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If a large majority of Christians do not vote, would that be a political movement?

In this final question and answer session on The Political Disciple, Dr. Vincent Bacote of Wheaton College addresses a question regarding whether Christians abstaining from voting would constitute a political movement.

This resource is part of a series on The Political Disciple.  Click here to listen to the full series.


Vincent Bacote

Vincent Bacote, is an Associate Professor of Theology and the Director of the Center for Applied Christian Ethics at Wheaton College in Wheaton, IL. He is the author of the The Political Disciple: A Theology of Public Life (2015), The Spirit in Public Theology: Appropriating the Legacy of Abraham Kuyper (2005), and has contributed to books including On Kuyper (2013), Aliens in the Promised Land (2013), Keep Your Head Up (2012) and Prophetic Evangelicals (2012). He is a regular columnist for Comment Magazine and contributes to other magazines, including Books and Culture, Christianity Today, Think Christian and regeneration quarterly, and journals such as Christian Scholars Review, Urban Mission and the Journal for Christian Theological Research.

 

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