I hope you will read this by D.L. Adams. I find little fault with this article and look fowrad to part 2 tomorrow. That this country has lost its way is quite obvious to all except those on the left who detest what our country was built upon and how; a Judeo-Christian foundation, strong morals and ethics. We have really fallen off the train. I will limit my commentary and let you get on with reading this excellent article. From Big Peace.
Understanding Liberal Disillusionment – Part 1
By D.L. Adams
The idea that Judeo-Christian religious morality is the basis of a just society is a foundational concept in the creation of the United States. This once pervasive concept has now fallen from favor within certain loud segments of society regardless of the high esteem in which it was held by the universality of our Founders. Rejection of the religion-based worldview of the Founders is the core around which liberal anger is constructed.
Where matters of morality, religion, history, and ethics are concerned in the United States today, there is now no “middle.” Among people of good will and reasonable intellect there is a fundamental disagreement not about the nature of morality and ethics, but rather about their value and provenance. One side defends the importance of morality and its origins in religion; the other takes an evangelical, rejectionist position.
Our Founders credited the future success of the United States on God’s guidance, adherence to Judeo-Christian religion, and to Christian religion-based morality. The historical record of our foundational documents and the private papers of our Revolutionary leaders show this to be true.
It is religion and morality alone which can establish the principles upon which freedom can securely stand. The only foundation of a free constitution is pure virtue.
And
[W]e have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and religion. . . . Our constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other. (source)
John Adams’ cousin, Samuel Adams, patriot and signer of the Declaration of Independence, founding member of the Committees of Correspondence, and one of the leading independence agitators responsible for the radicalization of the Massachusetts Colony against British rule went much further.
For Samuel Adams the Revolution was not only about “independency” – he had even loftier goals. Adams hoped for the return of Puritanism and the creation of a nation founded on Christian principles.
In Sam Adams’s eyes, the American Revolution was to do far more than establish an independent state; it was to purify society, revolutionize manners and morals, and pave the way for another Puritan age.
(Miller, Sam Adams, pp. 359-360; as quoted in John Eidmore, Christianity and the Constitution: The Faith of Our Founding Fathers, p. 255.)
There are few now who know much of Samuel Adams but what they see on a beer label.
There are fewer still who would suggest that the return of Puritanism is now a desirable outcome.
Far fewer suggest (as many Progressives do) that religion, and a desire to fulfill/implement God’s concept of justice and goodness on earth (as they were understood by the Founders and their generation and delineated in Jewish and Christian doctrine), were not fundamental to those who created the United States. Such an overtly inaccurate position surpasses simple denial, though without the usual blather of convolutions and bloviating – it’s merely a lie.
While this revisionist position is difficult to defend – mainly because it is false – there are many who promulgate this counter-historical view.
Even Jefferson, the noted populist and “Deist”, credited God for the wisdom that guided the Founders during the American Revolution. Jefferson concluded his first inaugural address with the following request to the American people and to God.
Relying then on the patronage of your good will (ed. the people), I advance with obedience to the work, ready to retire from it whenever you become sensible how much better choices it is in your power to make: and may that infinite power which rules the destinies of the universe, lead our councils to what is best, & give them a favorable issue for your peace and prosperity. (Thomas Jefferson, First Inaugural Address, 1801)
Jefferson concluded his second inaugural address with similar themes:
shall need, too, the favor of that Being in whose hands we are, who led our forefathers, as Israel of old, from their native land, and planted them in a country flowing with all the necessaries and comforts of life; who has covered our infancy with his providence, and our riper years with his wisdom and power; and to whose goodness I ask you to join with me in supplications, that he will so enlighten the minds of your servants, guide their councils, and prosper their measures, that whatsoever they do, shall result in your good, and shall secure to you the peace, friendship, and approbation of all nations. (Thomas Jefferson, Second Inaugural Address, March 5, 1805)
A cursory review of the lives of the Founders, their public utterances, and personal and private papers shows a deep link between them, their belief in God and the divine source of morality and its derivation from Judeo-Christian religious principles, doctrine, and tradition. Few public officials today outside of the religious sphere (almost all on the right) discuss morality, its roots in religion, and the importance of Christian and Jewish thought to the foundations of the country. When they do speak in public of such things, they are excoriated for doing so by those on the Progressive Left and also by many others who ought to know better.
