16 Nevertheless when one turns to the Lord, the veil is taken away.
17 Now the Lord is the Spirit; and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty.
18 But we all, with unveiled face, beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are being transformed into the same image from glory to glory, just as by the Spirit of the Lord.
We can be vigorous defenders of religious liberty, as defined by the Scriptures, and be bold in speaking out. Galatians 5 tells us:
13 For you, brethren, have been called to liberty; only do not use liberty as an opportunity for the flesh, but through love serve one another.
14 For all the law is fulfilled in one word, even in this: "You shall love your neighbor as yourself."
15 But if you bite and devour one another, beware lest you be consumed by one another!
By now you've probably heard about the story that has shaken the sports world and revealed an uncomfortable intersection of sports and politics. Georgia lawmakers, like legislators in other states, passed a bill that, as Governor Kemp said makes it "easier to vote and harder to cheat." Georgia is one of the so-called battleground states in which allegations of improprieties in the 2020 election were circulated. This new law includes a voter ID provision.
Leaders in the political, corporate, and sports worlds were quick to criticize the bill, and Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred announced that the 2021 All-Star Game scheduled for Atlanta would be moved. This is ironic because some of the more visible critics of the bill have now brought economic retribution on themselves and their state. Self-inflicted punishment.
It's been speculated that all this hullabaloo has been perpetrated in order to gin up support for HR1, the so-called "For the People Act," which would essentially federalize the U.S. election system.
But, Cobb County, Georgia, where the site of the game was to be, anticipates it could lose $100 million in revenue as the result. So, there are real negative consequences.
So, is there a faith angle here - absolutely, when you consider the hypocrisy that has been pointed out - it is no secret that American sports leagues, such as the NBA and MLB, are intent on expanding their footprint to Communist China. You may remember that back in 2019, when an NBA team executive spoke out in favor of Hong Kong's moves toward democracy, the Chinese government retaliated against the Association.
The government of China has certainly shown their disdain for Christians and others, such as the Muslim, Uyghurs, who dare to embrace a worldview that is different than the state-sanctioned one. But, punishing an American state, with the blessing of the President, seems to be more important than trying to get China to change its position on human rights, with real people facing persecution for their faith.
A Washington Examiner piece summarizes the situation well:
China, after unleashing a global pandemic, carrying out a genocide, and rendering Hong Kong voters' voices meaningless? They don't really seem to care.
It adds that the President has "led the way" on the All-Star Game situation, and states, "Apparently, expanding voting opportunities in Georgia is boycott-worthy, but China’s genocide against the Uyghurs in Xinjiang is not such a big deal. China hosts the 2022 Winter Olympics, and Biden remains unable even to threaten a boycott over human rights."
And, FoxNews.com highlighted the hypocrisy, amplified by a case of bad timing:
Major League Baseball is protesting a democratically passed Georgia voting law while bolstering ties with a Communist Party-backed Chinese company that cracked down on an NBA executive who supported the pro-democracy movement in Hong Kong.
Senator Marco Rubio tweeted out in response:
"@MLB caves to pressure & moves draft & #AllStarGame out of Georgia on the same week they announce a deal with a company backed by the genocidal Communist Party of #China," he tweeted. "Why are we still listening to these woke corporate hypocrites on taxes, regulations & anti-trust?"
John Stonestreet pointed out in a Breakpoint commentary last year:
Beijing’s treatment of the Uighur minority in Xinjiang Province qualifies, in every way, as genocide. Writing in Newsweek, Israeli Human Rights Lawyer Arsen Ostrovsky didn’t hesitate to call the Communist Party’s actions “genocide,” pointing especially to the “forced sterilizations, abortions and intrusive birth prevention.” These actions alone meet the requirement for genocide and have led to “the population growth rates in the two largest Uyghur prefectures [to fall] by 84% between 2015 and 2018.”
But there’s more.
According to the State Department, “Over a million Uighurs have now been detained by China in camps, where they are starved, abused, tortured, electrocuted, raped and even killed.” Recent video footage showed “Uighurs, with heads shaven, being blindfolded, shackled and herded onto trains, headed for these camps.”
Unfortunately, criticism of the Chinese government may be on its way to becoming unacceptable speech - in light of reported violence against Asian-Americans, and judging from the harsh response against former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee for a tweet last weekend pointing out MLB's and other corporations' hypocrisy concerning China, will it eventually be regarded as racist to be critical of China?
And, for those concerned with religious freedom, consider how the current Administration is now pulling back on the worldwide religious freedom principles put in place by the previous Administration, essentially equating religious freedom with so-called "reproductive freedom," which offers no rights to the unborn baby? I guess you could laud China for its devotion to this type of "freedom," considering its one-child policy that was in place for many years?
Secretary of State Antony Blinken will restructure America’s top priorities around the globe in order to focus on more progressive and liberal pet issues, such as abortion and LGBTQ activism.
Friendly descriptions of the shift in focus can be found throughout the media, such as characterizing issues conservatives champion (like religious freedom) as opposed to human rights.
And, two U.S. representatives from a religious freedom body were sanctioned recently from traveling to China, Hong Kong, and Macao, according to CNBC.com:
The Chinese sanctions target the chair and vice chair of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, Gayle Manchin and Tony Perkins. The USCIRF has condemned China’s treatment of the Uyghur Muslim population in Xinjiang and endorsed recent U.S. sanctions against Chinese officials.
Even this was a bridge too far for Secretary of State Blinken. The CNBC reports said:
The U.S. condemned the sanctions in a late Saturday statement released by the State Department, calling the measures “baseless.”
It's a crazy world in which we live in which the First Amendment principle of religious freedom is considered equal to the mythical woman's right to take the life of a baby. Or to engage in the sinful behavior of homosexuality. The tendency is to lash out in anger or retaliation, which is counterproductive; but, we can and should express our convictions when freedom is under assault and "rights" are being turned upside down.
Fact is, we should always find ourselves on the side of being a champion for true human rights - when defined in the right way as determined by the Scripture. We should be in favor of racial harmony and Biblical justice, but we should not be involved in assigning racial motives when none exist. To require an ID in order to vote is not a racist act, and recent polling data shows Americans of a variety of races support it. Untruths should not be cloaked under a false racial curtain. The Washington Examiner reports that: "New polling shows that a large majority supports voter ID laws that require individuals to show a photo identification before voting, including almost 70% of black voters." In mid-March, the website reported:
The poll, released on Wednesday by Rasmussen Reports, found that 75% believe photo identification should be presented before voting and that 69% of black voters support voter ID laws.
We should be concerned about preserving the right to vote and upholding election integrity. We should be concerned about the right to life of an unborn baby to. And, we can defend the right to religious liberty: for people to practice their faith without fear of persecution.
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