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Home > 2003 > May (Web-only)Christianity Today, May (Web-only), 2003  |   |  
Christian History Corner: When World Leaders Pray
Some observers are upset with Tony Blair's recent public avowal of faith. But what impact has Christianity really had on our leaders?



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"Humility, conscience, and responsibility." These are the traits London Times writer Michael Gove believes political leaders learn when they submit themselves to God.

Gove made this statement last week after Tony Blair publicly stated that he would be judged on the Iraq war by "my Maker." Blair's closest advisors flinched—believing such an admission of faith by a Prime Minister "plays badly." These are the same advisors who insisted the PM not end his Iraq war broadcast with "God bless you," because "people don't want chaplains pushing stuff down their throats."

Sadly, the British spin-doctors are probably right to worry. After all, ever since the European public found out about the Bible study classes being held at the White House, many have been convinced Bush is "a fundamentalist crazy." "To listen to the European reaction," says Gove, "one might have thought they were bringing back witch trials in Massachusetts."

But Gove suggests we look at the record. He argues that if we do so, we will find that Christian faith helps leaders gain a frame of reference for their decisions beyond that of mere political expediency. Far from becoming arrogant, inflexible, and intolerant, Christian leaders are forced to face the fact that they are answerable to a higher authority. And this is all to the good. It "enriches" such leaders and "extends their sympathies," leading to such compassionate actions as Bush's policies on AIDS in Africa and his attention to the poor and undereducated at home, and British Tory leader Duncan Smith's forays out from Westminster to address the conditions of drug abusers and the problems of failing schools.

Though non-Christians, too, have shown such enlightened compassion in their leadership, Gove's challenge reminds us that Christian leadership has been the norm—not the exception—for most of Western history. And despite the decidedly mixed record of such leadership, examples abound—from Constantine, Theodosius I, and Justinian I through Charlemagne, Louis IX, and Elizabeth I—of rulers who have taken seriously the faith they professed, and allowed it to influence their policies to the benefit of their people.

Though some historians now debate whether Constantine, "the first Christian emperor," was truly Christian at all, he clearly believed he was. And he looked back to a battle at the Milvian Bridge, just outside the walls of Rome, as the decisive hour in his newly found faith. There, after seeing a vision of a bright cross in the afternoon sky with the words BY THIS SIGN CONQUER, Constantine ordered his soldiers to mark their shields with a stylized cross and proceeded to rout the army of his challenger.

Two years later, in 314, Constantine sent a message to the assembled bishops at the Council of Arles. He wrote about how God does not allow people "to wander in the shadows" but reveals to them salvation: "I have experienced this in others and in myself, for I walked not in the way of righteousness. … But the Almighty God, who sits in the court of heaven, granted what I did not deserve."

Though Constantine wavered for a decade, allowing pagan sacrifices to be portrayed on the monument celebrating his Milvian Bridge victory, and though he ordered the execution of several relatives for obscure reasons, he acted on his faith more consistently during the last 14 years of his reign. Creating the conditions we call "state-church," he lay the foundations for Western Christendom. And in 325 he convened the crucial Council of Nicea to address the Arian controversy that threatened to split the church (and, not incidentally, his empire). It was this council that first formulated the orthodox Christian doctrine of the Trinity, over against the Arian teaching that Jesus Christ was less than fully God.





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