Do Politics Stress You? (Proverbs 21)
Does politics ever leave you feeling anxious or overwhelmed? Many Christians, especially in America, tie their hope and view of God’s work too closely to it.

Proverbs 21
Today's Scripture Passage
A Few Thoughts to Consider
How stressed do you get with politics?
Some Christians, especially those in America, place a high emphasis on politics. It consumes their thoughts, ambitions, and views of God’s activity in the world. They stress if the “wrong” person gets elected and are elated when their person achieves a position of power. However, Proverbs 21:1 helps us place political concerns in the proper place. It says, “A king’s heart is like channeled water in the Lord’s hand: He directs it wherever he chooses.”
In an age when kings were comparative to gods, “This proverb shows that God has ultimate authority over world rulers.”[1] When we peel back the meaning of this verse, we see that “Just as water is directed to a good purpose by digging irrigation ditches and building dams, so the king’s heart will follow the directives of Yahweh to establish his purpose of justice.”[2] As Bruce Waltke notes,
Farmers in Mesopotamia and Egypt divert the water by putting up dams and other obstructions in the stream’s flow to direct the water to their fields and gardens. Palestinian farmers depend on heavenly rain (cf. Deut. 11:10–12), but must have captured and directed the water to where it was most needed. Natural streams are not meant, because their direction is fixed. The LORD is the Farmer; the king’s heart is the flexible channel; and his well-watered garden is the pious and ethical needy.[3]
Throughout history, this example proved to be true. God raised leaders up, and he brought them down. Even leaders who wanted nothing to do with him, such as Pharaoh in the Exodus narrative, were used to accomplish his purposes. Thankfully, this reality holds true today as well. God uses both Godly and ungodly leaders to fulfill his kingdom purposes. This isn’t to say we shouldn’t pray, support, and vote for good people to hold positions of power, but we should do so with the right perspective.