Moral Convulsion in America

“Domestic Convulsion”

The Founders of the American Republic were well-informed, educated, intelligent men. When it came to establishing a republic, they did their homework. They familiarized themselves with history and grasped the principles and lessons to be learned from the past. They understood not only how to initiate a new nation, but also recognized what would be necessary to perpetuate and sustain it. What’s more, they articulated very firmly the circumstances that they predicted would lead to the dissolution of the Republic.

One such political prophet was Gouverneur Morris (1752-1816). Having graduated from King’s College (now Columbia University) in New York, Morris was admitted to the colonial bar in 1771 and became a member of the New York provincial congress from 1775-1777. He served as a Lieutenant Colonel in the New York State militia in 1776. He was a member of the Continental Congress in 1778-1779, and signed the Articles of Confederation. He was a delegate to the convention that framed the Constitution of the United States, speaking more than any other delegate, and serving as the head of the Committee on Style that was responsible for the final wording of the Constitution—which he signed in 1787. He then served as America’s Minister Plenipotentiary to France (1792-1794) and also served in the U.S. Senate from 1800-1803. He is buried in St. Anne’s Episcopal Churchyard in the Bronx in New York (“Morris…,” n.d.).

On September 4, 1816, just two months before his death, Gouverneur Morris delivered a speech to the New York Historical Society on the occasion of the 206th anniversary of the discovery of his home state of New York by English explorer Henry Hudson (Morris, 1816). In that oration, Morris made several insightful, eerily descriptive observations of current American culture. First, he insisted that the Bible is the key to making sense of history and learning from the mistakes of the past: “The reflection and experience of many years have led me to consider the holy writings, not only as most authentic and instructive in themselves, but as the clue to all other history. They tell us what man is, and they, alone, tell us why he is what he is” (pp. 7-8). Making brief allusion to the biblical characters Joseph, Moses, and David, Morris explained:

From the same pure Fountain of Wisdom [i.e., the Bible—DM] we learn that vice destroys freedom; that arbitrary power is founded on public immorality, and that misconduct in those who rule a republic, necessary consequence of general licentiousness, so disgusts and degrades the nation, that, dead to generous sentiment, they become willing slaves…. Then laws to protect the weak against the strong, the innocent against the wicked, become instruments of oppression and torture (pp. 8-9, emp. added).

One would have difficulty finding a more applicable description of what has happened to America in the last 50 years—from the widespread surge of crime and immorality, to the governmental encroachments on personal freedom, and the use of those legions of laws to favor the lawbreaker over the victim, as well as promote hedonism.

Second, Morris insisted that the “profound lesson of political wisdom” to be learned from 1 Samuel 8, acknowledged by such authors as Machiavelli and Montesquieu, is that “virtue is the principle of republics” (p. 10). Even the government that God Himself set up (i.e., for the Israelites) “became intolerable from the prevalence of vice and impiety” (p. 10). Here, again, is an uncanny anticipation of America’s present spiritual condition. Vice, impiety, immorality, and crime are rampant and continue to increase. What can be done?

Morris noted that man is governed by hope and fear. People are motivated by hope when their desires for pleasure, wealth, and power are achieved. They are motivated by fear when they are able to avoid poverty, pain, and death. They are likewise governed by “prompt generous reward” and “speedy severe punishment.” These “are the human means to invigorate duty, stimulate zeal, correct perversity, and restrain guilt” (p. 10). However, these tools are insufficient. After all, is not America the wealthiest nation in human history, having provided for a larger percentage of her citizenry a higher standard of living than any previous civilization? And is it not the case that Americans experience more pleasure, wealth, and power, and have surpassed all previous human progress in reducing poverty, masking pain, and postponing death? Yet, despite these incredible advancements, America is experiencing widespread social chaos and moral decline—in the government, school, workplace, and home. As Morris foreshadowed: “criminals escape punishment, by the perpetration of new and more atrocious crimes” (p. 10).

