Don’t Misrepresent
I am not trying to be political (though I faithfully vote, pray about election choices, try to be a good citizen), but I am guessing that by now, most, if not all of you have heard the name James Talarico in the news. He is a member of the Texas House of Representatives and is running in a highly publicized race to be a U.S. Senator from Texas as the Democratic nominee.
He is getting a great amount of press across the nation not just because his democratic constituency thinks he has a chance to overturn a Republican Senate seat, but most of the press is about how he is representing, or should I say misrepresenting, the Christian faith to his fellow Texans in stunning ways.
James Talarico is a smooth and compelling communicator, so believers especially need to be alert to what he is saying about Christianity. Please note, James claims to follow Christ, earned one of his degrees, a Master of Divinity at Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary, and has preached from various pulpits in his circle of influence. Some of his views on Christianity are radically unbiblical, like believing abortion is permissible, affirmation and inclusion of LGBTQ beliefs, that God is "non-binary" and cannot be described by human gender language, and that other religions can teach Christians important truths among other misrepresentations.
I heard about a Pastor Jeff Mullen from Nevada who wrote an excellent open letter to James Talarico to challenge his unbiblical viewpoints that can confuse and certainly misrepresent the truth about Jesus Christ and the faith He has called us to believe and embrace.
Here is the open letter:
My name is Jeff Mullen. As a pastor who spent thirty years shepherding God's people, I have learned that what we believe about God shapes everything else. That is why I am writing this letter.
I do not write as a political opponent, but as a fellow citizen concerned about the growing confusion surrounding faith, truth, and Scripture. Because you frequently speak about Christianity, quote the Bible, and present your views as expressions of Christian conviction, I believe those claims deserve to be examined in light of God's Word.
One of my greatest concerns is that many people know you are currently pursuing a Master of Divinity degree at Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary while serving as a Texas State Representative and working toward ordination in the Presbyterian Church. As a result, many people understandably assume that your theological conclusions represent historic biblical Christianity. Your words, therefore, carry weight far beyond politics.
When theological claims are presented in the name of Christ, people naturally assume they are hearing biblical truth. My concern is that some of the positions you advocate may lead sincere people away from the clear teaching of Scripture and toward a version of Christianity that reflects the spirit of the age more than the Word of God.
Over thirty years of ministry, I have sat beside hospital beds, preached funerals, counseled struggling families, and watched countless people wrestle with questions of faith. One lesson stands above the rest: when we drift from Scripture, confusion always follows.
James warns that those who teach will be judged more strictly (James 3:1). That reality has humbled me throughout my ministry, and it should humble anyone who publicly speaks in the name of Christ.
For that reason, I offer these thoughts—not as an attack, but as a pastoral appeal for biblical clarity and faithfulness.
Concerning Your Statement That God Is Non-Binary: God is spirit and transcends human limitations. Christians agree on that. The question, however, is not how modern culture categorizes God but how God has chosen to reveal Himself. Throughout Scripture, God consistently reveals Himself as Father. Jesus taught His disciples to pray, "Our Father in heaven" (Matthew 6:9). Christ is the Son, and the Church is His Bride. These are not accidental descriptions but part of God's self-revelation. Every generation faces the temptation to reshape God according to its own values. Ancient cultures carved idols from stone. Modern cultures often carve them from ideology. Faithful Christianity begins by allowing God to define Himself rather than redefining Him according to cultural preferences. We do not improve upon divine revelation; we submit to it.
Concerning Your Statement That Other Religions Are Circling the Same Truth: Respect for people of different faiths is a Christian virtue. Surrendering truth is not. The suggestion that multiple religions ultimately lead to the same God stands in direct conflict with the words of Jesus Himself. Jesus declared, "I am the way, and the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me" (John 14:6). Peter echoed that truth when he proclaimed, "There is salvation in no one else" (Acts 4:12). Christianity does not teach that all roads lead to God. It teaches that God has provided one Savior for the world. We can love our neighbors of every faith while remaining faithful to the exclusive claims of Christ.
Concerning Your Statement That the Bible Is Silent on Abortion: While Scripture does not use the modern term abortion, it speaks clearly about life in the womb. David wrote, "You knit me together in my mother's womb" (Psalm 139:13). God told Jeremiah, "Before I formed you in the womb I knew you" (Jeremiah 1:5). John the Baptist responded to Christ while still in his mother's womb (Luke 1:41). The consistent testimony of Scripture is that unborn children are known by God, created by God, and valued by God. The question is not whether the word abortion appears in the Bible. The question is whether the child in the womb is a human life bearing God's image. Scripture answers that question repeatedly and clearly. Christians have historically defended the unborn not because of politics, but because every human life belongs to God.
