Philophronos Blogging

The internet, as much as I enjoy it, has helped lower the level of political discourse because it is far easier to type something directed at a stranger that you’d never dream of saying to the face of someone with whom you’re acquainted. It even affects the Christian blogosphere. I’m not alone in occasionally wanting “to not just debate the point, but to crush [someone's] argument into oblivion.” I also know that feeling is not consistent with 1 Peter 3:15-16:

But dedicate your lives to Christ as Lord. Always be ready to defend your confidence in God when anyone asks you to explain it. However, make your defense with gentleness and respect. Keep your conscience clear. Then those who treat the good Christian life you live with contempt will feel ashamed that they have ridiculed you.

If we are called to make our defense of our faith with gentleness and respect, how much more should we do so with respect to minor issues like the politics of our nation or any of the temporary governments of this world? Those things may feel quite important right now, but in the light of eternity, our perspective on them will be very different. By and large I think Christians do an excellent job of keeping debate civil, and that is why I’m joining Henry Neufeld, a liberal blogger (Threads from Henry’s Web) to make a rather bold challenge that we’re calling Philophronos Blogging.

philóphrōn: to think, have a mindset. Friendly, courteous, benign (1Peter 3:8). Deriv.: philophrónōs (G5390), in a friendly or kind manner.

Philophronos is defined by Louw-Nida in their Dictionary of the New Testament According to Semantic Domains as “pertaining to friendly concern and kindness toward someone.”

Christian bloggers should purposefully express our political beliefs with gentleness and respect, with the intention of setting the example for non-Christians. We’re not all going to agree. We don’t need to agree. But we can debate the issues in such a way that the debate glorifies God and points people to Christ. We’re challenging Christian bloggers who write about politics to write at least one post a week until the election – and hopefully after it – that adheres to the following guidelines.

  • Consistent with 1 Corinthians 13:4-7 and Ephesians 4:15
  • Assume goodwill and good intentions for our political opponents
  • Wherever possible list supporting reasons why they have good intentions
  • Negative statements are not personal and are factual
  • If negative statements are conclusions, the facts that led to the conclusion are referenced
  • Negative statements support the argument and are not gratuitous

Imagine what the political tone in the country would be like if all political debate adhered to those guidelines! Again, we believe most Christian bloggers are already doing these things, but we’re challenging the Christian blogosphere to do so in a more purposeful way, on the “pay it forward” concept that if we start this, others may just join in. We can have edifying and productive political discourse. Let’s work on blogging friendly - practice Philophronos Blogging!

If you would like to join us, you’ll be added to the blogroll and aggregator. But if you just want to let us know that you’re blogging Philophronos without joining, trackback to this post or the one at Henry’s. To join, add the blogroll or post RSS feed to your homepage and post a comment here or at Henry’s.
Since the reason for joining a blogroll is to publicly associate with blogs you have something in common with, and to gain exposure on those blogs, we do require that one of these be displayed on your home page while you remain on the blog roll.

Preferred method:
RSS – this provides a list of recent philophronos posts:

http://feeds.technorati.com/faves/philophronos/tag/philophronos?format=rss

(Please display at least 3 Philophronos posts.)

Alternate method:
Use the code for the traditional blogroll -

About Laura

Comments

  1. bleechers says:

    Glad to find your blog and glad to see your commitment! :)

    I saw your post at hotair and you are correct… Free Republic has a story from 2004 about the Kennedy-KGB connection.

  2. Anna Venger says:

    What a wonderful idea! I am a woman of strong opinion, but I try very hard to be fair to other views and not to be inflammatory. I try to treat those with opposing views with respect. It has on occasion hurt my soul to see the vulgarity and the nastiness, the lack of civility in the blogosphere. It would be wonderful if we could raise the level of civil discourse beyond name-calling, etc. Consider me in.

  3. SteveO says:

    Great initiative and well articulated–count me in!
    No Neutrality.

  4. Martin LaBar says:

    Now if our congresspersons would just be more civil . . .

