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March 14, 2016: US Senator and Democratic Presidential Candidate Bernie Sanders speaks during a campaign rally at the Family Arena in Saint Charles, Missouri.Shutterstock

Aug. 15, 2016 (LifeSiteNews) – It is strange, Charles Krauthammer noted some time ago, that a decade or two after the idea of socialism was bankrupted and abandoned by all but a few intellectuals holed up in their airtight ivory towers, socialism’s popularity should rise so suddenly and so meteorically.

Indeed, the upstart Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders nearly growled his way to an upset of Hillary Clinton’s coronation, with tens of thousands of people—especially young people—pouring out of their hipster coffee shops and taking breaks from live-tweeting their oppression on expensive iPads to hear him speak. His message—a fairly simple socialist, collectivist we’re all in this together mantra—seems to have had an enormous appeal to an enormous number of people.

It is not our job to demand that the government do what we are supposed to do, and it is fundamentally anti-Christian to decide that supporting politicians who endorse the violent destruction of tiny human beings created in God’s image is a sacrifice that can be made for the greater good.

The reason I find this so interesting is because in my work as a pro-life activist, I spend my time fighting the other ideology that has conquered our culture, one that seems to be at complete odds with the socialism so many left-wingers claim to admire: hyper-individualism. On nearly every major life issue, secular progressives promptly abandon their collectivist croonings and with an abrupt grinding of gears announce that issues such as abortion and assisted suicide are personal matters of choice.

Suddenly, all the syrupy speeches lauding our duty to assist one another to the greatest extent of our ability, to help the poor and the weak and the vulnerable, are replaced with a harsh manifesto to selfishness. Apparently the socialist spirit only extends to relieving wealthy business owners of their earnings, but does not involve any condemnation of the violent barbarism abortion inflicts on society’s weakest members. Suicide activists are pushing to make suicide a universal human right, indicating that the harmony the progressives assure us will come with socialism does not preclude Grandma being put to sleep like a household pet.

This is all really very strange. The idea that someone can choose such a thing as death without impacting everything and everybody else is delusional. It also an idea with a profoundly dismal view of the value of individual human lives. We’re all in this together, it seems, until we’re not. Business owners wanting to keep more of the money they earned are selfish money-grubbers, but killing a baby in the womb is just good feminism in practice.

So on one hand, socialism and collectivism are the prevailing political tropes. On the other hand, autonomy and individualism are dominating social policy, as seen in the rise of assisted suicide, euthanasia, abortion, and no-fault divorce even for parents with children.

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These policies, regardless of which side of the political spectrum you inhabit, are destroying the most precious human bonds we have: husbands and wives, parents and children, children and parents. These relationships are rupturing under the weight of the secular selfishness that demands sacrifice only from certain people, and for certain things.

I suppose this makes sense in a way. Once the family structure has been destroyed and all natural bonds of affection have been poisoned, the government has to step in with massive social programs and socialist policies simply because the once-prevailing safety nets of the immediate family, the extended family, and the church community will have been eliminated. Millions of people are then one missing paycheck away from poverty. Promoting radical autonomy and unmitigated self-determination for individuals and imposing socialism on the broken society that remains once the fallout is complete is really quite clever. Perhaps the secular progressives realized quite some time ago that if they could just convince everyone to live thoroughly selfish lives in pursuit of what made them happy, then the state would have to step in to curate the remaining rubble. The rich could pay for everything, of course. Those reluctant to pay higher taxes would simply have to stop being so selfish.

It is simply impossible to take socialists seriously in the light of their transparent hypocrisy. Even so-called Christian socialists are often willing to go wobbly on the murder of children in the womb in order to back left-wing political candidates that they claim, in direct contravention of the evidence, will solve the economic circumstances that lead to abortion in the first place. Being pro-life means being pro-whole-life, they explain condescendingly – as if they would be making the same argument if it were instead thousands of adults being decapitated, dismembered, and disemboweled each day. Do you think for one moment that they would vote for a candidate who endorsed the execution of three hundred adults each day based on the fact that said candidate had so many other compassionate policies? I think not.

Underlying their arguments, as well-intended as they might be, is the same fundamental disregard for children in the womb and the same belief that the state can fix the brokenness we have brought on ourselves that is shared by their secular progressive comrades. Secularists pretend Karl Marx wasn’t an utter failure, and Christian socialists pretend that the commands of Jesus to “love our neighbor” actually refer to endorsements of government policy rather than our duty to love and care for those around us. Christian socialism, as sweet as it often sounds, is simply a cheap way of avoiding the messy, complex reality of our actual Christian duty: to stand up and care for our neighbors ourselves. Having the government take money from other people to fund social programs is not what Jesus had in mind when He exhorted us to love our neighbors. Christian socialists sound as if their concern for the poor is acute while actually proposing, in effect, that we pass the buck to the state. The phrase “champagne socialists” comes to mind.

In an increasingly broken culture filled with increasingly broken people, our duty as Christians is to reach out to those people, to help where we can, and to defend and protect the weakest and most vulnerable members of society. It is not our job to demand that the government do what we are supposed to do, and it is fundamentally anti-Christian to decide that supporting politicians who endorse the violent destruction of tiny human beings created in God’s image is a sacrifice that can be made for the greater good. Throughout history, it has been Christians who founded orphanages, soup kitchens, homes for unwed mothers, associations to assist the poor and the struggling, and alleviated the pain of those who lived in their communities. And throughout history, it was the state that became increasingly dangerous and hostile to those who believed that the state was not God.

We would be wise to remember that.

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Jonathon Van Maren is a public speaker, writer, and pro-life activist. His commentary has been translated into more than eight languages and published widely online as well as print newspapers such as the Jewish Independent, the National Post, the Hamilton Spectator and others. He has received an award for combating anti-Semitism in print from the Jewish organization B’nai Brith. His commentary has been featured on CTV Primetime, Global News, EWTN, and the CBC as well as dozens of radio stations and news outlets in Canada and the United States.

He speaks on a wide variety of cultural topics across North America at universities, high schools, churches, and other functions. Some of these topics include abortion, pornography, the Sexual Revolution, and euthanasia. Jonathon holds a Bachelor of Arts Degree in history from Simon Fraser University, and is the communications director for the Canadian Centre for Bio-Ethical Reform.

Jonathon’s first book, The Culture War, was released in 2016.