By John Sykes
From Bruce Walker in Stuffism:
“Man, Thou art dust and to dust Thou will return.” Many millions of us hear that quiet, vital thought about life on Ash Wednesday.
Life is not “stuff.” When we form our lives around things, then we lose the great value of our life. This is a religious view of materialism, but it is also a profoundly American view. Recall the last sentence of our Declaration of Independence: “And for the support of this declaration, with a firm Reliance on the Protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge our lives, our Fortunes, and our sacred Honor.”
The Founding Fathers fully understood that supporting liberty, a transcendently noble virtue, might well bring impoverishment. The sick notion that our Founding Fathers were motivated by enlightened economic self-interest is Marxist; indeed, it is essential to the grim Marxist perspective on life. When we look at politics as an economic game, then we accept the naked materialism of Marx (and also of Hitler, of Mussolini, of Mao, and of almost every other evil monster of the last century).
Our nation was founded, as that last line of the Declaration so clearly restates, upon belief in a Blessed Creator and His protection. The history that led up to the Declaration encompassed ancient Jews rejecting not wealth per se, but rather the elevation of wealth above higher values. This thorny part of Judaism still makes us squirm when Amos tells of the damnable fate of those who “[p]ant after the dust of the earth on the head of the poor” – a theme that runs throughout the whole of Jewish theology. The men who wrote our Declaration and founded our nation were intimately familiar with Jesus’s dramatic warning that “[t]he love of money is the root of all evil.”...
None of this means, of course, that this world of Stuff is bad. Creation is good; indeed, it is “very good.” Jews write of a Blessed Creator. Christians know that Jesus celebrated a wholesome enjoyment of life. Our Founding Fathers were farmers and inventors and merchants and traders who lived in lovely homes and who enjoyed a robust meal with a fine glass of Port. Stuff, however, ought to be a pleasant consequence of honorable life, a happy ancillary of human liberty, a worthwhile secondary purpose to our pursuit of the Good.
When we descend into utter materialism, as it seems so many conservatives do these days, then we fight our political battles on the home ground of our enemy. Marxism is evil not just because it produces poverty; it would be evil even if it produced prosperity. Liberty is good even when it costs us – and many veterans pay a price much greater than money could compensate – and the optimization of affluence that markets cause is a byproduct that sharpens our arguments for liberty but cannot be the heart of those arguments.
We have heard it said by Pastor Brian Doyle:" We must not allow ourselves to live in the "Thingdom of Man",; but give all praise to God in His Kingdom." David Kupelian in "The Marketing of Evil" said it so well when he spoke of how we have been manipulated into giving up our basic identity as a Christian Nation ,"...We've traded Western civilization for vain delusions, cheap thrills and laughably illogical docterines." Further, "... we can plainly see the truth- but we play along out of fear and intimidation. We're afraid of confrontation, of losing the love and approval of others, of being labeled 'judgmental', 'racist', 'bigoted', or 'homophobic.' So we quietly allow our minds to be twisted as we surrender our [core] former beliefs and bequeath an unknow country to our children and grandchildren." PP102-103. He then goes on to tel s about why we shy away from the "light": "...haters of truth scheme to extinguish this shining light. So they concoct an absurd fantastic ruse [to sel to us]--that animals should have the same rights as human beings, that white people are inerently racist and oppressive, that self destrcuctive sexual compuslions are perfectly normal and noble. Each passing year brings new and more bizarre delusions beng held up as TRUTH."
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