In addition to national, state and local leadership, voters also made decisions on over 100 ballot initiatives.
In addition to national, state and local leadership, voters also made decisions on over 100 ballot initiatives.
Today is Election Day. What will the outcome be? Well, thankfully, because we live in a free society, it all depends on you and me. If you have not voted yet, I encourage you to go and fulfill your Christian duty to be a good citizen and go vote. Now is not the time to buy into the lie that your vote doesn’t really matter.
In a video posted to Facebook, megachurch pastor Fredrick Price Jr. encouraged Christians to vote their conscience in November. He also asserted that voting for "the lesser of two evils" still meant one was voting for evil.
In a video posted to YouTube, Phil Vischer, the creator of VeggieTales, breaks down the history of why White Christians generally vote for Republicans and Black Christians generally vote for Democrats.
According to a new report, 86 percent of Americans identify as spiritual at least to some extent.
Christians have both a civic and a Christian responsibility to vote. As my friend Tim Goeglin, vice-president of external and governmental relations for Focus on the Family, put it recently, to vote is the beginning of our civic duty of Christians.
In Missouri, controversy has ensued over local absentee ballot voting laws which have come under scrutiny in the midst of the ongoing pandemic, with many voters expressing a desire to vote from home to avoid encountering disease.