When Pastors Become Political Actors
Pastors carry a sacred responsibility: to tend souls, teach scripture, and cultivate communities of compassion. But in recent years, many clergy have found themselves pulled into partisan battles. Some feel pressure from congregants. Others feel compelled by conscience. Still others are swept along by the cultural currents around them. The challenge is not that pastors have opinions — they are citizens, too. The challenge is that the pulpit is not built for partisanship . When sermons become political endorsements, congregations fracture. When clergy become campaign surrogates, their spiritual authority becomes suspect. And when pastoral identity merges with political identity, the gospel’s breadth is narrowed to a platform. The prophetic tradition has always called faith leaders to speak about justice, mercy, and moral responsibility. But prophetic speech is different from partisan advocacy. One calls people to conversion of heart; the other calls them to vote a certain way. Pas...