With The Perrys - How to Be a Christian During Election Season with Justin Giboney
Episode Date: October 28, 2024Justin Giboney joins the Perrys for a conversation on politics. Justin is the co-founder of the AND Campaign, a Christian civic organization for raising civic literacy among Christians so that we can ...engage in a better way. He talks with the Perrys about the idea that our public witness doesn’t belong to either political party, and that parties are just tools, not identities. Follow Justin and the AND Campaign: https://www.instagram.com/justinegiboney https://www.instagram.com/andcampaign The Church Politics Podcast Resources discussed in this episode: The Pour Over: https://signup.thepourover.org/ The Free Press: https://www.thefp.com/ Breaking Points (podcast) UnHerd (podcast) Subscribe to the Perrys' newsletter: https://withtheperrys.myflodesk.com/zhfus4jx1s Join Preston's discipleship community for men: https://www.patreon.com/PrestonPerry/membership To support the work of the Perrys, donate via PayPal: https://paypal.me/withtheperrys Shop BOLD Apparel: boldapparel.shop Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
What's up with y'all?
It's the saints in the eight.
Oh my goodness.
That is the raggedy.
It's the saints and the aides.
That's the raggedy saints and aints I've ever heard.
It's terrible.
So when y'all hear this, by the time it gets to you, I'll be healed.
In Jesus name.
I won't be on the sick and shutting list.
But as for today, she ain't got it.
I don't have it.
But I'm grateful.
I'm grateful.
We thank you for showing up anyways.
I mean, you ain't put your little makeup on today.
You said, scratch you.
Y'all getting concealer mascara out of me.
Ain't no foundation.
Ain't no, ain't no, ain't no, ain't no, press powder, none of that.
I'm sorry.
I'm sorry.
Got you a little tea.
I'm sorry.
Anyways, you're going to lead most of this conversation, and I'll be here to support.
Bet that up.
Well, we have a special guest on the couch today.
Our friend, Justin Gibbetti, from the Ann campaign, the founder of the Ann
campaign.
Co-founder of the end campaign.
He's humble.
Sorry, the other guys who's...
Show Baracka and Angel.
An Angel, those are some good brothers.
But man, you know, talking to you, especially in this season,
it's always been a pleasure because we are...
You're somebody that we respect greatly, you know,
when it comes to faith in politics and merging the two.
And you always come with a very non-biased and just a fair biblical perspective.
You know, and it's refreshing, you know what I'm saying?
Which is the reason why we've supported the end campaign and partnered with you on multiple occasions or whatever.
And so, man, in light of the political season, this last two political seasons, it seemed like Christians have gone crazy.
Like, it's a lot of fighting, a lot of bickering, a lot of...
It don't seem a little calmer now.
I feel like it's going to get crazier.
Maybe when this podcast comes out, it's going to be crazier.
Last season, it was crazy.
but I feel like it might get crazier.
What do you think?
Well, first let me say it's always a pleasure for me to be on with y'all today.
I appreciate Preston sending me the memo about the camouflage.
So we all match.
We all go into war.
So always a pleasure, man.
I just am so appreciative of you guys' witness and how you guys really just represent
in a way that I think connects to people's authentic and is a pleasure to be with you.
as far as the political landscape right now, it's crazy.
I mean, let's think about we already had two assassination attempts.
Oh, yeah.
Right?
I mean, this is pretty crazy.
We had a situation where you had one candidate on the Democrat side.
That person gets replaced through a crazy process.
You want to call it that.
I mean, a lot is going on.
And I've been a little bit disappointed, but not necessarily surprised in how a lot of Christians have responded, right?
election seasons in general to me
can kind of become like
you know Acts 19 the riot in Ephesus
right where you have
because you have all these interests you have all these people
with money and who are moving things around
so you know in Acts 19 you got
Demetrius who the Silversmith
he's like man my pockets are getting light
he gathers all these people around
and he's like man you hear about this dude Paul
and so the Silversmith he was creating shrines of idols
and Paul was going around telling people man these idols
ain't real. They're made with human hands. They're not valuable at all. Demet just gets everybody
together goes out and starts a riot. The crazy thing about the riot, though, is the Bible
says that there was all this confusion during the riot and that most people did not even know
why they were there. Some were saying one thing, some were saying another. Most people didn't even,
why are you rioting and you don't even know why you're there? That's so like this society now.
Like people just be out, just want to be a part of something. Just one is the herd mentality,
wanted to be a part of something.
But I also think, and this happens during the election season, in our brokenness,
we like to find a target and put all our pain and all our troubles on that target.
Wow.
So my target is the, you know, Vice President Kamala Harris, she's right now in this moment,
she's the cause of all of my issues, or if it's Trump, he's the cause of all of my
issues.
And I just dump and purge all.
And in my, as they say, in my sanctified imagination, I imagine that may have been what
was going on in Ephesus.
and that's exactly what we do.
Yeah, and I think for me,
and I don't even want to make it about me,
but I just want to briefly talk about me.
I think that's one of the reasons why, you know,
I've found politics very, like, not pleasurable,
and it seemed fake,
and it just seemed like, you know,
whoever can spend the narrative the best in their favor,
you know, we can just dump all our frustrations on one political party
and act like they're just the evil of all evil, you know?
