Ideas

Secular complacence replays ancient script

By Dave Petteys (dpetteys@comcast.net) At a recent cocktail party I talked to a person who believed that secularism was “mankind outgrowing religion: getting beyond it.” He also implied that this was a good thing, in that “religion was the cause of wars." But is this the correct perspective? Or is our generation merely a disobedient one that is “doing evil in the sight of the Lord”? Certainly Old Testament Scripture is filled with the sad litany of disobedient generations that went on for much longer than our brief 200 years.

King Josiah in 2 Kings was an example of a “faithful” generation. But even his piety was not enough to save Judah, “because of all the provocations with which Manasseh (Josiah’s grandfather) had provoked him”, (2 Kings 23:26). The strongest provocation was Manasseh’s sacrificing children to Moloch. But is our practice of “lifestyle abortion” anything less egregious? King Manasseh sacrificed probably tens of thousands: we have sacrificed tens of millions! Do we really believe there will be no accountability?

Western Civilization faces a renewed struggle with Islam, a continuation of a 1000 year religious war that’s gone on since the year 634. But the secularists believe that since they profess no faith the struggle doesn’t apply to them. In the eyes of the secularists, a religious war is archaic and too absurd for words in the 21st Century. Not only do the secularists refuse to recognize the danger, they also actively oppose measures for our defense, placing us in grave jeopardy. The secularists concentrate instead on pushing a warped sense of "civil rights," such as homosexual scout masters, and severing our society from its Judeo-Christian heritage.

The prophet Isaiah had the same trouble with a smug and self-satisfied Jerusalem just prior to its destruction in 587 BC. They believed that with God in their Temple they were invulnerable. Isaiah found the people would "Keep listening but do not comprehend: keep looking, but do not understand" (Isaiah 6:9).

Do we not hear the same talk of our “invulnerability” and the same complacence? Will our fate be any different from Jerusalem’s?

Manger lacked inaugural pomp

By Krista Kafer (krista555@msn.com) “Ritter’s inaugural week jampacked” the Rocky Mountain News’ headline exclaimed a few days ago. The week for Gov.-elect Bill Ritter is to begin on the 9th of January with the swearing-in ceremony. Two days later, the new governor will be honored at an inaugural dinner followed by a concert featuring his favorite country music star. Next the governor will be whisked away on a train tour of the Front Range ending in Pueblo where a spaghetti dinner awaits him at the Pueblo Union Depot. The inaugural committee is busy sending invitations to dignitaries, Members of Congress, other elected officials, and civic leaders. The cost of the events is expected to top out at $750,000.

What if the plans were different? Imagine if instead of Denver and the Front Range, the new leader chose to go to La Junta on the plains. Rather than invite prominent officials, civic leaders, campaign funders, and other distinguished individuals, he invited the night cleaning crew from the nearby Wal-Mart and some unknowns from out of the country. And what if instead of surrounding himself with flashing cameras and cheering supporters, he chose a bunch of pack animals. Then rather than take the stage as a man in his prime attired in a suit and tie, he entered as a tiny infant swaddled in scraps of cloth.

Why would he do that? Leaders announce their arrival with power and grandeur not weakness and austerity. Yet, 2000 years ago, when God came down to walk among men He chose the company of beasts of burden, the working poor, and foreigners – those outside the circle of power. What does that say about this ultimate leader of men, Jesus of Nazareth, that he chose them to be his honored guests?

I am reminded of a passage in the Old Testament where the prophet Elijah weary and despondent listens for God’s message.

“Then a great and powerful wind tore the mountains apart and shattered the rocks before the LORD, but the LORD was not in the wind. After the wind there was an earthquake, but the LORD was not in the earthquake. After the earthquake came a fire, but the LORD was not in the fire. And after the fire came a gentle whisper.” 1Kings 11-13

In the whisper Elijah heard God.

An image stirs in my mind rough-hewn and earthy, a hard contrast with the glitz of inaugural events I’ve attended. I am listening to the hooves of donkeys scraping at the hay, the praises of shepherds huddled in the doorway, and the cries of an infant in the arms of a new mother. Here God’s message begins in a whisper audible among common sounds.

Like Elijah, I am weary and the message resonates in a deep place. It is a comfort to me that while I expect to find God in the great and triumphant, He often prefers to speak in humble places. Outside of the circle of power, among animals, the poor, and foreigners, He entered his kingdom. He is truly with us.

Merry Christmas.

The House of Christmas

By G. K. Chesterton There fared a mother driven forth Out of an inn to roam; In the place where she was homeless All men are at home. The crazy stable close at hand, With shaking timber and shifting sand, Grew a stronger thing to abide and stand Than the square stones of Rome.

For men are homesick in their homes, And strangers under the sun, And they lay on their heads in a foreign land Whenever the day is done. Here we have battle and blazing eyes, And chance and honour and high surprise, But our homes are under miraculous skies Where the yule tale was begun.

A Child in a foul stable, Where the beasts feed and foam; Only where He was homeless Are you and I at home; We have hands that fashion and heads that know, But our hearts we lost - how long ago! In a place no chart nor ship can show Under the sky's dome.