So something more is needed. Morris pinpointed that “something”:

Something more, then, is required to encourage virtue, suppress vice, preserve public peace, and secure national independence. There must be something more to hope than pleasure, wealth, and power. Something more to fear than poverty and pain. Something after death more terrible than death. There must be religion. When that ligament is torn, society is disjointed and its members perish. The nation is exposed to foreign violence and domestic convulsion. Vicious rulers, chosen by vicious people, turn back the current of corruption to its source. Placed in a situation where they can exercise authority for their own emolument, they betray their trust. They take bribes. They sell statutes and decrees. They sell honor and office. They sell their conscience. They sell their country. By this vile traffic they become odious and contemptible…. But the most important of all lessons is the denunciation of ruin to every State that rejects the precepts of religion (pp. 10-11,13, emp. added).

The religion to which Founder Morris referred is the Christian religion—to the exclusion of all others.

According to Founders like Morris, the general doctrines and moral principles of the Christian religion must thoroughly permeate our civilization if our nation is to avoid “the denunciation of ruin.” Otherwise, America will be subjected to violence inflicted by foreign enemies (terrorists?). And the nation will find itself in the throes of “domestic convulsion.” Domestic convulsion? What better epithet to identify America’s current national condition?

The key to securing America’s future is simple and definitive: “May it be secured by a pious obedience to that divine will, which prescribes the moral orbit of empire with the same precision that his wisdom and power have displayed, in whirling millions of planets round millions of suns through the vastness of infinite space” (p. 24, emp. added). In the words of the inspired writers: “Righteousness exalts a nation, but sin is a reproach to any people” (Proverbs 14:34). “Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord” (Psalm 33:12).

REFERENCES

Morris, Gouverneur (1816), An Inaugural Discourse, Delivered Before the New York Historical Society, 4th September, 1816; the 206th Anniversary of the Discovery of New-York, by Hudson (New York: T. & W. Mercein), [On-line], URL: http://digital.library.cornell.edu/cgi/t/text/text-idx?c=nys;cc=nys;idno=nys004;view=toc;node=nys004%3A3.

“Morris, Gouverneur, (1752-1816)” (no date), Biographical Dictionary of the United States, [On-line], URL: http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=M000976.

Dave Miller – Apologetics Press – http://apologeticspress.org/APContent.aspx?category=7&article=2595

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Honor and Prayer

Let Us Put Honor Back in Prayer

I thank God continually for my godly parents who reared me. As the son of a preacher, I have had many opportunities that most children never have had. One such type of opportunity was having preachers, elders, deacons and other faithful Christians into our home for meals—I still enjoy this blessing. Right before we ate a delicious meal, my father would usually ask our guest, “Would you do the honor of giving thanks?”

honor

Is it an Honor to Pray to God?

The question asked implies that it is an honor to lead prayers. Do we really believe today that it is an honor not just to pray, but to be able to lead prayers? Many ask preachers periodically to lead benedictions for various events and programs. These are most often honorable invitations. Many have even led prayers for Congress. Is it not an honor today to lead the prayer during our worship and devotionals? The audience who is praying with us does not make it honorable, but the audience to which we are praying makes it honorable.

In Luke 11, one of the disciples of Jesus requested of Him, “Lord, teach us to pray, as John also taught his disciples” (Luke 11:1). Jesus then taught them to pray to Jehovah God in such a way as they never had before: “And he said unto them, ‘When ye pray, say, “Our Father which art in heaven…”’” (Luke 11:2). Those Jewish disciples were able to learn and know that God truly was their heavenly Father. What an honor to be His children, and to call our God “Father!”