And it's like,
we want to paint Trump to be, you know, this,
and we want to paint Kamala to be this.
And it just doesn't seem, it just doesn't seem like,
none of it seems real, you know what I'm saying?
And so like, what would you say, you know,
for the Christian out there who just doesn't want to get involved in it at all,
just wanted to get, I don't want to, I don't care.
Like we talked about Patrick Mahomes.
He was like, I don't want to use my platform for none of this stuff.
You know what I'm saying?
Do you think that that's wise for a Christian to say,
you know what?
I'm going to kind of turn my back on it and just serve Jesus.
or do you think that we all should be concerned about politics in some way, shape,
form?
Great question.
No, that's a very good question.
And I'll say about patching my homes, I think he was a little more responsible because
he was basically saying, hey, go vote, do your own research.
I'm not using my platform to endorse.
Yeah.
As far as a Christian who looks out here and says, man, they fake, this is not, you know what I'm
saying?
There is a lot of, I mean, there's a lot of fakeness in politics.
There's a lot of things that are corrupt, but it's still worth engaging.
And the reason that it's still worth engaging is
Honestly, politics touches everything that we do
So from what's in the food that your kids just ate
That's politics. That's who's gonna regulate that to what constitutes a crime? Yeah, it might be dirty
It might be ugly. It might be fake, but you still have an opportunity to have an impact on it
And so you have to go through and how can you be the salt and the light if you're not in contact with something that's dirty?
Right? It's a reason to kind of be
To put it in perspective. It's not a reason to be a
reason to walk away because there's too much at stake.
That's great.
Okay. All right.
All right, Justin.
Stay in there, man.
Oh my goodness.
It's worth it.
I've been all the way tapped out, but I'd be like, man, I'm sick at everybody.
And change can happen, right?
Like, there's, I can give you example after example historically where people got together
in an ugly place, you know, and when the scene was very ugly, the landscape was ugly,
and actually changed something that saved people's lives or made their lives better and
help them flourish.
So the change happens.
For real, that's good.
The reason why I like your ministry and what the end campaign does is because I think that you guys do a really good job of in this what can be a very confusing season for a lot of people and a very angry, frustrating season.
I think that you guys do a good job of making people focus on like the things that matters, like the essential things that matters.
Because we can get caught up in a lot of non-essential stupid stuff and, you know, and it's just like you guys.
talk about things that really like impact the heart and mind.
And so can you talk about the political abstractions and the like the Christian value dignity
piece that you talk about?
Yeah.
Like you break that down and how we should think about this.
So one thing, let me say this.
I mean, we know that there's a lot coming at people.
And people have jobs.
They have kids.
They got church, you know, responsibilities that they have to take care of.
Folks are not going to just be paying attention.
to politics. And most people shouldn't just be paying attention to politics. But when you don't,
it's hard to filter out what is real and what's not and what really matters because you have all these
messages coming at you. So the end campaign does. It is part of our mission to say, hey, I'm going to be
the nerd that's lit reading policy and watching all these every single debate and, you know,
looking at people's legislative history and let us break that down for you as a part of your due
diligence as you get ready to engage politics. So that's one thing that we try to do.
And to kind of further, I think what you're talking about is our civic revival where we've created like these 10 disciplines where we've been gone around the country and I was at a conference with you not too long ago.
Yeah.
Basically telling Christians, hey, here are some disciplines that you need to get through this election cycle in a constructive way.
Because we can't, I mean, I would love to come to y'all and say, man, Christians have really been the model of what good politics and civics looks like.
I would love to say that, but y'all would know I'd be lying.
Yeah.
Right? We really just reflected what the world is and brought it into the church.
I feel like back in the day, it used to be that.
Like Christians were the front rudders of...
I mean, when you look at the civil rights movement and things like that, yeah, I think we have...
We come from a legacy of people who engaged politics in the right way.
Unfortunately, I think we haven't done that as of late.
And really, that's not about what policy you support.
That's really about a spiritual disposition.
And so when we talk about these disciplines, it's saying, hey, you can't just wake up in the morning and say, I'm going to do different.
I'm going to be better after.
we've put out this terrible public witness.
Wow.
You have to have habits and practices that put you in the spiritual disposition, along with prayer, obviously, to respond in a better way to issues that are really serious.
And here's the whole thing.
We're talking about life or death issues.
So none of this is our small things.
Yeah.
We still can't act like politics is everything, right?
That it's ultimate.
Yeah, absolutely.
We know it's not.
Absolutely.
He break down number one of the discipline.
You're doing a great job.
I'm just glad you hear about this.
I appreciate that.
He's not a fantastic now.
I was where you are now last week.
So I get it.
Christian value human dignity.
We must understand that the person is made more, more than whom we voted for.
What do you mean by that?
So our first discipline for the civic revival is seeing people and not political abstraction.
And there's a sister's name, Chloe Vowdory, that is a really good job talking about this.
And basically what we're saying is we tend to think that we know somebody by how they voted.
So if you voted for Biden or if you voted for Trump or somebody else, I know everything about you.
Right.
I know whether I should hold you in contempt.
I know whether I should show you grace.
I know how you feel about this race or that race.
