Posted on 10/04/2016 7:48:16 PM PDT by Kaslin
Pundits, increasingly, are saying that both major party candidates are targeting college-educated white women, but Hillary is ahead in that demographic. Some conservative elites are asking how any intelligent person can vote for Trump. I see those responses as emotional, rather than rational, logical decisions. Im a white woman with a Ph.D. and Im voting for Trump because of my experience in D.C., my training in logic, and my appreciation for those who can get the job done.
When I first came to D.C. more than 25 years ago, I was moving from a successful academic career into a completely different, political one. Admittedly, my learning curve was steep, but it didnt take long to see through the bluster to realize that some of the most intimidating, articulate people pontificating at meetings and acting so superior and elitist as colleagues were great on paper, but not very productive or accomplished in reality. Some of the so-called experts spouting impressive data and quoting relevant research sounded good and shut down any dissent, but often, I discovered with a bit of research, they were off the mark and sometimes just plain wrong. They, as the saying goes, are Often wrong, but never in doubt.
(Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...
God is angry that love is spoiled and purposes to correct the condition, which is a different point of view from those who can only love the hypothetically perfect.
Often what we think is God acting inexplicably harsh towards us, is actually the devil acting by permission, only to be rebuked later. Our situation is as a puzzle that God can solve perfectly.
As we learn in the Orthodox Church, the vast majority of real Saints do not get involved in politics. Many of them withdraw from the world in monasteries or caves.
However, a few Saints are Warriors and national leaders like S. Alexander Nevsky and Sts. Vladimir and Constantine.. Others choose monasticism, but are called by their people into a leadership role, like St. Sava of Serbia.
Most of us are laypeople who are called to engage with the world, including the dirty, messy business of politics and of course of employment. But some monastic Saints taught that many laypeople are more saintly than most monastics, despite our engagement in the messy business of the world. (So there is hope for even me, a sinner!!!)
However, whatever our calling, we are reminded that our true citizenship is in the Kingdom of God.
Such a tendency would militate against those starkly intended in a pure life from even being seen among the political world.
Maybe this is a mistake. The Protestant evangelical model would aver that it is a mistake, that it’s better to stay out in public (if possible) and serve as a conduit of blessing from God to other people. I.e. the career monk or nun is likely being more idealistic than even God is.
Though understood here, the Orthodox sector of the church has an answer as you mentioned, that there is a public demand for a holy man (or woman) to come out of the monastic life and help a public situation.
In a modern democratic republic, this may or may not be hard to envision. Perhaps a wise man like Donald Trump could end up getting a reference to someone in a monastery, but I’m thinking more likely he’d just respect this person’s vocation and go elsewhere.
I want to live a Christian life, but the more I approach it, the more I see that it looks like the public is the place that makes the most sense to live it in. But that might just be my calling. Some people might be so put upon by the demands of a public life that a monastic life would make more sense. God has a plan for every willingly yielding person.
Cool. What field, btw?
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