Tuesday 26 May 2015

Politicians tell lies!


‘My point is if you are suggesting that every MP who has never quite told the truth or indeed told a brazen lie - including ministers, including Cabinet ministers, including prime ministers - we would clear out the House of Commons very fast, I would suggest’.[1] These are the words of Sir Malcolm Bruce defending his fellow MP and ex-Scottish Secretary Alistair Carmichael. He went on to say: ‘The SNP . . . were "judging people by standards that they do not apply to themselves"’.1

 
The more cynical observer would probably say that Malcolm Bruce is absolutely right but is telling us nothing new. Most of us were aware of politicians who say one thing and do another. In many surveys, politicians were up amongst the top of those who were trusted least! However, the sad thing is that lying is both taken for granted and, for some, expected! What, then, do we think of God’s commandment ‘Thou shalt not bear false witness’?[2] God tells us that lying is wrong. It is sin – falling short of what God expects of everyone! It’s a simple thing but one that has BIG consequences!


But there is another important point in the story featured on the BBC website. It is easy to point the finger at others. It is easy to find faults and failings, even in those in public office. It is easy to follow that up with suggestions of what penalties they should face for those failures – resign, be sacked, be fined, be imprisoned, etc. The question that needs to be asked is: ‘What would happen if we applied the same standards to ourselves?’ The Bible says ‘Therefore thou art inexcusable, O man, whosoever thou art that judgest: For wherein thou judgest another, thou condemnest thyself; for thou that judgest doest the same things’.[3] The reality is that we all sin. We all fail to do what God expects – we fall short of His standards. That sin or failure carries a penalty – separated from God forever, punished for our sin!


The good news is that God has provided a way by which we can escape the penalty we deserve. We can be forgiven! How? Some 2000 years ago the Lord Jesus Christ, God’s Son, died on a Roman cross outside of Jerusalem. Though He was perfect – He had never sinned or failed – He died. In that death, He bore God’s punishment upon my sin and, in so doing, brought forgiveness to me and many more Christians. Those who confess their sin to God in prayer and put their faith in Christ can know that forgiveness too. Rather than judge others, let us accept what we are before God, confess our sin and guilt and seek His peace in forgiveness. Will you?




[1] http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-32881672
[2] Exodus chapter 20 verse 16.
[3] Romans chapter 2 verse 1