Concerning Your Use of Mary's Consent to Defend Abortion Rights: Mary's response to Gabriel was not an assertion of autonomy but an expression of surrender. When told of God's plan, she replied, "I am the servant of the Lord; let it be to me according to your word" (Luke 1:38). The entire story of the incarnation celebrates the acceptance and protection of life within the womb. God Himself entered humanity through the womb of a woman. Mary's example is not about the right to end life but the willingness to trust God with it. To use the incarnation as support for abortion requires reversing the very message the story proclaims.
Concerning Your Statement That Jesus Was a Radical Feminist: Jesus elevated the dignity of women in ways that challenged the culture of His day. He taught women, ministered to women, welcomed them among His followers, and entrusted women with proclaiming His resurrection. Yet calling Jesus a radical feminist places a modern political label on One who transcends every political movement. Jesus did not come to advance an ideology; He came to save sinners and establish the Kingdom of God. Every political movement must ultimately be measured against Christ—not Christ against a political movement.
Concerning Your Statements About Biological Sex: Conversations about sex and gender involve real people and often deep personal struggles. Christians should approach them with compassion and humility. Yet compassion cannot require the abandonment of truth. Scripture teaches that humanity was intentionally created as male and female. Genesis declares, "Male and female He created them" (Genesis 1:27), and Jesus reaffirmed that truth (Matthew 19:4). The Christian understanding of sex is rooted not in cultural tradition but in God's design. Our identity is not ultimately discovered through self-definition but through submission to the One who created us. God's design is not restrictive; it is wise and good.
Concerning Your Support for Same-Sex Marriage and the Reinterpretation of Biblical Sexual Ethics: Few issues create more tension in modern Christianity than sexuality and marriage. The temptation is either to compromise truth in the name of love or abandon love in the name of truth. Scripture calls us to neither. From Genesis to Revelation, marriage is presented as a covenant between one man and one woman. Jesus affirmed this design when He quoted Genesis and declared that the two become one flesh (Matthew 19:4-6). The New Testament consistently teaches that sexual intimacy belongs within that covenant. These teachings are not expressions of fear or hostility. They are expressions of God's design for human flourishing. The call of discipleship is not the affirmation of every desire but the surrender of every area of life to the Lordship of Christ.
Concerning the Danger of Reshaping Christianity to Fit Culture: The deeper concern behind these issues is the temptation to reshape Christianity so it aligns more comfortably with the values of the age. The Church has faced this pressure for two thousand years. The source changes; the temptation remains the same. Paul warned Timothy that a time would come when people would seek teachers who tell them what they want to hear rather than what God has said (2 Timothy 4:3-4). The role of Christian leaders is not to make Scripture acceptable to the culture. It is to faithfully proclaim Scripture, whether the culture applauds or rejects it. During my years in ministry, I learned that God does not call pastors to make Scripture popular. He calls us to make it plain. When culture becomes the lens through which we interpret Scripture, truth is eventually replaced by preference. The question for every generation is not whether the Bible aligns with the culture, but whether we are willing to align ourselves with the Bible.
The Biblical Responsibility of Leaders
Representative Talarico,
Politics is temporary. Elections are temporary. Legislative victories are temporary. Souls are not. Scripture teaches that those who influence others bear a greater responsibility before God. James warns that teachers will be judged more strictly. Jesus warns against leading others astray. These truths should humble every pastor, teacher, author, influencer, and public servant who speaks in God's name. They certainly humble me. For thirty years, I stood behind a pulpit knowing that one day I would answer to God for every sermon I preached and every truth I taught. The same is true for anyone who publicly speaks about faith and Scripture. The older I get, the less interested I am in winning arguments and the more concerned I am about whether people know the truth.
My concern is not your political party. My concern is whether the Jesus being presented to the public is the Jesus revealed in Scripture or a version reshaped by the spirit of the age. America does not need progressive Christianity or conservative Christianity. America needs biblical Christianity—faithful to God's Word, centered on Christ, and unafraid to proclaim truth in love.
My prayer for you is the same prayer I pray for myself: that every belief, every ambition, and every public statement would be brought under the authority of Scripture. Because one day neither of us will stand before voters, political parties, commentators, or public opinion.
We will stand before God and give an account.
Respectfully,
Jeff Mullen
Pastor Emeritus
Follower of Jesus Christ
Foundational Faith Statement #36: How does the Holy Spirit help us? The Holy Spirit convicts us of our sin, regenerates us, unites us, strengthens us, guides us, empowers us, fills us, grants us spiritual gifts, and enables us to bear fruit, obey the Lord, pray, and understand God’s Word (John 16:8–11; Eph. 3:16; 5:18; Acts 1:8; 1 Cor. 12:11; Rom. 8:26–27).