This world is wild as an old wives' tale, And strange the plain things are, The earth is enough and the air is enough For our wonder and our war; But our rest is as far as the fire-drake swings And our peace is put in impossible things Where clashed and thundered unthinkable wings Round an incredible star.

To an open house in the evening Home shall men come, To an older place than Eden And a taller town than Rome. To the end of the way of the wandering star, To the things that cannot be and that are, To the place where God was homeless And all men are at home.

The death-wish of secularism

By Dave Petteys (dpetteys@comcast.net) A recent article in the London Times discusses how British schools will now no longer teach right from wrong. Initially, teaching moral values was considered the province of the family. But in an age of latch-key kids and two-earner households, schools have assumed the role. They teach secular moral relativism and moral equivalency as THE only philosophy of life that has merit, ridiculing traditional Christian values.

Recently, two American soldiers were kidnapped and beheaded without a peep from the media. The rhetorical question: “Where was the outrage, considering the fuss at Abu Ghraib?” The answer is more than the media’s agenda to undermine the Administration’s efforts in the Middle East. It also has to do with this moral relativist vacuum.

There is a massive assault on Western Civilization by Islam. The news is greeted with a yawn and a “whatever!” The last two generations of Americans have been taught by the Left that our unique gift of liberty and prosperity is to be taken for granted and that it is no better than any other society. Barbarous depredations by Islamists are greeted with moral equivalency: “well, we did the same thing to them 500 years ago, so you can’t blame them!” The current greatest virtue is “tolerance and understanding”, not exactly an overriding principle that inspires people to give their lives. Images of violence make little impression on a generation weaned on violent video games. One can always go “Game Over” and exit to the refrigerator.

On one side, we have the Islamists who would give the world the choice “convert or die!” On the other side are free men of faith that will fight! The secularists are caught in an unsustainable middle, not really understanding the problem, mistakenly believing they can opt out.

Some questions for the humanists

The age-old doctrine that "man is the measure of all things" takes contemporary form in the Humanist Manifesto, as neat a one-page summation as you will find anywhere of the belief that people are perfectible, the future is bright, and God is unnecessary. "Analysis by critical intelligence" is the touchstone of knowledge, according to the humanist worldview. Yet by this very standard, the manifesto itself proves to be groaning with questionable assumptions and assertions. Among them, listed in less than an hour the other day, as fast as I could type, were the following:

(References are to the 11 paragraphs of Humanist Manifesto III, online at www.AmericanHumanist.org)

1. Questions on Paragraph 1

a. How is “progressive” defined, and what is the evidence for its validity as a concept?

b. Why is supernaturalism excluded?

c. How is responsibility justified and enforced?

2. Questions on Paragraph 2

a. What are the specific antecedents in human thought from which humanism has “evolved through the ages”?

b. What values and ideals, if any, are not subject to change?

3. Questions on Paragraph 3

a. Is there anything we must believe?

4. Questions on Paragraph 4

a. Does science itself define the problems to be solved and the criterion for what is beneficial, and if not, how are these things determined?

b. What is the difference between science and critical intelligence?

5. Questions on Paragraph 5

a. Does the belief in unguided evolutionary change rest on evidence or faith?

b. How do you know that nature is self-existing and that our life is all there is?

c. By what empirical standard do you apprehend “things as they are”?

d. What do you mean by “the future”?

6. Questions on Paragraph 6

a. Do these contingent values exclude the notion of truth, or unchanging categories of right and wrong, good and evil?

b. Does concern for the global ecosystem imply animal rights?

c. Is the inherent worth and dignity of each person merely an arbitrary stipulation, and if not, where is it grounded?

7. Questions on Paragraph 7

a. How do you know life’s fulfillment does not emerge from selfishness?

b. What is so good about tragedies and death, and to that extent, why seek to avoid or resist either of them?

c. What warrant is there, and why, for private property and voluntary charity in times of want and times of plenty?

8. Questions on Paragraph 8

a. Does this mean you accept human nature as a given, something permanent, with all that this implies about relationships?

b. What causes cruelty, and how is it be eliminated?

c. In the world as it is now, what place is there for self-defense, punishment, and war?

d. Is your stance peace at any price, and if not, what price is too high?

e. By what process and authority is justice to be defined and enforced?

f. What evidence do you find in history that such a world as this is attainable?

9. Questions on Paragraph 9

a. How will you then treat someone who seeks happiness in the opposite direction?

b. What progressive cultures are those, and where do you place the United States and the United Nations in this context?

c. By what process and authority will this “just distribution” be effectuated?

d. Do you consider the problem of production and scarcity to be solved, leaving only distribution as consideration for policy?

e. Will the fruits of human effort be maximized through private property and free markets, or if not, how?

10. Questions on Paragraph 10

a. How do you define diversity, and why is it important?

b. How will you then treat someone of inhumane views – which are defined how?

c. What place is allowed for religious belief and practice in your secular society?

d. How are these civic and planetary duties to be enforced?

11. Questions on Paragraph 11

a. What obstacles do you acknowledge, internal or external to human beings, in the way of this progress?

b. How do you balance personal responsibility, as stated here, with the interdependence and global community mentioned above (Para. 8 & 9)?