A case in point is the vitriol directed at former Governor Sarah Palin and Delaware Senate candidate Christine O’Donnell. Both are conservative politicians who speak about morality and link Bible-based morality with public policy.
The rejection of morality in politics by the American Left is nothing less than an ongoing denial of the religious origins of our country and our national character. Many on the Progressive Left have embraced a post-modernist worldview.
Post-modernism posits a radical equivalence that views all religions and all cultures as equal. This concept of radical equivalence is also the foundation of multiculturalism. The deconstruction then of the Founders’ faith, its importance in the development of the country and of its continued value is necessary to support post-modernism and multiculturalism’s worldview and utopian goals.
A central problem to the advancement of the post-modernist view is the origin of American law and morality in Judeo-Christian religion, and our understanding of the central dichotomies around which such laws are built: good/evil, right/wrong, just/unjust, etc. The rejection of the morality of the Founders and the support today for Islam (our Founders did not at all support it ) among American leftists is illustrative.
Islam does not view these essential dichotomies upon which our laws are based in the same way that Americans do. Regardless, the Left views Islam as a fellow-traveler in the deconstruction of American institutions and has therefore allied itself with Islam and Islamists.
The same approach was taken by Iranian leftists prior to the 1979 Islamist Revolution. After the Shah was overthrown leftists there unpleasantly discovered that their views were not at all compatible with totalitarian Islam.
It is difficult to comprehend the cooperative relationship between far left (American Progressives) and extremist totalitarian forces (Islamists) especially when history shows that such relationships can only be temporary. Alliances of convenience between political opposites are usually short-lived and end …poorly. The Iranian leftists learned this lesson. American Progressives seem determined to repeat this costly mistake. (Please see Persepolis.)
Original article is here
Showing posts with label Founding Fathers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Founding Fathers. Show all posts
Understanding Liberal Disillusionment – Part 1
Posted by
PatriotUSA
at
12:02 AM
Labels:
Constitution,
Coptic Christianity,
Foundations of the USA,
Founding Fathers,
Fraleft subversion in the USA,
Judaism,
Obam and the far left,
Progressives and socialism
Samuel Adams 1781 Your vote. Patriot Post
Something so simple as a vote, is so powerful. The founding fathers knew it. A right and priviledge taken for granted in today's America. The proof of that is what we have in Congreess and worse yet, The White House.
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
"Let each citizen remember at the moment he is offering his vote that he is not making a present or a compliment to please an individual — or at least that he ought not so to do; but that he is executing one of the most solemn trusts in human society for which he is accountable to God and his country."
—Samuel Adams, in the Boston Gazette, 1781
Patriot Post
http://patriotpost.us/quote/2010/02/15/
_____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Samuel Adams
"Let each citizen remember at the moment he is offering his vote that he is not making a present or a compliment to please an individual — or at least that he ought not so to do; but that he is executing one of the most solemn trusts in human society for which he is accountable to God and his country."
—Samuel Adams, in the Boston Gazette, 1781
Patriot Post
http://patriotpost.us/quote/2010/02/15/
MSM starts caving in to Obama,again. When have they ever stopped?
Posted by
PatriotUSA
at
9:49 PM
Labels:
Founding Fathers,
Islamic Subversion in America.,
Khalid Sheihk Mohammed,
Obama,
Osama bin Laden,
September 11,
Shameful deals with Islam.
