|
"I've made my choice," wrote the young basketball
star. "I love Jesus Christ and I try to serve Him to
the best of my ability. How about you?"
Who is this--David Robinson of the San Antonio Spurs?
It may surprise you to learn the tract was written 30
years ago by former Senator Bill Bradley.
Bradley has since renounced his Christian beliefs,
and his actions are a warning of the perils of
political expediency--and of not holding our fellow
believers accountable.
The pamphlet, titled "I've Made My Choice," was
published in the 1960s by the American Tract Society
when Bradley was a rookie with the New York Knicks.
In it, Bradley recounts how he accepted Christ while
a student at Princeton. "I knew I had been giving my
life to the wrong goals," he wrote. "I knew then
that I wanted to give my life to Jesus Christ and His
service."
Not anymore, it appears.
In his 1996 memoirs, Bradley says he was put off by
the exclusive truth claims of fundamentalist
Christianity. He was also bothered by the
uncharitable attitudes and racism displayed by
some Christians.
Bradley now disavows his Christian beliefs and,
according to "Investor's Business Daily," says he "now
embraces all religions" from Buddhism to Islam, so
long as they seek "inner peace."
These are chilling words from a man who was once very
active in the Fellowship of Christian Athletes. It
appears that he has either renounced his faith entirely--or he
has decided, for political reasons, to renounce it
publicly. After all, the Democratic Party has never
really warmed up to evangelical Christians. And
politicians in general are afraid to talk about tough
moral issues.
Now, since I believe that a person once saved is
always saved, I have to conclude that either Bradley
was not truthful in his earlier testimony, or that this is
purely a political move--that deep down, Bill Bradley
does know the truth. But is there anything scarier
than someone who knows the truth and yet publicly
denies it? One trembles for the state of his soul.
Bradley's story is a cautionary tale, not just for
Christians who go into politics, but for all of us.
Here was a man who was converting others to Christ,
and somewhere along the line, he got off the rails.
It's a warning that we need to constantly keep
ourselves fresh in the faith, to attend discipleship
classes, and to hold one another accountable.
It's a cautionary tale, as well, as to what the
political system does to candidates. It does seem to
reward politicians for turning their backs on
unfashionable commitments, like Christian faith or
pro-life positions. But what kind of "leader" does
that produce? Can such a leader ever be trusted?
As Bradley rises in the polls, Christians ought to
pray that he will come to his senses. I can't think
of anything more frightening than knowing the truth,
but denying it.
As for Bradley, I hope and pray he will to reconsider
the words that he himself wrote in that long-ago tract:
"The choice is simple. It is between the eternal and
the passing, between the strong and the weak . . .
between Jesus Christ and the world."
From BreakPoint. October 5, 1999, copyright 1999,
reprinted with permission of Prison Fellowship, P.O. Box 17500, Washington, DC, 20041-0500.
.
|