Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
4 lessons on Christian vocation in politics from Gov. Bill Haslam
4 lessons on Christian vocation in politics from Gov. Bill Haslam
Apr 22, 2026 6:40 PM

In our explorations of Christian vocation, the faith-and-work movement has been largely successful in reminding us of the meaning and purpose of our work, from parenting in the home to manual labor in the fields to teaching in a school to trading on Wall Street. But amid those discussions, there’s still an area we tend to forget and neglect: politics.

Can an institution that wields such power really be seen through the lens of Christian calling? Sure, we may be able to develop or implement some noble policies along the way, but isn’t the actual work of politics inevitably driven and defined by narrow self-interest, zero-sum bat, and incessant promise?

In a set of reflections at Comment Magazine, Bill Haslam, the Republican governor of Tennessee, argues to the contrary, reflecting on a new book, John Senior’s A Theology of Political Vocation: Christian Life and Public Office, and sharing personal stories and lessons learned from his 15 years of experience as a mayor and governor.

Some of his key points are summarized below.

1. Politics does not require choosing power over virtue

Contrary to the Machiavellian mindsets we continue to encounter among Christian political activists (on both sides of the aisle), we are not forced to choose between faithfulness and effective political tactics. Strength and power need not consume love and grace.

To find the balance, Haslam argues, we need to restore a politics that understands and pursues mon good:

As Senior summarizes the dichotomy, “One can be a good Christian or a good republican (small r), Machiavelli seems to be saying, but one cannot be both.” Humility, grace, sacrifice, and forgiveness must take a back seat to strength and power and “above all, assertion of one’s proper claims in the knowledge and power needed to secure their satisfaction.” Thus a candidate who will support our view of abortion, or the expansion of health-care coverage, or any other issue that we deem worthy is to be supported at all costs. In that view, the ends of power make it worth it to abandon those Christian virtues in order to be elected and thus able to effect change. Lost in the discussions about specific issues is the concept of the mon good.”

In our hyper-partisan era, the idea that there even might be mon good is up for debate. One of the joys of serving in office has been seeing the impact of various initiatives that contribute to mon good. …These elements of mon good…rarely make the list on a voter’s guide describing critical issues for people of faith. Add to this the historical difficulty of governing in a pluralistic society, and it is understandable that most potential office-holders would just throw up their hands and declare politics hopelessly broken.

2. Politics does require moral courage

That isn’t to say that achieving the right political framework will be easy. If we believe Lord Acton’s famous refrain — that “power tends to corrupt” — resisting such those tendencies will not only require a proper vision of human freedom and destiny, but the moral courage to defend it at the highest levels of political power.

The truth is that the political space is, as [Senior] describes it, morally perilous. It is hard to find encouraging examples. But I would argue that most spaces are morally perilous. Politics is just more visible and more frequently involves higher stakes since the decisions that elected leaders make have consequences for so many people beyond themselves. Senior discusses the all-too-real problems of political spaces forcing good people to act in problematic ways. When one is forced to make difficult decisions, with no clear-cut answers, in front of a watching public that will be affected by that decision, the tendency is to find the easiest, most politically popular landing place.

This is exactly why a proper theology of political vocation is so important. Courage to make a hard political es from the assurance that God has called us to this position and this challenge. Rarely is the decision as easy as it sounds on Fox or CNN…My hope for the church is that we would be people that cling to the truth while still understanding plexities of the challenges that face our elected leaders.

3. Politics is fundamentally about the love and service of our neighbors

In business, we tend to forget that our work is ultimately about serving others, not ourselves. So it is with politics!

For those of us in elected office, the challenge of political vocation means taking seriously Paul’s call to “not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewal of your mind” (Romans 12:2). As a candidate and as an office-holder, I experienced powerfully the pull to conform in order to succeed. The best way that I have found to counteract that magnetic pull is to remind myself that I am here because I truly believe that this is where God called me to be. As a matter of fact, nothing in my life has felt as much like a calling as serving in a public role.

A campaign for office can either be an exercise in pushing Christ to the side, or a crucible for the formation of Christ in us. There is nothing like a campaign to force you to constantly remind yourself that your opponent and your opponent’s supporters are created in the image of God! It was more than a little bit helpful to keep the phrase “created in the image of God” in the back of my mind as I listened to someone criticize me or my policies. It has also been beneficial to remind myself that as a cross-bearer, we are inevitably called on to bear pain… But it also means the inestimable privilege of being a part of God’s project to redeem society and serve our fellow image-bearers.

4. Politics shapes the spirit and the self

In his book, Faithful in All God’s House, Lester DeKoster explains how, in serving others, work nurtures the worker. “Merely to rise to one’s daily tasks requires an act of will, a decision to serve munity, however reluctantly, however unaware the worker may be that such is the case,” he writes. “Such willed acts of service not only make and sustain the fabric of civilization and culture, but also develop the soul.”

Haslam connects that same reality to the vocation of the politician:

Personally, nothing in my life has affected my spiritual growth as much as campaigning for election and serving in public office. The heightened visibility and multiplied consequences of serving in a public role have frequently reminded me of my own weakness. The difficulty of the decisions leaves me yearning for wisdom. And the relentless nature of problems constantly reminds me of living in a fallen world…

What I didn’t anticipate was how God would use serving in public office to change me. As Senior writes, “The idea of vocation implies a process of formation; it is about the kind of selves workers e by virtue of participating in vocational work. The idea of vocation holds that in the doing of vocational work, persons e the kind of selves God intended them to be.”