Put Osama bin Laden on trial - CNN.com
From Communist Network News or
Confused News Network
The capitulation to the
administration's plans to
try terrorists here on U.S.
soil has begun. Who better
than CNN to lead the way for
'dear leader'? PMSNBC would be
the other network to start spinning
the virtues of such tripe and
stupidity. One of the most idiotic
things an American president has ever
done. Leave it to the mullah
Obamaham to continue to re-define
stupidity for U.S. presidents.
http://www.cnn.com/2009/OPINION/11/13/cruickshank.osama.bin.laden.trial/
From Communist Network News or
Confused News Network
The capitulation to the
administration's plans to
try terrorists here on U.S.
soil has begun. Who better
than CNN to lead the way for
'dear leader'? PMSNBC would be
the other network to start spinning
the virtues of such tripe and
stupidity. One of the most idiotic
things an American president has ever
done. Leave it to the mullah
Obamaham to continue to re-define
stupidity for U.S. presidents.
These men knew better.
Voice in the Wilderness: Mere Conservatism- Theology
Posted by
PatriotUSA
at
1:06 AM
Labels:
Constitution,
Dutch Freedom Party,
Founding Fathers,
Theology
A Voice in the Wilderness is a true gem. Mr.Moeller
has eleoquently tied in theology with the Constitution,
Founding Fathers and the Bill of Rights. There is a move to
disconnect these unique, forthright and freedom protecting
documents from our current history. The Founding Fathers
knew what they were doing. They knew NO document was
going to ever be perfect, man is not perfect, nor can what
man does, ever be perfect. That said, The Consitution brought
in our founding theologoy, the discussion of God, not religion
and guaranteed FREEDOM FOR ALL. All religions and ideologies.
These men knew that our Judeo-Christian heritage was instrumental
back then and they knew it would be the same in the future. They
warned against extremeism from either side, right or left. For with
extremeism comes polarization. That is what we have today. Are
we ashamed of our freedom, liberty and that a creator is what gave us
these freedoms? It seems so today as our leaders trot about the globe
apologizing for our past history and how this country was built.
It was not built on diversity and multiculturalism but again,
FREEDOM FOR ALL. The founding fathers had the right building blocks
for our foundation. There is a place to agree on, to strike an accord
between the extremes that truly threaten to tear this country apart.
Enjoy RJ Moeller as he is a true believer in our freedom and how the
Constitution has worked to ensure that Freedom for all for over 220 years.
Mere Conservatism-Theology
by: R.J. Moeller
(Note: If you haven't read the Mere Conservatism Intro yet, take a minute and familiarize yourself with what we're trying to accomplish with this series of essays.)
Theology, history, and economics are the three prisms through which my conservative view of the world can be most clearly seen and understood. Obviously these are three broad categories to draw upon, but stick around for each of the next three weeks as I will be narrowing down what it is I mean by each of these loaded terms.
I completely appreciate that for many Americans the word “theology” is perhaps scary, confusing, misunderstood, or meaningless. It’s okay to admit that, even if you consider yourself a spiritual person.
Theology is simply the study, or understanding, of God.
Every person has a theology, even atheists. They make the bold claim that there is certainly no God. Keep in mind that we are leagues away in this intellectual journey from making declarations as to which God is the true Higher Power. I’m merely attempting to help define theology, and then explain the type of theology that I believe usually leads to a conservative outlook on life. If you consider yourself liberal (or anything else) and find that you agree with my sentiments today, then perhaps we aren't as far apart as our partisan prejudices would have us believe.
The presupposition of my definition for theology is that one has already actually thought about God, about a Higher Power. Looking back on our lives, it is nearly impossible to separate the question of God from our own experiences of asking the “Why am I here?” and “What is my purpose?” questions that rightly plague us all. You can brush these questions off for much or all of your life, but the intellectually honest person is confronted with them and eventually says, “Results be damned: I’m getting to the bottom of life’s meaning and God’s existence.”
On a side note: If you have never reached this point of candid self-reflection in your life, I do not intend to debate the existence of God here and now, but we cannot avoid Him in a discussion of America, let alone American conservatism.
As we continue our discussion about theology, add on to the layers of existential soul-searching I just mentioned the practical, daily implications of those eternal questions. For example, issues such as abortion, murder, capital punishment, and war carry with them critically important moral conundrums that no responsible citizen should ignore. Underlying all of this, in the context of a free society like our own, is the question of “rights.”
