-Caveat Lector-

From
http://www.nationalreview.com/comment/commentprint011501a.html

}}>Begin
1/15/01
        9:00 a.m.
Religious Pluralism For Liberals, 101
Against religious bigotry.
By Michael Novak,
        fellow, American Enterprise Institute
& NRO contributing editor

  n their rancor toward
        the admirable John Ashcroft, soon to be the flinty-eyed, square-jawed
        attorney general from the Western Plains, the extremists of the Left are
        day by day adding fine detail to their own self-portrait.
They say, for instance, that they don't see how he can enforce laws that
        he personally opposes or even thinks immoral. The reason they think this
        is they couldn't do it. Extremists of the Left feel obliged to write their
        own morality into law. They often feel obliged to disobey (or void) laws
        out of tune with their own morality.
Liberal extremists don't seem to know that conservatives, drawing on a
        long tradition of their own, have a very different theory of law and morality.
        John Ashcroft told the Economics Club of Detroit in 1998, "It would be
against my religion to impose my religion on others." That's an old tradition
        in the dissident Christian churches opposed to state-established religion.
        If liberals knew religious history, they would know that.
Even John Locke, drawing on these traditions (cautiously, for fear of
        his head) pointed out in his Letter on Toleration that to respect
        the liberty of the consciences of others is the true teaching of Jesus
        Christ, and that tolerance is another name for Christian charity. This
        same point is picked up in the last provision of the Virginia Declaration
        of Religious Rights.
Liberal extremists don't seem to remember that the primary energy behind
        the First Amendment came from the Baptists and other dissident churches
        of Virginia, Jerry Falwell's ancestors, who suffered grievous punishments �
public whippings, jail, heavy fines � for the "crime" of preaching
        without a licence from the state. They held the state had no power to
        licence preachers of the gospel, only the gospel did. When James Madison
        was opposed to writing amendments into the new Constitution, the Baptists
        of Orange County reminded him vigorously that they had elected him to
        office, and they wanted religious liberty put down in writing. "No
establishment
        � free exercise" turned out to be the perfect formula in their eyes.

Baptists and other evangelical Christians need no lectures from secular
        liberals about the meaning of the First Amendment. In 1791, it was their
        idea. John Ashcroft is a true son of that tradition of liberty.
Another thing extremists of the left don't understand. They think that
        the "mainstream" of America passes through big cities, university towns,
        and Indian reservations � that is to say, the few hundred counties
        in the U.S. that the Democratic party's candidate won in 2000, those little
        isles of blue on that vast sea of red representing the 2,494 counties
        won by the Republican candidate. Most extremist liberals don't seem to
        know anybody who voted Republican. That's how insular, isolated, and out
        of the mainstream they are.
Third, most extremist liberals don't seem to have the foggiest understanding
        of religion, let alone the variety of Christian traditions. They demand
        a religious test for public office, and the test they propose is simple:
        No one in public office is allowed to take religion seriously, or to apply
        it to reality, or to allow it to shape their views. The upshot of this
        test is that all officers of the government of the United States ought
        to be effective or practical atheists.
John Ashcroft in particular must never, ever, be guided by his faith in
        public. Extremist liberals seem to have a special hostility to evangelical
        Christians, such as John Ashcroft. They do not propose similar assaults
        on any other religious group. They give every outward indication of
indulging
        in religious bigotry. This demand may be a fruit of their own ignorance
        about religion, an ignorance they allow themselves in religion as nowhere
        else. Even the redoubtable New York Times tolerates egregious errors
        in this domain, as when it has (more than once) referred to "the St. James
        version" of the Bible.
The religious bigotry among the extremist liberals assaulting John Ashcroft
        is now visible to all, their lack of respect for his faith tradition,
        their desire to shackle the conscience of John Ashcroft as they would
        not tolerate the shackling of their own.
In the hope that it may be useful to liberals, then, allow me then to
        propose four brief lessons from Religious Pluralism For Liberals, 101:

1. Evangelical Christians have shed much blood, born many stripes
        upon the back, endured many weeks in jail, in the struggle against the
        state establishment of any religion; and they find the establishment of
        any version of the Christian religion particularly odious, because the
        state inevitably corrupts the church.
2. Evangelical Christians hold that God speaks directly to the
        soul of each individual and, therefore, the arena of individual conscience
        is inviolable by any human agency, and the individual act of conscience
        is inalienable by any other individual; and these beliefs are enshrined
        both in the Virginia Declaration of Religious Rights and in the famous
        Remonstrance of James Madison, and protected in the First Amendment to
        the U.S. Constitution, as insisted upon by evangelical Christians in
Madison's
        congressional district in the first place.
3. Evangelical Christians hold that all authority is from God,
        not from the state, and that therefore there is a realm of inalienable
        rights that the state may not violate, and that is the root of the motto
        Benjamin Franklin once proposed for the Great Seal of the United States:
        "Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God." The same idea was incorporated
        in a slogan hurled against King George III during the Revolutionary War
        era, "We have no king but Jesus," meaning that the source of rights runs
        deeper than the King's writ.
It is this slogan that John Ashcroft used in his famous remarks at Bob
        Jones University in 1999. These remarks put down a marker for the university

        to live up to � a call to respect basic rights in the lives of all
        connected with the university and in the university itself; a call to
        live up to the full potential of the university, not yet met.
4. Evangelical Christians hold both to a basic realism about the
        persistence of sin, weakness, and conflict in human life, and to an
obligation
        to strive to do better, to be more perfect, to move forward into the full
        potential that God intended for human beings, as is sketched in the image
        of the "shining city on the hill." From this source more than any other
        comes the constant striving in America for improvement and progress, and
        the profound sense that we are not yet where we ought to be. John Ashcroft's

        religious tradition deserves great respect from those of us in America
        who spring from other traditions, not least because it has helped to form
        the rest of us as Americans.
John Ashcroft, the man, also deserves respect. He is a great witness to
        the best that America produces in the realm of conscience, respect for
        law, dedicated public service, and human decency (as exemplified to an
extraordinary degree in his recent campaign). Ironically, he is a superb
        witness to many virtues that liberals insist upon for others, and hope
        to exemplify themselves: respect for the conscience of others, a fierce
        commitment to religious liberty, and enforcement of the law as written.


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Integrity has no need of rules. -Albert Camus (1913-1960)
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The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking
new landscapes but in having new eyes. -Marcel Proust
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The libertarian therefore considers one of his prime educational
tasks is to spread the demystification and desanctification of the
State among its hapless subjects.  His task is to demonstrate
repeatedly and in depth that not only the emperor but even the
"democratic" State has no clothes; that all governments subsist
by exploitive rule over the public; and that such rule is the reverse
of objective necessity.  He strives to show that the existence of
taxation and the State necessarily sets up a class division between
the exploiting rulers and the exploited ruled.  He seeks to show that
the task of the court intellectuals who have always supported the State
has ever been to weave mystification in order to induce the public to
accept State rule and that these intellectuals obtain, in return, a
share in the power and pelf extracted by the rulers from their deluded
subjects.
[[For a New Liberty:  The Libertarian Manifesto, Murray N. Rothbard,
Fox & Wilkes, 1973, 1978, p. 25]]

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