When the truth of the matter is, based on how somebody voted, you don't know all that much about them.
Yeah.
You know, these are people dealing with the human condition just like you are.
Yeah.
If you don't have a relationship with them, it is sinful to assume that you know everything about them and that you can treat them in contempt.
These are people dealing with sickness, I mean, insecurities, everything that you are.
But we tend to feel like if I know your profile, I know you and what you're meant.
Why do you think that is?
I've noticed that.
Why do you think that is?
Do you think that people are just like shallow or do you think that it's more tribal?
like what what makes us like think that way when it's I think it's tribalism I think it's a shortcut that we use to say if you're not with us then I know you're all the way on the other side and you can't be trusted right and so that that's basically what it breaks down to and let's be honest we all know there's this kind of myth that there are only two ways to engage politics right like two legitimate ways either all the way progressive all the way progressive all
the way conservative.
And if you don't fit in one of those,
you're either unsurious,
indecisive,
or deceptive.
Right.
So you say one thing
that the conservatives don't like.
Now you're a Marxist.
Now you're all this stuff.
You say one thing progressives
don't like.
Now you are with the bigots
and all that stuff.
And it's just false.
I mean,
there are a number of ways
to come at any given issue.
Yes.
Not just two ways to come at any issue.
And so we have to keep that in mind.
And I can show you thousands of examples
in history.
in history where both sides got something wrong.
Yeah. So if somebody would have the
prophetic voice and independent voice
to say, nah, y'all both getting this wrong,
we might be in a better place than we are today. So
I urge people not to fall into that. I got to be
progressive or I got to be conservative stuff. And
in doing that, we often dehumanize
each other and think we know
more than we do. Is there a
biblical text
that could, I guess,
motivate people to see people as people
and not as abstractions? Yeah, I mean,
think it starts in genesis.
I think you got to look at the fact that we,
we all have the image of God.
And not only that,
I think you even have to look at,
we look at the praying Pharisee in Luke,
where he was probably right.
So he's looking at this tax collector and saying,
man, I'm happy.
I'm not like this dude.
And tax collectors were bad people.
So he's not necessarily wrong about this dude's impact on society.
These were people who were cheating.
their own people, exploiting their own people, and sending some people into debt slavery.
Yeah.
This was a bad dude.
But what he didn't get was he was bad too.
Right?
And so he said, thank God I'm not him.
But the tax collector is like, I'm not even worthy to be here right now.
The tax collector walks away justified.
The Pharisee walks away, doesn't walk away justified for exalting himself.
And too often in politics, we exalt ourselves to say, man, those conservatives are so bad.
Those toxic evangelicals are so bad.
I don't want nothing to do with them.
I'm glad I'm not like them.
Yeah.
And what God's telling us is, hold up, bro, it's not that simple.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And that's the thing that that's frustrating to somebody like me because it's like I don't, I don't care to be on either side.
And I'm not a tribal person like that.
I like to think that I'm a very free thinker.
And I like to think for myself.
I don't like for people to think for me.
And there's things that I find problematic on both sides.
And I feel like you guys, the end campaign,
Pan, you guys do a healthy, you guys do a good job of critiquing both sides, which I think
is healthy.
Yeah, we try to do that.
I mean, we take a lot of criticism for it too.
Yes.
Because some people would say, well, you're standing, you know, you're standing on the fence.
You don't want to take a position.
But I completely disagree.
To us, it's not about taking a side, taking one of these two flawed sides.
Yeah.
To us, it's really about taking the right position.
Explain.
What's a difference?
So taking aside means to say, you know, Trump is so bad that I'm going to be.
I'm going to agree with everything the progressives say.
Okay, what happens when we start talking about gender identity, abortion, all that?
What you're going to do now?
Now you got to stay with them, even though they may be wrong on something.
And you may be right about the right.
But now, because I chose a side, I got a side with them or defended or just not talk about it.
Right?
That's what we do.
I hate Trump so much that I can't talk about none of the stuff going on on the left right now.
And they're sinful.
Yeah, I literally got into our argument last political season for that very same thing with
somebody that's very close to me who who's, you know, solid Democrat, you know, in a political
world. And I was on my story just kind of critiquing both sides and just saying, I think that
a lot of times, you know, God is somewhere in the middle, right? You know, and, you know, he just
kind of got mad of me just straddling the fence. And I was like, why does I have to be straddling
the fence? And I don't even think it's straddling the fence. I mean, sometimes it's not in the
middle. So I will say this, there are people who strive to always be in the middle because they're
trying to avoid conflict, right? I do think that's wrong. There's nothing inherently virtuous about
being in the middle. But when you have two parties, one that doesn't think racism exists and
doesn't want to talk about racism, then another one that says, man, you get pregnant, I might just happen
not to be in the middle of that somewhere, not because I try to be, because they're both so extreme
and absurd.
Yeah.
And so for us, it's not about trying to be in the middle,
but it's realizing that if one side is right about 99 things,
that one thing they're wrong on, as a Christian,
I got to call it out.
Yeah.
I can't just let it go just because they're more right than the other side.
That's not how this works.
So we always talk about it's not about taking the side.
Because when you just take a side,
you're basically outsourcing your public witness.