Here is where I believe the theology of an American matters. Don’t confuse theology with “religion.” You belong to a religion, but you believe in a particular theology.
The question before us, as fellow citizens of a republic, is the genesis of our rights.
Where do they come from? Does everyone have them? Can they be taken away? Should they ever be taken away? What can and/or should be done if they are taken away?
Thomas Jefferson, the author of the Declaration of Independence, believed in a Higher Power, but in one who created the world, wound it up like a watch, and then walked away to let things play out as they will. Jefferson believed that like a watch there were certain truths, what one might call Natural Laws, which governed the universe. He was what is known as a “deist.”
He was also a lawyer and a rationally thinking man.
The core of his reasoned defense for America’s right to be free from British tyranny was this: “All men are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights.” This is, in my opinion, the single most distinctive thing about America. The Jewish people of the Old Testament were the first to claim that mankind was made in God’s image. Jefferson, a deist no less, and our remarkable Founding Fathers took the logical next step and said “If God created us, then our rights come from Him, not a king.”
These "truths" were considered to be "self-evident"...as in, "You have to go out of your way to ignore or deny them."
How does one explain where rights come from without a Higher Power? How does one explain the history of this blessed nation without coming in to contact with a Higher Power?
If it is not God, then our rights are in my opinion arbitrary and illusionary. If our rights do not come from someone or something higher than ourselves, namely a Creator, then we are entirely dependent on the whims of the State.
You don’t have to worship on Sunday morning at Sarah Palin’s church or profess belief in a Six-Day Creation to acknowledge the importance of this point. You don’t have to (and shouldn’t) be the type of person who calls America the “Second Israel” to appreciate the uniqueness of this country’s fundamental claims about life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
The irrefutable genius of our Founders was this: led by their undeniable Judeo-Christian theological influences and values, they conceived a way to ground our national system in theology without forcing people to be religious. You can believe whatever it is you want about God, Jesus, Buddha or the Hale-Bopp Comet. Just remember that this freedom comes from the worldview of our Founders that recognized that our Creator affords each of us a similar freedom while on this earth to accept or reject Him. The system He set up isn’t dependent upon our liking it, but merely accepting it.
The Founding Fathers were saying. “Go ahead and pray (or not pray) to God in any way you see fit – but we believe in a Higher Power and the only possible chance for sustained freedom and liberty we can see is a nation where everyone, especially those who are lent power to lead, is held to a higher standard.”
And from this a second, and for now, final, theological conclusion can be drawn: mankind is messed up. We are “fallen,” the God-fearing man or woman might say. This should be the most obvious theological point in the world. No one disputes that the world has problems. Our neighbors have problems. We have problems. Things aren’t as they should be a lot of the time.
As G.K. Chesterton (pictured right) phrased it in Orthodoxy, "Certain new theologians dispute original sin, which is the only part of Judeo-Christian theology which can really be proved."
Many secular-progressives excitedly say that while the Declaration of Independence may contain some “quasi-religious rhetoric,” that the real test is the Constitution and its alleged lack of “God language.” Argument won, right?
Well, first of all, there shouldn’t be any argument about the historical fact that the men who put together the framework for our republican democracy, who wrote the Bill of Rights, who signed the Declaration, who led the colonial troops in to battle were predominantly and overwhelmingly religious, theological dudes. This is simply the historical narrative of the country we all happen to live in.
No one wants a theocracy, but to write the Judeo-Christian heritage out of our nation’s history is preposterous and should not be taken seriously. For better or worse, this is who we are.
But more importantly, I contend that the Constitution is implicit in its theology. The very first thing our Framers wrote down was the concept of freedom of religion. Want to take a guess what (or Who) was on their minds when they wrote that? Certainly they were wanting to protect against a State-run church, the kind they had (have) back in Europe, but the reality of a Creator loomed in the words and on the pages of nearly everything these visionary men spoke and wrote.
