The RenewaNation Review 2015 Volume 7 Issue 1 | Page 32

AN ENEMY OF THE STATE Can a Christian run a business without violating his faith? The government says no. Y OU WOULD THINK A FAMILY that’s spent a half- century making drawers and cabinets would know a little something about compartmentalizing. That is, after all, why people buy and install drawers and cabinets— so that they can tuck away things they’re not using … store them out of mind and out of sight.   The Hahns understand that. They make their living care- fully crafting oak and cherry, maple and pine creations so simple and beautiful that whatever may be stored within becomes almost an afterthought.   They’re good enough at it that their business has grown, in 50 years, from a two-man operation to more than a thousand employees. Among their customers, they have a reputation for excellence. Within their community, they’re respected for their generosity. Their employees speak of the family’s kindness and compassion.   The Hahns themselves speak little of any of these things; privacy is as fundamental to their character as faith is to their beliefs. But they are not ashamed of their convictions, or of how those convictions shape their daily life and work and environment. Their beliefs are personal, but they are not hidden away. 32 By Chris Potts   In houses and offices, drawers and cabinets have their place. People like the Hahns, though, have no compartments in their hearts. They believe that if a man truly holds to his convictions, he must honor them as faithfully on the floor of his factory as he does at his own breakfast table.   But now the Hahns have come face-to-face with the hard reality that people who don’t share their religious beliefs— and even some who do—look on faith like the things in their cabinets … as something to be tucked away, out of mind, and out of sight.   It’s a view the federal government is now compelling the Hahns to share. But for people who have built their business as much on deep-seated belief as on finely crafted wood … the government’s demands go hard against the grain.   It is perhaps both easier, and harder, for the Hahns to understand what is happening in American legal culture today than it is for people of other faith backgrounds and persuasions, in other parts of the country.   As Mennonites, they represent a 500-year-old history of struggling for the right to live out their beliefs. “Struggling”— not “fighting.” The Mennonites have always cherished peace, shunned war, and responded to the various political and