Who at whatever side you take,
their influencers,
the custodians of that culture are really the ones
deciding what you believe. You give up too much by choosing the side. Choose, and we saw this in the
civil rights movement, take the right position. If you're not taking a position, that's a problem.
Take the right position and whatever side that may end up on, I don't know any scripture that tells me
I got to be on a certain side. It does tell me I got to be on the right position, considering
justice, considering my moral convictions. And neither side is good enough for me to give them all that.
Yeah, what would you say to the person? This can be a very, very,
controversial question. Well, we don't care. What would you say to the person that says you have to be
Christian? A Republican? Or to be like to be, you know, a Republican. And if you're a Democrat,
it's impossible for you to be a Christian because of all the things that the Democrats supports
that goes against biblical values. Yeah. I mean, I can just point to too many orthodox,
faithful Christians who see it very differently throughout history. I mean, when you're talking about
conservatism, you're talking about a group of people who got the civil rights movement wrong,
who got slavery wrong.
I think they have some room for a little bit of humility, because to me, that sounds very
arrogant.
We get things so right that you can't possibly be on that other side.
The other thing I think that gets wrong is because some people care about voter rights.
Some people care about racial.
They care about their list of priorities may be a little bit different than yours.
It doesn't mean that they're not faithful, and you've got to be very careful on telling
people that that means they're not a faithful Christian.
Right. It's a bit extreme.
So that's one thing they get wrong. The other thing that they get wrong is a party should
not be your identity anyway. So while I have was raised in a Democratic household, have,
was a Democrat, you know, most of my life, I'll vote for the best person. The party's a tool
for me. Yeah. The party is not part of my identity to where I take on what, you know, what's
going on. You know, what they're doing is me. Almost through my phone at your head.
It's a tool.
If I can use that, if I'm in a place where it's better for me to be an independent or Republican and Democrat, I might do that because I don't care.
I'm trying to do the good work.
That's good.
It doesn't matter what team I'm on.
That's my tool.
Too often we make that our identity and what happens when it's our identity, we got to defend it regardless.
Absolutely.
Because I think both parties do a really good job of painting one party to look like something else.
And I think, I say disrespectfully, I think people on both sides, whether you're,
Democrat or Republican, conservative, liberal, you start to be used as a puppet if you just listen to one side about the other side.
But when I see, you know, people like you in the end campaign, I'm like, you guys, you guys are known Democrats, but at the same time, you still celebrate.
We have some Republicans and Independence too, but yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, people know that I've been in Democratic, I was in Democratic policy.
Right, right.
And so I think that people automatically think about Democrat, oh, you guys support abortion, but you guys actually, you know, like protect human life.
really from the womb to the tomb,
but you're not necessarily for
these things or whatever. And so like I think
you know, just having that
mindset that man, this is a tool.
This isn't my religion. This isn't
something that I hold to. I think
it's a healthy distinction. Can I ask a question?
Go ahead. Because I think abortion
rights is, I think that's a huge thing.
As it should be.
Like the Lord created life
and loves life and we should protect
life. And so I guess
what is I can see how and I'm saying this neutrally people but I can see how people could be like I just don't see how you can vote for a party that kills babies like I just I just don't see how that's a thing would you say that that's a position that they've just taken and that's okay for them to feel like I can't get over that yeah you know I think it's a bit of an oversimplification of the of the issue so I think if I have no problem with somebody saying abortion is my number one issue yeah and that's the
issue that I'm going to look at first.
But if you ignore all the other issues, you're acting like abortion is on an island.
And that that's the only, there's no other issue that affects it.
So most women, if you ask them, a good number of women, if you ask them why they have
the abortion, I can't take care of the baby.
Well, what other policies play into her mindset and her situation that might make it a better
situation to where she doesn't feel like she has to have an abortion?
I might want to pay attention to some of those issues too.
I might also want to look at how people are treating people when they're alive.
The unborn life is very important to me.
The unborn life is not the only life that's important.
And I think that's what we can miss when we just focus on one issue.
But I'll say this, as far as a lot of Christians who lean left, some of my peers,
the way they've gone along with my body, my choice, and having said,
now there is another body there.
God cares about that.
You can't just bring someone into the world and just act like it's not.
not there. You're right. I've been very disappointed in a lot of Christians who lean left,
who are Democrats, who just go along with the narrative. Yeah. And no question to say,
that's an oversimplification. There's something else there too that matters. Yeah. So we can't
just go along with the secular narrative because that's what our, you know, our secular peers are
doing. So there's disappointment in both those. But, but to me, the issue isn't what party you
choose. The issue is if you don't stand up against that party when they get something wrong.
good.
That's good.
So I think a Christian can be a Democrat.
I don't think a Christian can be a faithful Democrat and have nothing to say to the Democrats
when it comes to abortion.
Yeah.
When it comes to sexualization of children.
If you have nothing to say, if you want to win so bad that you won't say anything to
them or you want to get favor or you want to get recognition so bad that you won't say
anything to your side, that's a problem.
Yeah.
If you're Republican, I don't think the problem is you being a Republican.
The problem is if they talk bad about immigrants, if they mistreat the people.
poor and you have nothing to say about it.