Was anyone expecting James Madison and the boys, to prove how much they believe in a Higher Power, would have to have thrown in an “Oh by the way, God rules and someday secular atheists like Chrisopher Hitchens will drool,” shout-out in the first ten amendments? If they had included a specific “Jesus is my Homeboy clause” in the Bill of Rights it would have flown in the face of the liberty-based sentiments from the Declaration that was their case to the world as to why they deserved to be free.
Just because haters on the secular Left and zealots on the religious right don’t seem to comprehend these subtle, yet profound, truths about the Founders intentions doesn’t mean we all miss them.
The Constitution is also inherently theological regarding my second point from before: the fallen state of mankind. The separation of powers would not be necessary in a world where enough hope, change, progress, and blaming Fox News for its “bias” could solve all social, political and moral ills. Of course we need protection from those who inevitably do wrong, and consequently we must have debates and votes regarding how much of our liberties we are willing to exchange for security.
Compromise is a reality of life. But so are sin and crime and murder and ponzi schemes and everything in between realities of life. The Founders believed things could be better, but never perfect.
They also believed that a significant contributor to ensuring things would be perennially worse was the centralization of power in the hands of a few “elites” who promised the rest of the population that they knew what was best.
From these two fundamental theological concepts - the existence of a Creator who grants us our rights and the natural depravity of man - a coherent, cohesive, and typically conservative worldview begins to form.
If you came to my church on Sunday or asked me over coffee to explain my religious faith in Jesus Christ, I’d be more than happy to share my life and my doctrinal beliefs regarding the God of the Old and New Testament. I could draw upon deeper biblical insights to explain why I believe Scripture and Christian teaching and tradition point people to a conservative worldview.
But in the public square, in the marketplace of ideas, in a free society that should welcome all points of view, and in an essay attempting to define the basic theological ideas pertinent to a conservative outlook on life, I only need the two I’ve already stated.
This is just the first stop on our intellectual journey, but it is a big one.
http://rjmoeller.com/2009/10/mere-conservatism-theology/
has eleoquently tied in theology with the Constitution,
Founding Fathers and the Bill of Rights. There is a move to
disconnect these unique, forthright and freedom protecting
documents from our current history. The Founding Fathers
knew what they were doing. They knew NO document was
going to ever be perfect, man is not perfect, nor can what
man does, ever be perfect. That said, The Consitution brought
in our founding theologoy, the discussion of God, not religion
and guaranteed FREEDOM FOR ALL. All religions and ideologies.
These men knew that our Judeo-Christian heritage was instrumental
back then and they knew it would be the same in the future. They
warned against extremeism from either side, right or left. For with
extremeism comes polarization. That is what we have today. Are
we ashamed of our freedom, liberty and that a creator is what gave us
these freedoms? It seems so today as our leaders trot about the globe
apologizing for our past history and how this country was built.
It was not built on diversity and multiculturalism but again,
FREEDOM FOR ALL. The founding fathers had the right building blocks
for our foundation. There is a place to agree on, to strike an accord
between the extremes that truly threaten to tear this country apart.
Enjoy RJ Moeller as he is a true believer in our freedom and how the
Constitution has worked to ensure that Freedom for all for over 220 years.
Mere Conservatism-Theology
by: R.J. Moeller
(Note: If you haven't read the Mere Conservatism Intro yet, take a minute and familiarize yourself with what we're trying to accomplish with this series of essays.)
Theology, history, and economics are the three prisms through which my conservative view of the world can be most clearly seen and understood. Obviously these are three broad categories to draw upon, but stick around for each of the next three weeks as I will be narrowing down what it is I mean by each of these loaded terms.
I completely appreciate that for many Americans the word “theology” is perhaps scary, confusing, misunderstood, or meaningless. It’s okay to admit that, even if you consider yourself a spiritual person.
Theology is simply the study, or understanding, of God.
