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Tony Evans, the African-American pastor of megachurch Oak Cliff Bible Fellowship in Dallas, Texas, is telling his congregation how to vote. Not who to vote for, but how Christians should evaluate candidates.

“The Bible is pregnant with politics,” he told me during a recent visit to New York. “You cannot read the Bible from Genesis through Revelation and go through too many chapters that are not involving politics. So it is not a minor issue or a marginal issue. It is a central issue.”

Evans started Oak Cliff in 1976 with a handful of members meeting in his home. Today the 9,500-member church has gained nationwide attention for its National Church Adopt-a-School initiative where churches adopt local public schools to provide mentoring, tutoring, and family-support services. Oak Cliff has adopted 65 urban public schools.

Evans, 63, also serves as chaplain to the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys and the NBA’s Dallas Mavericks. He was the first African-American to earn a doctorate in theology from Dallas Theological Seminary, and former President George W. Bush credited Evans with helping to launch his office of faith-based initiatives. (Curiously, Evans has never met Joshua DuBois, President Barack Obama’s director of the White House faith-based office. Evans shrugged when I asked why, and said, “I’m available to be met with.”)

Evans doesn’t speak on politics often—his array of books addresses basic theology, marriage, and racial reconciliation—but this year he wrote a political book titled How Should Christians Vote? (Moody, 2012). He makes clear he isn’t endorsing anyone or any party, but he’s clear in his criticism of President Obama’s positions on abortion and the family.

How do you help people think about voting?

“I believe God has spoken on this and He hasn’t stuttered. … When it comes to how to vote, I tell [my congregation], make a sheet of paper with four columns on it. First column, whatever the issue is, second column, what the Democrats say about the issue, third column, what the Republicans say about the issue, fourth column, what God says about the issue. Then you prioritize the issues because everyone’s not going to prioritize the same. Then you have a good feel for how you should vote.

“I don’t have a problem with people using the Bible, the difference is in how the Bible is being used. I don’t think you can put a defense for big government when you understand how God operates the world. God operates the world by covenants. Those covenants have specific jurisdictions and responsibilities, not to be infringed upon by another covenant. That’s where the redefinition of marriage comes in—God has a family covenant and He has a family definition. So if you don’t understand how God operates the world then you make up your rules as you go along and find pretext verses to make you feel good about it.”

How do you prioritize the most important issues?

“I will always start with the right to life. Because all other rights depend on your ability to live. Secondly, I will always go to the importance of the family, and that civil government should support family government. Then I will go to the church, because as many historians have concluded, a democratic republic can only work in a moral atmosphere. And if people cannot self-govern, you have to engorge civil governance to do the governance for them. That’s why it’s critical that the church becomes the dominant influencer in the culture, and that includes government.”

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article courtesy of EverydayChristian.com

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