If you don't push back on that, that's where the problem is, the party's just a tool,
like I said before.
So the problem is, are you taking the right stances and standing up for what you should be,
or are you just kind of going along and outsourcing your public witness?
And I think that's what Christians, I personally feel like, I feel like every Christian
should have pushbacks on both sides if we are true believers, because God cares about way more
than what our political party cares about.
We are very narrow-minded and God isn't, right?
God cares about, you know, the whole life.
Can we talk about like the, like finding identity in the virtue and virtue on the other side?
Can we talk about that?
Because like a lot of times, you know, it's hard for people to admit that there's good in the other political party, right?
That they get something right.
Yeah, that they get it all wrong.
But as a Democrat, how do I respectfully say, man, no, I, you know, I, and the reason why it's because me, me and, I'm going to be honest, me and my
friend with my pastor. I had an event in London a couple of months ago. And we were going to the mall
right before our event. And me and my pastor Philip, we was going to the mall. And right before we
we got in the mall in the courtyard outside, there were drag queens with third graders. And they
literally was like walking around with the third graders teaching them to respect their body,
saying, my life, my choice, you know, and it made me angry.
I'm going to be honest with you.
And me, you know, like my family is not historically Republican, right?
My mama is a Democrat.
Like my grandma is a, like all of these people, right?
And I don't really adhere to like neither.
But at the same time, it's like I've had criticism about Trump in the past, you know,
and about, you know, how he doesn't respect, you know, like people.
It's not even his policies.
I just think that he doesn't respect people, you know.
But at the same time, when I saw that, I was like, yeah, I'm with the Republicans.
with this, you know, as well as abortion and stuff like that.
And so I'm not afraid to say, no, I got a problem with this too.
And so what would you say about people who have a problem with identifying the virtue
on the other side?
Yeah, I would say this.
Like, so for one, I think it's good that you're feeling that tension.
I don't worry about Christians that feel the tension.
Like, I can't really get with all the stuff they do.
I can't get with all the stuff.
The other side does.
That's a good tension to be in because neither of them is a pure application of the gospel.
They're not even, they don't even present themselves as a pure application of the gospel.
Well, we treat them that way.
And so it's good to feel that tension.
I'm more worried about Christians who don't feel any tension at all.
And especially during election season, you look at a lot of Christian leaders.
You don't see any tension.
You see them rooting for the other side just like in a really sycophantic way.
And it's just like, show me that you feel a little bit of attention that they don't get everything right
and that if we just fully give our support to one side, that we could go wrong.
So I just say it's good that you feel that tension
To get to the ability to see virtue on the other side
What I want to make very clear is this isn't
Us saying oh, it's all the same
Everybody's good, it's gonna be okay, no, these are real issues
And the sides are not equal on any given issue
And we need to be real about that
We don't want to pull the it's all good, you know
Because that's an easy way out to not really have to make a decision
So that's not what we're saying
But what we are saying is
if we got good theology and we believe in the fall,
we know anything touched by human hands is flawed.
Seriously flawed.
I would say both these ideologies are almost mortally flawed if you take them to that extent.
So if we know that, then we have to admit we don't get everything right.
And if we look at history, there are people who can be wrong on a lot of things.
But once again, they can be wrong on 99 things as a Christian on that one thing that they get right.
We got to admit it.
even during election season.
We have to be impartial.
The Bible talks about being impartial.
That means holding up the same standard to both sides.
So if I think this side gets a lot wrong and they get that one thing right, whether it be on abortion, whether it be on poverty, whatever, I need to say they actually do well with that.
So what that means to me is to say, if I'm a conservative, I should be able to look at the idea of inclusivity and say, I might not take it to the extent that the progressives do.
but I can look at the church and see when we weren't inclusive of just of people, not
theologic, but of people that we really went wrong.
When we weren't letting, you know, other races have power and sharing power, that was a problem.
Yeah.
So I appreciate that there's some people in society, even if they take it further than me,
that care about that.
That's good.
If I lean to the right, I think you should be able to say, you know what?
I'm glad there's some people that are talking about the sanctity of life.
Would I really want to live in a culture that had no regard for life?
all. I can appreciate that they do that and when they get it right, I'm going to admit they
get it right. That's good. I might not take it to the same extent. I might not have the same
conclusion, but being able to admit that they get something more right than we do is, I mean,
it's humility, but it's also our ability to critique ourselves. Yeah. You know, something that is
coming to my mind is that I think, I can imagine that a Republican or a Democrat with wisdom would
have some tension, but they wouldn't
express that publicly. Right. Because
of the vitriol that could come
their way simply by being honest.
And so, how does somebody even deal
with the fear of expressing that
tension? You know, because they might actually have
it, but they're afraid to say it. Because it's like, if I
say it, then now they think, you know, I hate babies
or they think I love, you know,
pronoun. Like,
yeah, like, that's the thing.
I mean, I think it's part of the Christian life. It's part of
discipleship. I think we have to ask
ourselves when we don't say something we know needs to be said, what are we protecting?
And who are we protecting? We ain't protecting the gospel, right? We're saving ourselves.