Every person has a theology, even atheists. They make the bold claim that there is certainly no God. Keep in mind that we are leagues away in this intellectual journey from making declarations as to which God is the true Higher Power. I’m merely attempting to help define theology, and then explain the type of theology that I believe usually leads to a conservative outlook on life. If you consider yourself liberal (or anything else) and find that you agree with my sentiments today, then perhaps we aren't as far apart as our partisan prejudices would have us believe.
The presupposition of my definition for theology is that one has already actually thought about God, about a Higher Power. Looking back on our lives, it is nearly impossible to separate the question of God from our own experiences of asking the “Why am I here?” and “What is my purpose?” questions that rightly plague us all. You can brush these questions off for much or all of your life, but the intellectually honest person is confronted with them and eventually says, “Results be damned: I’m getting to the bottom of life’s meaning and God’s existence.”
On a side note: If you have never reached this point of candid self-reflection in your life, I do not intend to debate the existence of God here and now, but we cannot avoid Him in a discussion of America, let alone American conservatism.
As we continue our discussion about theology, add on to the layers of existential soul-searching I just mentioned the practical, daily implications of those eternal questions. For example, issues such as abortion, murder, capital punishment, and war carry with them critically important moral conundrums that no responsible citizen should ignore. Underlying all of this, in the context of a free society like our own, is the question of “rights.”
Here is where I believe the theology of an American matters. Don’t confuse theology with “religion.” You belong to a religion, but you believe in a particular theology.
The question before us, as fellow citizens of a republic, is the genesis of our rights.
Where do they come from? Does everyone have them? Can they be taken away? Should they ever be taken away? What can and/or should be done if they are taken away?
Thomas Jefferson, the author of the Declaration of Independence, believed in a Higher Power, but in one who created the world, wound it up like a watch, and then walked away to let things play out as they will. Jefferson believed that like a watch there were certain truths, what one might call Natural Laws, which governed the universe. He was what is known as a “deist.”
He was also a lawyer and a rationally thinking man.
The core of his reasoned defense for America’s right to be free from British tyranny was this: “All men are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights.” This is, in my opinion, the single most distinctive thing about America. The Jewish people of the Old Testament were the first to claim that mankind was made in God’s image. Jefferson, a deist no less, and our remarkable Founding Fathers took the logical next step and said “If God created us, then our rights come from Him, not a king.”
These "truths" were considered to be "self-evident"...as in, "You have to go out of your way to ignore or deny them."
How does one explain where rights come from without a Higher Power? How does one explain the history of this blessed nation without coming in to contact with a Higher Power?
If it is not God, then our rights are in my opinion arbitrary and illusionary. If our rights do not come from someone or something higher than ourselves, namely a Creator, then we are entirely dependent on the whims of the State.
You don’t have to worship on Sunday morning at Sarah Palin’s church or profess belief in a Six-Day Creation to acknowledge the importance of this point. You don’t have to (and shouldn’t) be the type of person who calls America the “Second Israel” to appreciate the uniqueness of this country’s fundamental claims about life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
The irrefutable genius of our Founders was this: led by their undeniable Judeo-Christian theological influences and values, they conceived a way to ground our national system in theology without forcing people to be religious. You can believe whatever it is you want about God, Jesus, Buddha or the Hale-Bopp Comet. Just remember that this freedom comes from the worldview of our Founders that recognized that our Creator affords each of us a similar freedom while on this earth to accept or reject Him. The system He set up isn’t dependent upon our liking it, but merely accepting it.
The Founding Fathers were saying. “Go ahead and pray (or not pray) to God in any way you see fit – but we believe in a Higher Power and the only possible chance for sustained freedom and liberty we can see is a nation where everyone, especially those who are lent power to lead, is held to a higher standard.”
And from this a second, and for now, final, theological conclusion can be drawn: mankind is messed up. We are “fallen,” the God-fearing man or woman might say. This should be the most obvious theological point in the world. No one disputes that the world has problems. Our neighbors have problems. We have problems. Things aren’t as they should be a lot of the time.
As G.K. Chesterton (pictured right) phrased it in Orthodoxy, "Certain new theologians dispute original sin, which is the only part of Judeo-Christian theology which can really be proved."
