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Denying
Spiritual Man
By Steve Farrell
This
is Liberty Letter 22 For other
Liberty Letters by Steve Farrell, check Meridian's archives.
The
apostle Paul prophesied the time would come when man’s “conscience
[would be] seared with a hot iron.” (1)
Part
of that searing, sad to say, has come in the form of a modern
secular state that has, plain as day, utilized curriculum
mandates, accreditation standards, and block grants to impose
one standard, and one standard alone – in this thing, that
the social ‘sciences’ and natural ‘sciences’ must deny the
true nature of man, deny that man is something more than
a mere compilation of biological processes.
In
1790, English statesmen Edmund Burke, in his famous denunciation
of the atheist run, socialist inspired French Revolution,
declared “We know, and it is our pride to know, that man
is by his constitution a religious animal; that atheism
is against, not only our reason, but our instincts.” (2)
Burke
knew, what every honest, reflective man must know, that
man is not just a physical being, but a spiritual being,
and as such, that man is not just blessed with a collection
of ‘common’ physical senses, but endowed by his Maker with
a collection of uncommon Higher senses – among them, reason
and conscience.
Twenty
nine years earlier, ‘A Well-Wisher to Mankind’ (Massachusetts
born, John Perkins), wrote in his 1771, Essay on the
Nature, Source and Extent of Moral Freedom:
Every human creature has a sense of right and wrong, ought
and ought not, which are evidently intended to remind him
of duty and obligation; and without which he could have
no idea of it. It is as really a natural sense, as the external
ones of sight, feeling, tasteing
&c. As constitutional as the other internal ones of
honor, harmony, benevolence, &c. (3)
A
“natural,” “constitutional” sense that reminds of us “right
and wrong, ought and out not,” “duty and obligation;” could
it be?
Founder
Thomas Jefferson thought so. While mentoring his nephew
Peter Carr as regards his education, he noted in a letter
dated August 10, 1787:
He who made us would have been a pitiful bungler, if he had
made the rules of our moral conduct a matter of science.
For one man of science, there are thousands who are not.
What would have become of them? Man was destined for society.
His morality, therefore, was to be formed to this object.
He was endowed with a sense of right and wrong, merely
relative to this. This sense is as much a part of his
nature, as the sense of hearing, seeing, feeling; it is
the true foundation of morality …
The moral sense, or conscience, is as much a part of man as
his leg or arm. It is given to all human beings in a stronger
or weaker degree, as force of members is given them in
a greater or less degree. It may be strengthened by exercise,
as may any particular limb of the body. This sense is
submitted, indeed, in some degree, to the guidance of
reason; but it is a small stock which is required for
this: even a less one than what we call common sense.
State a moral case to a ploughman and a professor. The
former will decide it as well, and often better than the
latter, because he has not been led astray by artificial
rules. (4)
Jefferson
was counseling his nephew about what two prophets of God
once charged, as the necessity of “circumscribing all truth
into one great whole.” (5) If you are studying man, and
daring to call it science, denying the reality of his spiritual
nature, and the existence of a conscience, such a science
is artificial indeed.
But
it’s more than that. There is a danger involved. When Jefferson
spoke of artificiality in learning circles, his voice was
a voice of testimony against a history of state imposed
educational establishments that had stifled freedom of religion,
speech, press, and assembly, and with them, the march of
truth, so as to hold the masses in darkness by design.
For
this cause: Despots have always known that disconnecting
man from his kinship with the King of the Universe, the
Great and Eternal Sovereign of all men, and with the spirit
that God put in man, is vital to any plan to hold man down.
For no man who truly understands his pedigree, and his potentiality
as a joint heir with Christ, is a prime candidate to be
a slave to any man or any state – and that’s the point.
Atheism,
then, or the separation of science from any possible connection,
however remote, to the Christian faith, and men of faith,
becomes part of the modus operandi in despotic states, or
for states heading in that direction.
Burke
knew all about this agenda. He observed:
“[T]he
mind will not endure a void”; and so the intent is to empty
it, and then fill it up again with “some uncouth, pernicious,
and degrading superstition.” (6)
The
“uncouth, pernicious, and degrading superstition” was the
byproduct of political ambition. It was Europe’s first leap into the arms of a new revolutionary order, socialism,
whose Utopian goal it was and is to impose a top down control
on all things, especially in education, in order to usher
in their godless version of a Heaven on Earth. “Uncouth,
pernicious and degrading,” because the truth of the matter
– in practice – was that this new religion resembled something
more like a “riot,” a “drunken delirium,” a “hot spirit
drawn out of the alembic of hell,” and always will. (7)
It
is a point of interest, if not confusion for many of us,
how it is that there is absolute freedom in the halls of
academia for some lines of thought, and certainly for every
sort of debauchery, and yet a fierce intolerance for the
things of God, for appeals to man’s moral conscience, or
even to the existence of a conscience.
Burke
provides a frank answer, as disconcerting as it may be.
