Last week,
following the Democrat presidential debate, Glenn Beck called in to his radio
show (he was out that day) to comment. He opined that what Bernie Sanders is
proclaiming is what is moral. It isn’t what is really moral, but what people
with a totally skewed worldview might think is moral.
That got
me thinking. I’ve noticed, among friends who are non-religious but still decent
people, they seek morality. They try being vegan—to avoid eating what was alive
as an animal. They might volunteer with Habitat for Humanity. While rejecting
God’s word as a way to a moral life, they nevertheless seek to be moral,
finding their own definitions—and sometimes proselytizing their “discovered
morality” to others who don’t yet agree with them.
I propose
that it is normal for people to want to be good, to think of themselves as
good. They can define that according to what God has revealed as good. But if
they reject that, they leave a vacuum they must fill with something. Sometimes
what they fill it with will align with what God tells us is good, sometimes
neutral. Sometimes they’re just plain wrong.
Another
thing necessary for figuring out what is moral is a standard, or authority. If
God is not the authority, then the vacuum left is filled by something else: the
person’s own gut feelings, the popular culture—or the government. 
What we
saw at the Democrat debate was morality as defined by those who think the
authority is government. And it’s circular; government must do what the people
think is moral, and the people must agree with government’s definitions of
moral.
I thought
it might be useful to draw a comparison between God’s definition of morality
and the counterfeit Government-is-god version of morality. If we can trust that
those who disagree with us want to be good and right, and we can use language
that recognizes the search for morality, we might persuade away from the
big-government ideas that lead inevitably to tyranny, poverty, and savagery—which
moral people do not want.
This thought exercise in the chart
isn’t yet how to word things to the lost morality thinkers, but it is on the
way. If we can see the real next to the counterfeit, then maybe we can think of
ways to lead others to the real.
| 
God’s Revealed Morality | 
Government-as-god Morality | 
| 
God is the authority of what is moral and good. He
  lets us know what that is, in written word that has been used and handed down
  for millennia, and agreed upon by civilizations.  | 
Government is the
  authority of what is moral and good. What government says is good is
  different now than it was a decade ago, and will likely be quite different a
  decade from now. | 
| 
God grants human beings inalienable rights. | 
Government grants
  human beings what it chooses, and removes those “rights” and privileges as it
  sees fit. | 
| 
God grants us life, and determines timing of birth
  and death. God prohibits us from taking innocent life. | 
Government decides
  whose life is or is not worth protecting. Government places greater value on criminal
  life and possibly animal life than it does innocent unborn human life or
  innocent elderly or infirm. | 
| 
God is no respecter of persons; i.e., He invites all
  races and nations of people to come unto Him and follow His law in order to
  live their best life. | 
Government chooses
  whom to favor, and may favor one ethnicity or gender or class over another as
  it chooses. | 
| 
The earth is the Lord’s and the fullness thereof; God
  gives mankind the resources and responsibilities to live well on the earth,
  allowing His children to prosper from their work and effort. | 
Government insists
  that man is a danger to the earth, and should curtail any activities or
  enterprises that the government deems to be dangerous to the environment,
  even if those restrictions unduly harm the poor, or prevent inventions that
  could solve cleanliness issues. | 
| 
God plans for each child to be raised by a loving
  mother and father, to teach the child God’s morality and bring him/her up to
  be productive and contributing to society, so parents have the sacred right
  and responsibility to see to the care and upbringing of their children. | 
Government claims
  to know what is best for children; it will insist on government institutions
  for inculcating government ideas, and will override parental rights as it
  chooses. | 
| 
God is concerned about economic inequality if some
  of his children are starving and in need while others fail to care and offer
  help, because voluntary helping, individual to individual, can help both the
  giver and the receiver. | 
Government is
  concerned about economic inequality regardless of cause, and takes by force
  from some to give to others, as it sees fit, regardless of how this might harm
  both the giver and the receiver. | 
| 
God allows, and considers it a responsibility, to
  defend self, family, and home. So good citizens have a right to arm
  themselves. | 
Government claims
  that citizens should not be allowed to own weapons, because some people might
  use them improperly. | 
| 
God requires allegiance to Him first, followed by
  family, community, and government. | 
Government requires
  allegiance to government first, followed by community as higher government
  allows, then family as government dictates, and to religion as far as
  government is willing to tolerate. | 
| 
God joined our first parents in marriage and
  commanded them to multiply and replenish the earth—to care for their
  offspring and bring them up to adulthood in love and security. | 
Government decides
  that marriage is a current agreement between any two people in a sexual
  relationship, without any connection to permanence, exclusivity, or
  parenting; and government may decide on a different definition at any time in
  the future, regardless of the effect on families and children. | 
| 
God expects His children to respect property
  ownership, to care for what is theirs, but never to take what is not theirs. | 
Government decides
  who owns what, and whether to allow ownership to continue, or to confiscate
  from a current owner to claim for government or to bestow on a new owner. | 
| 
When God asks for charity, it is one person freely
  giving something he has, or his time, attention, or work to benefit another
  of God’s children. | 
When government asks
  for charity, it is coerced by taxation, confiscation, or regulation and
  requirement. | 
| 
God’s laws are short and simple: there are ten
  clearly worded basic requirements respecting God, family, life, honesty, and
  property ownership, plus some advisory details about how to implement them.
  He has made them relatively easy to understand and obey. He will judge fairly
  and mercifully. | 
Government’s laws
  are lengthy, complex, unintelligible, and often obscure, so as to make them
  almost impossible to obey, which gives government the power to prosecute at
  will almost anyone it might target. Government may judge arbitrarily and
  inconsistently. | 
No comments:
Post a Comment