We're saving our own lives. And that doesn't make it easy. But I take heart in the fact,
I look, anytime I feel that tension and I'm like, man, should I do this or not? I just,
I just think of the civil rights generation and the threats that they were faced with and their ability
to stand ten toes down in the public square and say what was right and wrong, knowing that they
could get lynched for it.
That's good.
Wow.
If they could do that if, if, you know, Fred Shuttlesworth gets his house bombed and the next
day goes out and still goes forward with a bus boycott, then I can say something on
social media that somebody might not like.
Yeah.
I can honestly see this conversation and the things that you're saying, frustrating for
some people.
Yeah.
Right?
And the reason why is because I think, unfortunately, we live in a society, especially in the world
of social media, where it's just more convenient to choose.
choose aside instead of dealing with nuance.
It's just more convenient.
Because one, I think society and social media doesn't force us to think.
Right.
We won't, like, it's more convenient to have somebody think for us.
Right.
And to say, vote this way, vote that way.
And so what would you say to the person who's holding the attention who's being programmed in
that way, who's listening to this and saying, okay, I get what you're saying, but what side should
I pick?
Like, like, like, like, what is the less of the, of the evil?
Like, you know, like, less of the two evil.
Like, which one, which one is, is more evil than the other?
Do you even agree with that framing?
Do you think that's an actual, a good discernment tool?
I get what people are saying by that.
Yeah.
I get what people are saying.
I don't want to say I don't get it.
I get what people are saying when I see so much corruption on, on both sides or whatever,
it's hard for me to make a decision.
But I think we have to dig in.
And like I said, one thing I recommend people to do, make a list of your 10 top issues.
Put them in order and see what you.
where both, you know, see where the different candidates or the different parties fall on that
and use that. But what I want to tell you is so many people, see, we have this thing that I call
opposition-centered politics. And so once we find that person we think is really bad, we just do
the opposite of what they do. That's problematic, though. Yeah. And I think just, just choosing
aside is problematic. When Jesus comes, when Jesus comes onto the scene, he knew that the Pharisees were
legalistic. Yes. He talked about the Pharisees being legalistic.
But he didn't just say, well, they're legalistic.
Let me go ahead and be a Herodian because I don't like them.
Yeah.
And that's what we see that all the time.
People in toxic evangelicalism come out of it, start to see the flaws in toxic evangelicalism,
and they run into the arms of secular progressivism.
Wow.
They think themselves free thinkers.
Yeah.
But they're actually just going to another system of belief.
Yeah.
Another side of an extreme.
Another extreme.
Yeah, yeah.
Only because they're not familiar with that extreme's flaws.
Now, I'm from Denver, Colorado, very progressive, went to Vanderbilt University, very progressive, in Atlanta, Georgia, which are very progressive.
I thank God I've been able to see the flaws of that and not get so giddy that there's another team that I can go to once I find the flaws with toxic evangelicalism.
Yeah, that's good.
And I pray, even for a lot of our friends, I pray they see it soon because it's there.
You're just not familiar with those flaws.
Yeah.
And that's the difference.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Explain media hygiene.
Yeah.
You want people to brush their teeth, Justin?
Well, in a way.
Okay.
You often refer to.
Perverbially.
Referred to that.
That's a very interesting term.
Media hygiene.
What is that?
So media hygiene is the idea that whatever we're inputting into our system,
whatever information I'm getting and where I'm getting it from,
is going to form what my opinion is.
So if I'm getting my information out of the trash,
then my opinion is going to end up trash
trashed, boo-boo.
Exactly.
So basically what we know is
we all have this tendency
towards
wanting information
that confirms what we already believe.
It's confirmation bias.
So I don't really want to go to sources
that say something that I don't already think.
I want people to tell me what I already believe
so I can get, because we just get a feeling.
It's like, that's exactly what I was saying.
The problem with that is
when you just go to sources
that tell you what you
want to hear are tickling your ears, you're not getting the whole story. You're not getting the best
of both sides. And so I always recommend to people, make sure that you are following people on the
other side that you can say that you don't necessarily have to agree with them. You can say they're
wrong, but you can say they're intellectual and they're intellectually honest. So they're smart
and they're acting in good faith. If you don't know anybody on the other side that you can say is
smart and acting in good faith, that's not the other side's fault. That's your shortcoming.
Wow. Because they're there. You don't have to agree. You don't have to agree.
with them, but you at least need to know what they're saying so you know the best argument
on the other side.
And you're not just arguing with characters and misrepresentations.
That's really good.
Which is often what we're doing.
I would imagine that that would mean, you know, if you have someone who's a proponent of Fox News
or CNN, like diversifying your intake in a sense.
Diversifying your intake, but I would go so far as to say, turn off cable news.
Okay.
If you're getting most of your information from Fox News or MSNBC,
you're misinformed.
What should they get the information?
Because it's not good information.
What makes you say that?
Because, I mean, it's a model.
I watch Food Network, so I don't be knowing.
That's right.
The model for the way that they give information
isn't good.
It's all about bringing you back.
Yeah.
Right?
And so their focus on bringing you back
is a lot of propaganda.
I mean, if you look at the charts for bias,
Fox News, MSNBC are extremely biased.
Yeah.
So if you're getting your news from a biased source,
this is why everybody's so up in arms
and has no sobriety
because they think
there's nobody on the other side
that has anything to say.
