It’s time to reclaim America
- Jun 28, 2007 - 1
Sally Kern is first and foremost a pastor’s wife. But she is also a member of the Oklahoma House of Representatives, and concerned about the future of our nation and its religious freedoms.
“The Bible says we are to be salt and light, and I don’t believe that is just in the church,” said Kern, who is the wife of Steve Kern, pastor of Oklahoma City, Olivet.
Kern said, as a pastor’s wife, she knows the most important thing is for a person to have a personal relationship with Jesus, but “if we don’t live in a society favorable to faith, we won’t be able to share the gospel message.”
She said she believes the world is becoming antagonistic toward the Christian faith.
“If God’s people don’t get involved, we will lose the freedom to open our doors and share our faith,” she admonished. “We will be limited in what we can do. There are things going on in this country where people’s Christian faith is being challenged.”
Reiterating that this country was founded on biblical principles, Kern said if the church today doesn’t learn the true meaning of the first amendment instead of a distorted view of separation of church and state, Christians are going to lose religious freedoms.
“Our founding fathers wanted to separate the institutions of church and state, but never intended to separate faith from the public square,” she said. “Politics definitely influences our everyday lives. Our beliefs should be influencing society.”
Kern said she never thought she would be serving in the state legislature. She was happy being a pastor’s wife and a high school teacher.
But one day in her government class, she was teaching about political campaigns.
“The prevailing attitude of the students was that all politicians are rich and crooked,” Kern related. “For some reason, I said, ‘Mrs. Kern may run for the legislature some day, and you know she is honest and certainly not rich.’”
That thought stayed with Kern, and although she fought it, she began to pray and knew God wanted her to run for a house seat.
“When we moved here 11 years ago, we bought Rep. Bill Graves’ house,” she said. “Someone at church said, ‘You moved into one house of his, maybe it’s time you moved into the other.’”
Kern said she was told the best campaigning was to knock on doors, so she started knocking on doors a year before the election. She developed her own campaign literature, did her own mail outs, and said she expected to run, lose and be a much better teacher.
But she came in first in the primary, won the run-off and the general election in 2004. In 2006, she ran unopposed.
“If Christians would go to the polls and vote biblical values, we would have a biblical society,” she said. “We have to exercise our right to vote and stand up for biblical standards, or we are going to lose our freedoms.”
Kern said, according to a Gallup survey, only nine percent of people who call themselves Christian have a biblical view of the world.
“That is scary,” she said.
Kern spoke at the second annual Reclaiming Oklahoma for Christ Conference held at Oklahoma Christian University in Edmond July 14.
This article is reprinted from the June 28, 2007, issue of Baptist Messenger, the newspaper of the Baptist General Convention of Oklahoma.
Further Learning
Learn more about: Citizenship, Christian Citizenship, Legislation
1 comments (post your own) feed
1 On Jul 25th, 2007, at 7:40pm, Paul W. Moody wrote:
I heard Salley deliver that message at the “ reclaim Oklahoma for Christ seminar. She is absolutely right. I am on the ERLC committee of the Capital Baptist Association,in OK C, and Sally’s husband, Pastor Steve Kern serves on the committee with me. Our committee is trying to increase awareness, in our churches, of the moral issues that need to be voted on by our legislators at the state and National level.