Posted on 10/16/2008 8:51:41 AM PDT by Congressman Billybob
This is now the 15th year of my weekly column. Never have I used a Scriptural reference for these secular sermons. But every rule has its exceptions.
Todays text is from Phillippians 4:8. I greatly prefer the King James Version for the beauty of its language:
Finally, brethren, whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report; if there be any virtue, and if there be any praise, think on these things.
The first task of every preacher whose ever mounted a pulpit is to connect the Reading with the real world. Todays sermon is about politics.
Your immediate reaction is, that dog wont hunt. There is no more truth in politics than there is tea in a tea bag thats been through nine spin cycles at the laundromat. The same goes for just, pure, lovely, of good report, virtuous and praiseworthy. To that, I say with a wink, You betcha. But its a slight exaggeration.
Ive spent most of my career working with politicians whove been dead for two centuries. Ive represented the likes of Jefferson, Madison, Washington, Franklin in cases on the enduring meaning of the Constitution. Ive read almost every scrap of paper written by those gentlemen.
They did not always agree with each other. Franklins speech on thoughtful compromise, delivered the day the Constitution was signed in Philadelphia, is one of the classic political speeches of all time. Yet despite their sometime conflicting views, the Framers were all engaged in a constant search for what was true, honest, virtuous, and just.
One area where the search for truth ought to survive, is on Americas university campuses. So, todays example will be drawn from there, rather from this weeks Presidential Debate. Ive written long ago that lawyers are the squid of the literary seas, using a fog of words not to expose and explain, but to obscure and deflect. It is no accident that almost half of all members of Congress, and many other elected leaders, are lawyers.
Lawyers are trained in deception. It is often their task in life to present falsehoods and make them seem rational and true. Having been a lawyer for 38 years, I have earned the right to speak this truth. Most of you have probably experienced the same syndrome.
So, lets talk about academics. Professors are given tenure under the belief, however false, that security of position will allow them to seek the truth unfettered by the tides of passion in the outside world.
There is a petition circulating on the Internet, entitled Friends and Supporters of Bill Ayers. Over 3,000 tenured professors from around the country have added their names to this Petition. It says that those who are attacking Ayers are seeking to intimidate free thinking and stifle critical dialogue..
That sounds like exactly what university professors should do, defend a colleague who is under attack for his views. An attack on one is an attack on all. It is not only possible, but in todays politics commonplace, to lie by omission. As Dr. Joseph Goebbels noted, the most effective lie is constructed of partial truths.
Nothing in this Petition mentions that Ayers and his wife participated in bombings that killed people. And that Ayers avoided conviction on a technicality. And that Ayers was quoted in the New York Times on 11 September, 2001, with exquisitely bad timing that we did not do enough [bombing].
Heres the Petition. See for yourself its bias. See if any of the professors who signed it are being paid by your tax dollars. http://www.supportbillayers.org/
The Petition says, Its true that Professor Ayers participated passionately in the civil rights and antiwar movements of the 1960s, as did hundreds of thousands of Americans. I must have missed the news that hundreds of thousands of Americans killed people with bombs in the 60s, and then affirmed those acts just seven years ago.
When it is hard to find even a pretense of truth in the halls of academia, you can reach the sad conclusion that whatever is true and just and honest and pure is in a bad way in this nation these days. You can also conclude in reading and viewing the media that danged few people are thinking on such things.
Sorry the sermon ended with a downer. When you preach in the secular world, that happens. A lot.
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About the Author: John Armor practiced law in the US Supreme Court for 33 years. He now lives in Highlands, NC, and is working on a book on Thomas Paine. John_Armor@aya.yale.edu
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John / Billybob
It will be his IDEAOLOGY that hurts America. His radical Marxist hate for Americanism, our Constitution and its Rights for the people....his flagrant, rabid passion for Marxist redistribution of wealth. This all equates to AN IDEAOLOGY that is truly a clear and present danger to the America he HATES.
It is this IDEAOLOGY that should be attacked, IMHO.
I have had that passage posted up on my office wall for over year, it is one of the best in the NT.
That passage isn't in the version of the Bible that Obama uses. A lot of other stuff appears to be missing, too, like all those passsages about the wonder and beauty of unborn children, created by God in the womb.
Seeing that you are working on a book about Thomas Paine, I hope you will explain this statement by him:
“. . . tender laws, of any kind, operate to destroy morality, and to dissolve by the pretence of law what ought to be the principle of the law to support reciprocal justice between man and man; and the punishment of a member who should move for such a law ought to be DEATH.”
IMHO, the failure to understand the animosity of Paine on this subject, and to act accordingly, is at the root of our present economic crisis.
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