As you may have already noticed, while politics brings its own unique challenges and pressures, many of these lessons apply across our cultural stewardship.

Yet in viewing such matters through the lens of the Economy of Order, perhaps we can learn something new about the importance of vocation to the causes of freedom and justice.

“The practice of a political vocation, based on a sound theology of political vocation, has rarely been more difficult, or more critical, than it is today,” concludes Haslam. “May God send us faithful men and women to live out that calling in ways that glorify him and in making this world look a little more like the world that is e.”

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
“The university is totally ignoring diversity of thought”
Coming soon to a theater near you (hopefully) – Evan Coyne Maloney’s Indoctrinate U. From the film’s website: At colleges and universities across the nation, from Berkeley and Stanford to Yale and Bucknell, the charismatic filmmaker uncovers academics who use classrooms as political soapboxes, students who must parrot their professors’ politics to get good grades, and administrators who censor diversity of thought and opinion. With flair and wit, Maloney poses tough questions to America’s academics and university administrators — who...
Coming soon to your neighborhood bookseller: Al Gore’s Assault on Reason
Oh, I’m sorry. I messed up that title. Gore’s newest book will be called The Assault on Reason. Here’s the book description from : A visionary analysis of how the politics of fear, secrecy, cronyism, and blind faith bined with the degration of the public sphere to create an environment dangerously hostile to reason… …We live in an age when the thirty-second television spot is the most powerful force shaping the electorate’s thinking, and America is in the hands of...
‘Great Firewall’ not great enough
According to published reports, China is planning on adding new censorship regulations covering blogs and webcasts (HT). President Hu Jintao says the government needs to take these steps to “purify” the Internet, leading to “a more healthy and active Internet environment,” according to the Xinhua news agency. Estimates put the number of Internet police manning the “Great Firewall of China” at 30,000-40,000. To see if those cops are looking at a particular website, test it at GreatFirewallOfChina.org. You can also...
Censuring Sobrino
When the Vatican last week issued a stinging rebuke of Fr. Jon Sobrino, a noted proponent of Liberation Theology, plaints ensued about the Church squelching “dissent.” However, as Samuel Gregg points out, Fr. Sobrino’s books were not only based on faulty economic thinking, his works placed him outside the bounds of orthodox Catholic teaching about the faith. “For Fr. Sobrino, the ‘true’ Church is to be found in the materially poor at a given time, rather than in those who...
Church and state: do you serve two masters?
Last week, Acton’s Rome office, Istituto Acton, held a conference entitled “The Religious Dimension of Human Freedom” at the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross. (See this Zenit piece for a brief, if unexciting, summary of the event.) In addition to the news angle concerning China, I’d like to say that all three speakers agreed on one point – the rivalry between Church and State on the claims of primary human attachments. This e as no surprise to students of...
Adam Smith’s Theory of Moral Sentiments
Kevin noted earlier this week that the UK has issued a paper bill featuring Adam Smith. I also received notice this week that the Adam Smith Review is planning a conference in January of 2009, celebrating the semiquincentennial (250th) anniversary of the publication of Smith’s Theory of Moral Sentiments. The conference announcement notes that scholarship has e to appreciate the importance of Smith’s moral philosophy for his overall intellectual project.” For more on just how Smith’s Theory of Moral Sentiments...
Christianity and communism in China
Kishore Jayabalan reported yesterday on the latest happenings with the Acton Institute’s office in Rome and the most recent installment of the Centesimus Annus Conference Series, “The Religious Dimension of Human Freedom.” As Kishore notes, the conference took place within the context of the spate of media attention to the religious situation in China, especially with reference to the relations between Beijing and the Vatican. Last month Acton’s director of research Samuel Gregg wrote in The Australian about the increasing...
Partisan political engagement in the Church
I grew up in the South. I also grew up during the Jim Crow era. I asked a lot of questions and made a lot of white folks very angry when I did. I hated the “separate but equal” hypocrisy and I was never, in my heart of hearts, sympathetic with the illogic of racism as I knew it. As a teen I was called into the senior pastor’s office and told to stop spreading racial unrest among the youth...
Google minds the gaps in statistical analysis
Google recently announced that it has purchased the Trendalyzer software from Gapminder, a Swedish non-profit (HT: Slashdot). Trendalyzer is the brain-child of professor Hans Rosling, who was lecturing on international development “when it struck him that statistics were an underexploited resource, often presented in an prehensible fashion. To solve the problem he developed – along with his son – a new kind of software.” One interesting aspect of this purchase is that the software’s inventor won’t profit from its sale,...
EU conflicts of interest
The nearly decade-long battle between the European Union and Microsoft took another turn earlier this month, as the EU Commission offered a fresh threat to Microsoft: Submit to our demands or face stiff new penalties. The item at issue is an aspect of the 2004 ruling against Microsoft, in which “the Commission fined Microsoft and ordered it to provide petitors with information allowing them to develop workgroup server software interoperable Windows desktop operating system.” That ruling is still under appeal...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved