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Government, Law, Politics
The politician is trained in the art of inexactitude. His words tend to be blunt or rounded, because if they have a cutting edge they may later return to wound him.
Don Eberly on Law and Morality said...
"Is the Religious Right Finished?" in Christianity Today (September 6, 1999), pg. 53
The Bible recognizes many evils, but does not supply a specific mandate
for outlawing all that believers consider immoral or improper. As the
late thologian John Courtney Murray put it, "The law, mindful of its
nature, is required to be tolerant of many evils that morality
condemns." Christian should not adopt the habit of their secular
brethren in turning to the law to right every wrong, especially on
issues where only a genuinely restored moral authority in the culture
will get the job done.
Don Eberly on the Public Square said...
"Is the Religious Right Finished?" in Christianity Today (September 6, 1999), pg. 53
Public statesmen today should imagine themselves as called to serve,
not in a predominantly Christian nation, but one that more resembles
the conditions Paul encountered in Athens, where he invoked the
literature and philosophy of the times to make his point without
imagining a large sympathetic majority standing behind him.
"Is the Religious Right Finished?" in Christianity Today (September 6, 1999), pg. 53
But politics cannot begin to put the conecting tissue back in society.
It is ill-equipped to reconstruct traditional moral beliefs. The best
policies cannot recover courtship or marriage, make fathers responsible
for their children, restore shock or shame where it once existed, or
recover legitimate social authority to institutions that have been
hollowed out by a pervasive ideology of individual autonomy. The vast
majority of moral problems that trouble us cannot be eradicated by law.
"Is the Religious Right Finished?" in Christianity Today (September 6, 1999), pg. 58
But if the earlier hope to "save Amerca" was overblown, so too is the
current counsel to withdraw from politics — an overreaction against
an original overreaction. In the elegant words of Richard Neuhaus, such
pessimism "expresses a painful deflation of political expectations that
can only be explained by a prior and thoroughly unwarranted inflation."
Were Christians in fact to withdraw, we would simply ride a pendulum
swing back to the isolationism of the fundamentalist era.
PJ O'Rourke on Conservatism said...
Atlantic Unbound, August 8, 2002 (http://www.theatlantic.com)
In its worse forms, conservatism is a matter of "I hate strangers and anything that's different." But in its better forms, conservatism simply says that the structures of society, both civil and political, religious and so on, are the result of a long series of trial-and-error experiments by millions of human beings, not only all over the world, but through time. And that you should toss out received wisdom only very carefully. Obviously there are some ideas that were around for centuries that were not good (slavery comes to mind). But when people have been doing something for a millennium or two, there is probably a reason. And you better be pretty careful before you just throw it out.
Richard John Neuhaus on America said...
First Things, "The Public Square" (January 2002)
Intellectuals are inclined to think that they are certified as intellectuals by virtue of their capacity to complexify, and the messiness of history is such that any conflict provides ample opportunities to highlight evidence contrary to the general truth. In the present war and the larger story of which it is part, I continue to believe that America is — on balance and considering the alternatives — a force for good in the world. And I continue to be impressed by how many otherwise sensible people criticize that proposition as an instance of uncritical chauvinism rather than the carefully nuanced moral judgment that it is.
"My name is George, and I'm an alcoholic", Salon.com (July 26, 2001).
It's that experience of utter hopelessness, or moments of clarity, or hitting bottom, at which some sufferers typically call out to a higher power for help and others seek the aid of psychiatrists, healers and scientists. The common paradox in all these experiences is that personal powerlessness is twinned with personal responsibility: You suddenly realize that while no one can cure you, neither can you cure yourself on your own. You need God, or friends, or an institution, or a belief system, or something — anything — not yourself. And thus begins, in myriad forms, the archetypal untangling of epistemological knots that results, ultimately, in an unaddicted ego that knows it is both profoundly free and profoundly interdependent. And that's the basis of a healthy society. For that reason, many recovered addicts view with suspicion systems of government aid that seem to prolong dependency and/or to shield sufferers from the fundamental hopelessness of their situation. Thus we would expect Bush, not just as a political conservative, but as somebody who's experienced deep hopelessness, aloneness in the universe and the need for God, to view welfare and other government attempts to eliminate suffering as simply, and wrongly, shielding people from their true problems, the recognition of which alone could catalyze deep change.
"Is the Religious Right Finished?" in Christianity Today (September 6, 1999), pg. 44
The reason, I think, is that politics itself has failed. And politics
has failed because of the collapse of the culture. The culture is
becoming an ever-wider sewer. We are caught up in a culutrual collapse
of historic proportions, a collapse so great that it simply overwhelms
politics.
"Is the Religious Right Finished?" in Christianity Today (September 6, 1999), pg. 58
In 1947 Carl Henry published The Uneasy Conscience of Modern
Fundamentalism and led Christians back into the American mainstream.
What really galvanized them, however, was the liberal victory in Roe v.
Wade. In one swoop, the Court struck down abortion laws in all 50
states, turning around an entire culture on the most crucial moral
issue of the day. The lesson was not lost on moral
conservatives: they concluded that top-down political action was the
most effective means of cultural transformation. If liberals could do
it, so could they.