Notice with me a few reasons why approaching our Father in prayer is honorable. First, God listens to and answers our prayers. The Bible is rich with passages informing us that God has always listened to the prayers of His children, and He will still listen to our prayers today. During the days of Abraham, God tells Abimelech in a dream that he will be blessed because of Abraham’s prayer for him (Gen. 20:7, 17). Hannah prayed for a son in First Samuel, and God blessed her. Hezekiah prayed for longer life and God granted it to him (2 Kings 20:3-5; Isa. 38:2-5). David says in Psalm 5:2, “Hearken unto the voice of my cry, my King, and my God: for unto thee will I pray.” Solomon says, “The sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination to the Lord: but the prayer of the upright is his delight. The Lord is far from the wicked: but he heareth the prayer of the righteous” (Prov. 15:8, 29). Peter says in First Peter 3:12, “For the eyes of the Lord are over the righteous, and his ears are open unto their prayers: but the face of the Lord is against them that do evil.”

Another reason that prayer is honorable is that we, as Christians who sin, can still approach God for cleansing and forgiveness. The publican prayed in Luke 18:13, “God be merciful to me a sinner.” John says in First John 1:9, “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.”

Jesus certainly warns against those in Matthew 6:5 who misuse the honor of prayer. This honor to pray is not one of self-praise, but rather is one of praise to God. Therefore, when people ask us to lead a prayer, let us not look upon it as a burden, but rather, let us look upon it as an honor!

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Wonderful Water

It Flows! It Floats! It Flys! – Wonderful Water and Its Amazing Abilities!

Job 38:28-30 “Hath the rain a father? or who hath begotten the drops of dew?  Out of whose womb came the ice? and the hoary frost of heaven, who hath gendered it?  The waters are hid as with a stone, and the face of the deep is frozen.”

water

Water is Amazing!

What does your grocery cart look like?  I would suppose that something in your grocery cart contains vitamins and minerals.  From breakfast cereal to vegetables to the meat we put on our table, each of these food items contains some.  We often supplement these naturally occurring elements with a tablet or liquid form.  Life requires a certain amount of vitamins and minerals, at minimum, to survive, and at best, to thrive.  But have you ever considered from where these vitamins and minerals come?

Most probably get their vitamins and minerals from H.E.B., Wal-mart, or some nutrition store.  They arrive there by truck via a manufacturer.  Where does the manufacturer get these items?  Minerals come from the earth.  Vitamins are extracted from living things that absorb and compound minerals with organic material.  But how do minerals get transported, naturally, to the living things that need them?

The transport system for minerals is water.  Life requires minerals, but if there were no water on the planet, life would have no mechanism by which to obtain and process those minerals.  Water is needed to erode minerals out of the earth and transport them to the areas where living things can take advantage of them.  Water is also needed within those living things as a solution by which the minerals may be assimilated.

That water, however, cannot be in just any form.  Planets where water exists in only one state cannot provide an environment conducive to the sustenance of life.  Water needs to be able to flow, float, and fly for life to exist.  It just so happens (as by design) that the temperature of the earth is perfectly suited for water to be found in all three states: solid, liquid, and gas.

Ecclesiastes 1:7 “All the rivers run into the sea; yet the sea is not full; unto the place from whence the rivers come, thither they return again.”

Each of these states is helpful to life in providing the necessary transportation of minerals.  In its liquid state, water flows, bringing minerals from the mountains to the valleys and oceans where life lives.  In its solid state, water floats on the top of rivers, lakes, and the ocean giving space for the living things underneath to survive instead of crushing them with its weight.  In its vaporous form, water flies across the skies moving from the oceans back to the land and restarting the cycle all over again.

When we look at our artificial transportation systems that run from the manufacturers to the distributors and from the distributors to the retailers, we wouldn’t even begin to suggest that such a system was not designed.  Yet how is it that evolutionists can look at water, the greatest transport system the Universe has to offer, and suggest that it is not part of a grand design?  The evidence is simply too great.  Of all the elements, only water fits the bill; no other element can take its place and its unique existence in three forms at just the right temperature on earth defies the odds of its presence simply by chance.

