come to a
pretty pass . . . when religion is allowed to invade public life.
Well, thank God religion did invade public life, because it
brought an end to slavery.
And as for
that charge that you hear all the time that we religious
believers are trying to impose our will on otherswe cant
impose anything. We can simply speak out as citizens. It might
interest you to know where that charge of imposing your
will came fromnot from the days of the Moral Majority
in the eighties, but rather from the 1860 presidential campaign,
when Lincolns detractors charged that he was trying to
impose his moral views upon society. Again, thank God he
succeeded in changing the nation.
So
Christians have a rightindeed a dutyto call their
senators and tell them that what is going on is outrageous. These
nominees are being opposed by a minority, not because they are
unfit, but because the minority does not agree with their views.
They are constitutionally entitled to an up or down vote.
Filibusters have never been used with judicial nominations.
If you
belong to a church that has signed up for the simulcast, watch it
Sunday night. It begins at 7:00 p.m. (ET). If not, you can get it
at the same time at www.frc.org. Whatever you do, understand the arguments and
speak out next week. If Christians are not heard from this coming
week, it would mean that those who would silence us have won the
victory.
Copyright © 2005 Prison Fellowship. Used with permission.