Pulling a lesson from history, about how the aristocracy
of Venice got away with imposing “so heavy …[a] yoke” on her subjects, he observed:
[T]he nobles have been obliged to enervate the spirit of their
subjects by every sort of debauchery; they have denied them
the liberty of reason, and they have made them amends by
what a base soul will think a more valuable liberty, by
not only allowing, but encouraging them to corrupt themselves
in the most scandalous manner. They consider their subjects
as the farmer does the hog he keeps to feast upon. He holds
him fast in his sty, but allows him to wallow as much as
he pleases in his beloved filth and gluttony.
The ruling nobility are no less afraid of one another than
they are of the people; and, for that reason, politically
enervate their own body by the same effeminate luxury by
which they corrupt their subjects. They are impoverished
by every means which can be invented; and they are kept
in a perpetual terror by the horrors of a state inquisition.
(8)
Sounds
like University 101 to me. Unlimited freedom to debauch,
to promote the false and unseemly – side by side with “perpetual
terror by the horrors of a state inquisition” for stating,
teaching, or discussing that which is politically incorrect.
Think
about it. It’s happening here. History is repeating itself.
Conscience is being suppressed, religion crushed, the true
nature of man denied in almost every academic circle, and
all of this in the name of a “more valuable liberty.”
The
questions we ought to be asking ourselves are: Why have
we agreed to this? Why are we playing along? What has been
the price of our negligence, to our children, our neighbor’s
children, to truth, and to the nation at large? And what
will yet be the price if we fail to be men and women of
virtue, and turn the tide now, today?
The
good news is, such a denial of
the true nature of man “cannot prevail long.” (9) Burke
taught that too. I agree. There is an awakening going
on. As a member of the new media, I have seen it, felt it,
and been part of it. As a well known fictional Evil Emperor
once said, ‘there is a disturbance in the force,’
and it ‘could destroy us.” He was right. You and I, if we
do our small part, can help check and then route the Secular
Empire we face, and then remake a better, brighter, more
blessed nation, a nation that encourages its children and
citizens to stay in touch with, and be true to, their conscience,
that part of their being which is as natural a sense to
them as seeing, hearing, tasting, and touching.
Contact Steve
Footnotes:
- 1 Timothy 4:2
- Kramnick, Isaac, editor. The Portable Edmund Burke,
Penguin Books, New York, New York, 1999, from Burke’s
essay, Reflections on the Revolution in France,
p. 453.
- Hyneman, Charles S., and Lutz, Donald S. American Political
Writing during the Founding Era: 1760-1805, Volume I,
Liberty Press, Indianapolis, 1983, p. 149.
- Cousin, Norman, editor. In God We Trust: The
Religious Beliefs and Ideas of the American Founding Fathers,
Harper and Brothers Publishers, New York, 1958, p. 127.
- Ludlow, Victor L. Principles and Practices of
the Restored Gospel, Deseret
Book Company, Salt Lake City, Utah, 1992 (statement attributed
to Presidents Joseph Smith and Joseph F. Smith) p. 139.
- Kramnick, p. 453.
- Ibid.
- Ibid., p. 45, from Burke’s 1756 essay, A Vindication
of Natural Society.
- Kramnick, p. 453.
Meridian Magazine columnist Steve Farrell is associate
professor of political economy at George Wythe College,
press agent for Defend Marriage (a project of United Families
International), a pundit at America’s News Page, NewsMax.com,
and the author of the highly praised, inspirational novel,
“Dark Rose” (available at amazon.com).
For you West Coast night owls, try and catch Steve on
Mark Edwards’ “Wake up America!” talk radio show on 50,000-Watt KDWN, 720 AM, 10 p.m. to midnight, Monday Nights; or on the worldwide internet at AmericanVoiceRadio.com
(preferred access at WakeUpAmericaFoundation.com
Click
here to sign up for Meridian's FREE email updates.
© 2005
Meridian Magazine.
All Rights Reserved.
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| About
the Author |
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Author/writer
Steve Farrell is a contributing columnist at America's News Page,
NewsMax.com, the former managing editor at Right Magazine, a graduate
of the University of the State of New Yorks Regents College,
and a former Air Force communications manager.
His credits
include two books: Missing the Mark With Religion, the first in
a multi-volume series focused on religion in public life, to be
released this winter; Dark Rose, an inspirational fiction
novel in its final edit; and several other books in various stages
of production. His work, besides appearing in NewsMax.com, has appeared
in such respected venues as World Net Daily, the World Tribune,
and Mises.org (home of the Ludwig Von Mises Institute).
A convert to
the Church, Brother Farrell currently serves as the ward mission
leader of the River Mountain Ward, in the Henderson, Lake Mead,
Nevada Stake; where he is married to the former Jeanette Stebbing.
They are the parents of seven children.
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Come
and enjoy Steve Farrell's new book, Dark Rose, about one woman's
lonely journey through bitterness, hate and despair to faith,
love and hope. One valiant child's impossible dream. A classic
for all ages! Softcover. Click on the book for more information
about how to purchase it.
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