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God and Facebook

If God Were On Facebook

The popularity of social media can hardly be comprehended. It might shock you to learn that worldwide there are more than 645,000,000 Twitter accounts. Even more amazing is that there are 1,317,000,000 Facebook accounts and that 50% of all Americans check their Facebook account every day. Like so many things, social media can be either good or bad. To help us in being part of the phenomena, let’s take time to consider what it would be like if God had a Facebook account.

Facebook

What if God used Facebook?

What would He say about finding answers to life’s situation? Sometimes people use Facebook seeking advice about what they should do, and their friends readily give their advice. It is amazing that rarely does anyone look to the Bible to find answers. Wonder what God would say about this?

What would He say about many of the photos which are posted on Facebook? It is remarkable how little thought is given to the spiritual impact pictures have on others. It seems that far too many Christians just do not believe that that those who are guilty of lasciviousness “shall not inherit the kingdom” (Gal. 5:19-21). This word is defined as words or actions designed to produce immorality. Every Christian should take a second look at their posts to see what impact they would have on those who see them. Wonder what God would say about this if He had an account?

What would He say about “OMG”? Jesus said that man will give account for every idle word and be justified or condemned by what he says. Yet, His name is tossed about without any thought. The problem is far greater than just typing three letters which include God’s name. It is a reflection of a heart that has little respect for God.  Wonder what God would say about this if He had an account?

What would He say about reposting things which sometimes are preceded by a statement like, “Ignore the language as you see this.” Some seem to think there is no personal responsibility about what they post from others. They see something and share it with others. Christians must not find pleasure in wrong doing (see Rom. 1:32) and become part of that wrong. Wonder what He would say about “cute” things which are reposted when such actually glorifies sin?

What would He do about defriending you? Who has not defriended others or blocked their message after their posts are repeatedly offensive? Take time to look at what you have posted. Is it possible that God is offended by what we are placing on social media? Would God be happier if He blocked your messages. By the way, He does not have an account, but He reads all of ours!

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A Little Leaven

Examining Leaven

The American Heritage Dictionary defines leaven as “an agent, such as yeast, that causes batter or dough to rise, especially by fermentation.”  The term “leaven” is mentioned 24 times in the Bible. Sometimes it is used in a literal sense (Lev. 23:17); such as we read in the above definition.  However, the term is often used in a figurative sense to denote a pervasive influence that is either good or bad.

leaven

What does the Bible say about Leaven?

Jesus used the term in a negative sense when He warned His disciples about the doctrine of the Pharisees, Sadducees (Matt. 16:6, 11-12), and Herod (Mk. 8:15).  This warning still resonates today, for the pervasive influence of false doctrine will result in eternal condemnation for those who preach it and for those who embrace it (Gal. 1:8-9).

The bad leaven of corruption is found wherever sin is tolerated.  This is why Christians must abstain from the evil influences of the world lest they too be condemned with the world (cf. Matt. 5:27-30; Rom. 8: 5-8). “Be not deceived: Evil companionships corrupt good morals” (1 Cor. 15:33). “Do you not know that a little leaven leavens the whole lump?  Therefore purge out the old leaven” (5:6-7)

On the other hand, Jesus also used the term “leaven” in a good sense.  He said, “The kingdom of heaven is like leaven, which a woman took and hid in three measures of meal till it was all leavened” (Matt. 13:33).

Think of it, leaven does its work from within; and that’s how the influence of the gospel of Christ works (it works within a person’s heart – Jas. 1:21; Lk. 8:15). Think of it, leaven changes the ingredients; and that’s what the word of God does.  When one accepts the gospel they become a new man (Rom. 6:4), having new thoughts (Col. 3:1-4), and doing new deeds (vv. 5-17). Think of it, leaven is aggressive (it does not stop until it has affected the whole); and that’s how New Testament Christianity works.  The kingdom of God is spread by the pervasive influence of those who are Christ’s, who bring others to Him (cf. Jn. 1: 40-45), who introduce His saving message to them (Acts 8:4, 12).

Whether good or bad, “a little leaven leavens the whole lump.” Friend, what are the influences in your life?

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