    I found this through the Christian Carnival.

  5. Amanda says:

    So I decided to join you in this endeavor. :) I posted the blogroll on my blog.

  6. Laura says:

    You’re added, thanks!

  7. Cheryl says:

    I’d love to join. I’ve added the blogroll to my blog. :)

  8. Laura says:

    Great, you’re in the blogroll and the aggregator!

  9. Eric says:

    Hi Laura!

    I’ve been lurking around the Philophronos blogs off and on these past few weeks and I really like what I see. I’ve the blogroll up on my main page and would love to join up with you all.

    Thanks

  10. Laura says:

    Thanks, Eric, you’ve been added!

  11. Amanda says:

    Laura – Can you change my URL in the blogroll? I made the switch over to wordpress so now I’m http://freeindeed.wordpress.com

    Also, can you send me the OPML code since wordpress won’t allow java script?

    Thanks! :)

  12. Rose-Marie says:

    please add me to the blogroll. thanks! I’m posting the blogroll to my blog.thanks, Rose-Marie

  13. Brenda says:

    Don’t know if I fit here. Will let you decide, seeing mine is mostly encouragement to the heart kinda of stuff.

    No matter what, this is a fascinating, informative site.

    Blessings Brenda

  14. Eric says:

    Laura…for some reason the blogroll isn’t showing that I’ve updated with new posts. Could you come by and check the feed? (I’d have emailed you offline but I don’t seem to have one for you… :( )

  15. Alan says:

    Like what I see. Count me in.

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. Philophronos Blogging

    Laura () and I started discussing civility in debate about politics in a couple of comment exchanges and have continued via e-mail. As a result she proposed the idea of a blogroll and aggregator to support civil debate. In particular, we are challeng…

  2. [...] Laura at Pursuing Holiness (a conservative) and Henry Neufeld from Threads from Henry’s Web (a liberal) have a challenge for Christian bloggers who blog about politics – philophronos blogging.” [...]

  3. [...] The whole concept behind philophronos blogging was a “pay it forward” variation where Christian political bloggers would set the example for civil political discourse. Perhaps it’s dangerously naive to think that anyone – even other Christians – might pick up this ball and run with it. I know that I have struggled – and ultimately passed up – posting on several items where the temptation to be uncivil would have overtaken me. But this Liberty Mutual commercial reminded me that whether or not the idea meets with any success, it is a good idea. I’d rather be dangerously naive than cynical. [...]

  4. [...] Laura has posted some code to help add this important new blogroll to your site. Just head down to the bottom of that post to copy and paste. This blogroll is not just about this election. We wanted it to appear before this election, but we’ll be going straight into presidential issues leading up to 2008, and there will always be political blogging. [...]

  5. [...] There are of course exceptions to this, especially considering opposition to the war in Iraq. Philophronos blogger Henry Neufeld is against it, and while I think he is wrong, I don’t think he is naive [...]

  6. [...] Democrats ducked him, and Reid said flat-out that he refused to believe him. Having committed to Philophronos blogging, I’ll refrain from writing all the things that I’ve thought since seeing that video. In [...]

  7. [...] while you are at it, another interesting concept was started by Pursuing Holiness, called “Philopronos Blogging” – it is a group of Christian bloggers who have committed to a code of conduct on their [...]

  8. [...] Fellow Philophronos blogger Henry Neufeld of Threads from Henry’s Web points out liberal hypocrisy and very kindly adds [...]

  9. [...] Harstone of Discovering the Heart of God has joined the Philophronos blogroll. Go check out his latest post, In The End, Does The World Comes First?, and welcome him to the [...]

  10. [...] a new blog that I found through the Philophronos Blogroll, Alan Hardstone asks In the End, Does the World Come First? Check out his post. Do you see the [...]

  11. [...] post from fellow Philophronos Blogger Reformed Chicks Blabbing caught my eye, because the idea of philophronos blogging was to raise the [...]