So what sources
should people be looking at?
Like what's some incredible
sources on both sides
that can give people
a more well-rounded view
of the political culture?
Yeah.
I would say the pour over
is a good one.
So that's like a Christian source
that gives you a balanced view
of both sides.
I like breaking points.
Breaking points is a podcast
and they bring on
people from both sides
that are actually given
the best argument
not the person that y'all can just throw
you know tomatoes at all day okay um unheard
is a really good one um and again these aren't people that i always agree with
these some of these people aren't christian or anything like that
but they are being intellectually honest and they're talking about things that you'll never see
in in that's good primetime media that's good that's the that's the beauty about podcast
and the way media is done now we don't have to just go to the tv and they can also go to the
and campaign we go to the and campaign yeah you guys are church politics
podcast. Yeah, yeah, that's good. Yeah, for sure. And then another one is the free press.
Those are probably four, how many I get you, four or five that you can depend on if you want to hear the best of both sides.
Yeah, I can see this being scary for people because it's like you want to be intellectually honest.
But there's so much social pressure and even looking like there's some legitimacy on the other side.
There's so much bullying that can happen in it, you know.
And so like this stuff is just, it can be hard.
Yeah, it's definitely hard.
I mean, if I could tell you the amount of text and emails and stuff,
I get just from people I know when I say something they don't like
or goes against their side, you can't really prevent that.
But I think what you can do is show people the best of your ability that you're trying
to be.
I can't always please you.
Yeah.
But I'm going to do my due diligence and I'm going to be objective to the best of my ability.
And when I get something wrong, I'm going to admit it.
And I've had to do that before, right?
You get something wrong sometimes.
So that's really all you can do.
You can't please everybody.
What are the pros and cons of the political party having a black woman being in a race now opposed to show Biden, in the last?
I think for the election as a whole, it makes it a more, even more polarized election.
It's one thing when you had two white men, and that was polarizing enough.
Now to bring a black woman into it, you bring race into it even more.
And I think we've seen some of that.
And so the attacks on her are going to be, you know, are going to be stronger on that.
from that side.
And I also think the defenses are of things
that probably shouldn't be defended
or be there coming from us sometimes more than they should.
And so I would just urge people as much as you can
try to be impartial.
Try to weigh the issues more than the profile of the person.
It's not easy to do, but I think in community
and if we're deliberate, we can make it happen.
What would it look like?
Because you say community.
I feel like the last election
season, this was disruptive to a lot of church communities.
Oh, yeah.
Like, it was just destructive to churches, and I really believe that was the enemy.
How can a community come together to talk through these things and pray for people and all
of that in a way that still cultivates unity as a church while at the same time serving
like America?
Yeah, I think we just talk about Christian principles.
I don't think we necessarily need to always tell people how to vote.
You know, people can make their decision.
them, do what you can to inform them, and then focus on the principles, how we should care
about the poor.
You know, what do our moral values have to say to a particular issue while understanding
that we don't force our morals on every single, everyone our morals on everybody else, right?
This is a democracy.
We don't impose that.
We try to persuade people.
The biggest thing I would say, though, is helping people understand that it's good to advocate
for issues because we have neighbors who need us to be advocating for them.
But the best way to advocate for an issue is not to tell the other side how stupid and evil they are.
Yeah.
In a democracy, you have to persuade people.
So having a public temper tantrum every other day actually isn't getting that done.
It may be doing a disservice to the issue or the people that you claim to be protecting.
How do we show courtesy and kindness to the people that we're arguing against, our opponents, while still being tenacious?
And that's the beauty to me of the gospel.
It allows us to be gracious and also have that tenacity.
Again, we have proof of concept.
This is not just just in talking and theorizing.
We can look at the civil rights move.
That's exactly what they did.
They didn't have to cut somebody out to take them to task for what they were doing.
Yeah.
We don't have the moral imagination right now to be able to do that.
But that doesn't mean it's not doable.
Yeah, that's good.
Yeah.
And I think also, too, just fight.
getting to see people.
Like you guys talk about that.
I think that it would like, you know, when you, when you don't see people and you only see
politics, when someone shares their story, you won't hear a testimony, but you'll see a position.
Yeah.
And I think a lot of times that's what happens.
We often see people as the tribe that they're a part of and not realizing that this older
black woman in your church congregation is probably voting this way because she has some serious concerns, right?
And it's not she's trying to be a Marxist or she's not trying to be, you know, a critical race theorist.
But she's, she has some concerns about her grandson.
You know what I mean?
Like, and so like if we don't, if we don't do the hard work of seeing people and seeing stories, I think that we'll miss a lot that we can learn from people in our church, right?
I think about John 9 when Jesus heals the man.
I talk about this all the time is one of my favorites passages.
Jesus saw him.
It said it doesn't start off with Jesus healing a blind man.
It starts off with Jesus seeing a blind man.
And the Pharisees came later on in the story
and wanted to kick this man out of the synagogue
because it had already said
someone says this man is the Christ
they'd be kicked out of the synagogue.
They walk up to this man and says
who is the Christ since he opened your eyes?
They didn't walk up to him and say,
were you blind?
And now you can see?
I want to hear your story.
They didn't care about a story.