Many secular-progressives excitedly say that while the Declaration of Independence may contain some “quasi-religious rhetoric,” that the real test is the Constitution and its alleged lack of “God language.” Argument won, right?
Well, first of all, there shouldn’t be any argument about the historical fact that the men who put together the framework for our republican democracy, who wrote the Bill of Rights, who signed the Declaration, who led the colonial troops in to battle were predominantly and overwhelmingly religious, theological dudes. This is simply the historical narrative of the country we all happen to live in.
No one wants a theocracy, but to write the Judeo-Christian heritage out of our nation’s history is preposterous and should not be taken seriously. For better or worse, this is who we are.
But more importantly, I contend that the Constitution is implicit in its theology. The very first thing our Framers wrote down was the concept of freedom of religion. Want to take a guess what (or Who) was on their minds when they wrote that? Certainly they were wanting to protect against a State-run church, the kind they had (have) back in Europe, but the reality of a Creator loomed in the words and on the pages of nearly everything these visionary men spoke and wrote.
Was anyone expecting James Madison and the boys, to prove how much they believe in a Higher Power, would have to have thrown in an “Oh by the way, God rules and someday secular atheists like Chrisopher Hitchens will drool,” shout-out in the first ten amendments? If they had included a specific “Jesus is my Homeboy clause” in the Bill of Rights it would have flown in the face of the liberty-based sentiments from the Declaration that was their case to the world as to why they deserved to be free.
Just because haters on the secular Left and zealots on the religious right don’t seem to comprehend these subtle, yet profound, truths about the Founders intentions doesn’t mean we all miss them.
The Constitution is also inherently theological regarding my second point from before: the fallen state of mankind. The separation of powers would not be necessary in a world where enough hope, change, progress, and blaming Fox News for its “bias” could solve all social, political and moral ills. Of course we need protection from those who inevitably do wrong, and consequently we must have debates and votes regarding how much of our liberties we are willing to exchange for security.
Compromise is a reality of life. But so are sin and crime and murder and ponzi schemes and everything in between realities of life. The Founders believed things could be better, but never perfect.
They also believed that a significant contributor to ensuring things would be perennially worse was the centralization of power in the hands of a few “elites” who promised the rest of the population that they knew what was best.
From these two fundamental theological concepts - the existence of a Creator who grants us our rights and the natural depravity of man - a coherent, cohesive, and typically conservative worldview begins to form.
If you came to my church on Sunday or asked me over coffee to explain my religious faith in Jesus Christ, I’d be more than happy to share my life and my doctrinal beliefs regarding the God of the Old and New Testament. I could draw upon deeper biblical insights to explain why I believe Scripture and Christian teaching and tradition point people to a conservative worldview.
But in the public square, in the marketplace of ideas, in a free society that should welcome all points of view, and in an essay attempting to define the basic theological ideas pertinent to a conservative outlook on life, I only need the two I’ve already stated.
This is just the first stop on our intellectual journey, but it is a big one.
http://rjmoeller.com/2009/10/mere-conservatism-theology/
Founders Quote Daily for Thursday, October 8th, 2009 The Patriot Post
Founder's Quote Daily for Thursday, October 8th, 2009? The Patriot Post
"[W]here there is no law, there is no liberty; and nothing deserves the name
of law but that which is certain and universal in its operation upon all the
members of the community."
—Benjamin Rush, letter to David Ramsay, 1788
The Patriot Post has completely revamped it's website!!
This is an awesome website with new technology!!
I will try to remember to post the Founder's Daily Quote
here on PC
Shared via AddThis
"[W]here there is no law, there is no liberty; and nothing deserves the name
of law but that which is certain and universal in its operation upon all the
members of the community."
—Benjamin Rush, letter to David Ramsay, 1788
The Patriot Post has completely revamped it's website!!
This is an awesome website with new technology!!
I will try to remember to post the Founder's Daily Quote
here on PC
Shared via AddThis
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