When I got into politics professionally more than 20 years ago, I learned one thing pretty quickly. The worst people in the business to trust were the ones who talked a lot about being Christians and talked about being on a mission from God to change the world by getting elected.
Those were the people most likely to try to cheat me. They were the ones most likely to cut corners and justify their “little” dishonesties with the justification that they were trying to do God’s will. As a Christian, that sickened me. I learned that I could trust most of the rest of the folks in the business. If they had been around for awhile — even if you knew they were liars and thieves — you knew there was an “honor among thieves” that you could mostly count on.
Politicians such as Rick Santorum scare me. It’s partly because of his cavalier willingness to use government force to impose his judgment on other people while spouting rhetoric about liberty. But even more than that, it scares me that he seems to believe he’s on a mission from God.
In a speech four years ago at a Catholic university in Florida, Santorum laid out his view of the world. In his version, the United States is on God’s side. The parts of the world that oppose this country are evil. He seems to have missed the point that when God sees a sinful and fallen world, that includes us, too. Instead, he sees a holy and righteous United States — led by the U.S. government, of course — on God’s side. He said:

I haven’t learned to stop walking on eggshells around angry people
Cambodia prison photos remind me of man’s inhumanity to man
Identity politics is the cancer behind Elizabeth Warren’s lie about ancestry
Why do so many of us stay where we know we’ll remain miserable?
Evil and idiocy stripping away veneer of western civilization
Search for sexual pleasure can slowly destroy genuine intimacy
Our methods of selling politicians seem designed for mental defectives
Can we find ways to separate love of home from worship of government?