They just cared about what he landed
on the side of the law he landed on.
And I think a lot of times
we as Christians,
we act like that.
We don't care about stories.
We want to know who you're voting for.
What are you?
Once we have our team, once we have our narrative, it becomes a rivalry.
Absolutely.
And we get more, we're in more so to the rivalry than the merits of the case in front of us.
Absolutely.
And the person who's hurting, we want to prove our narrative is right.
We want to prove our team is good rather than actually taking care of the people that are right in front of us.
So I think that's absolutely right.
That's a good point.
Yeah, I was just going to speak to Ephesians.
and how I think in seasons like this
a read through Ephesians
like in one sitting would be helpful
just because you know how it says
there's no Greek or Jew or Gentile
and you know what I'm saying?
Male or female, we're all one.
And I think some people have a view of unity
that means like
everybody has to look the same to be united
but Ephesians is actually saying no
like where there should be disunity
because of the spirit of God
there's actually unity right? So if you're a Democrat
if you're a Republican if you do this
if you to, how do we still like move in the direction that the Holy Spirit already sealed,
which is our oneness?
You know what I'm saying?
Like, no, no, that's really good.
And it doesn't mean that your opponent isn't wrong.
Right.
It just means that there's something bigger than that and that you possibly might be wrong on something too.
So I don't want people to feel like it's acting like everything's okay.
It's not about acting like everything's okay.
But God unifies us in spite of all that, all that.
And I just don't see sometimes a commitment from Christians to that, especially during election season.
That's good.
That's good.
Do you pray for these people?
Which people?
Which people?
People in positions of authority.
Because I saw in the list that that's one of the tenets of this is to pray.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I do try to pray.
And we put that into the disciplines to pray for your political opponent.
And the reason for that is the Bible says it, right?
Pray, you know.
But also it's very hard to hold somebody in.
contempt and hate somebody who you're earnestly praying for, right? I think the spirit,
you know what I'm saying? The spirit works on you and you see it differently. Because again,
somebody can be very wrong, but they're not irredeemable. And so we should pray for people,
and not just imprecatory prayers, you know, that fire would rain down on their heads,
but that they would have good judgment and that they, their actions would be redemptive.
Yeah. I think that's really important. It sounds simple, but it's really important. Yeah,
because the Bible tells us to pray for our leaders, even goes as far as to say,
pray for your cruel leaders.
Yeah.
You know,
which it can be a very hard thing to do,
especially when our society teaches us to hate one side.
But it's like, no, like we have to pray for people who are in positions of power
that God was softening heart.
And we serve a God who can soften any political party.
Yes.
Like we, you know, he can do it.
And so ultimately, I hope has to be in God.
Man, before we get out of here, can you just educate people and tell people what is the end campaign?
what is your goal and your mission
and why did you, you know, start it?
So the AN campaign is a Christian civic organization.
Really what we want to do is raise civic literacy among Christians
so that they know how to engage in a better way.
That's number one.
Well, that's one of it, part of it.
And then we want Christians to be less partisan
and less ideological and focus more so on biblical principles.
We think party and ideology aren't necessarily bad, right?
They're part of the process and you can be in a party,
but when we focus on them too much, they divide us unnecessarily.
And one thing that Christians have to realize is we have some allies outside of the church
that have an interest in the church being divided.
Right.
And so we have to keep our eye on even if some in the church aren't doing what they're supposed to do.
How does God say we should be relating to them, even as we might have to oppose them on certain things?
So we want Christians to say, hey, let's look at these principles because that's what we have.
in common and let's apply those principles as we fight for our neighbor and then sometimes we'll
realize all the partisanship and ideology isn't even all that necessary. That's good. And so the
campaign is trying to do that and we do it through a number of ways. Obviously a lot of content,
workshops. You know, we have our Christian civic leadership academy, all those things trying to get
Christians engaged in a better way and really in a more faithful way. Yeah. Because our public witness
does not belong to the Republican Party.
It doesn't belong to the Democratic Party.
And really, our public witness doesn't belong to us.
Yeah.
It belongs to God.
What does that mean even during an election cycle?
Yeah, yeah.
And another good thing that you guys do is, I've always,
you know this, but I've always loved the whole project,
the whole life project that you guys, that you guys do,
you know, really celebrating, like, the whole of human life
and protecting the whole of human life, you know.
And so not just only being concerned with the child that's in the womb,
but the mother and the father that's in the womb because a lot of times,
especially in African-American communities,
a big thing that leads up to abortion is, you know,
father's not being present.
Yeah.
Well, thank you, brother.
Thanks, Mr. Gibney.
It's always good to have you.
So informative, man.
Follow the Ann campaign.
Follow Justin Gibbitty on.
Shout out your Instagram so people can follow you on.
Yeah, it's Justin E. Gibney.
Justin E. Gibney.
And we'll make sure we put all the resources.
as Justin mentioned in the show notes.
So, yeah, peace.
All right, y'all.
With the Perry's is produced by The Perrys,
with support from Amanda Reed and Channing McBride,
video recording and audio production by Matthew Baxter and Xavier Fairley,
edited by the team at Tread Lively,
artwork by Hop and music by Swoop.
Thank you for listening.
Now go with God.
