How did contemporary America arrive at the place where the perversion of truth leads to calling good evil and good evil? A perversion that changed the Bible from being the principal textbook into something illegal, with depravity and baseness becoming promptly normalized and exalted in public education.
Modern Christendom is a mere shadow of its former self as represented by those who founded the nation “for the glory of God and advancement of the Christian faith.”
Manifesting little or nothing of Christ’s character, contemporary American Christendom appears to have lost the drive and motivation to emulate His works.
In his excellent work Why We Should Call Ourselves Christians: The Religious Roots of Free Societies, the Italian philosopher and politician Marcello Pera [born 1943] points out that the intellectual and political elite of the West consider religion and Christianity in particular a primitive form of knowledge, a consolation for the weak-minded, and an obstacle to peaceful coexistence in the community.
“We are told that politics must take a neutral stance on religious values,” Pera writes, “and that societies must hold together without any reference to religious bonds. Liberalism is considered to be ‘free-standing’ and the Western, liberal, open society is taken to be ‘self-sufficient.’”
Secularism holds the treacherous and unsound notion that the State can impart virtue in its citizenry. Such a notion in reality bears the hiss and guile of a brood of vipers. Directed by sound judgment and well aware of the dangers of unchecked power, America’s Founders were so wise to ensure the separation of power in the government through the establishment of a checks and balances system.
Dr. Peter J. Leithart argues that when Europeans discovered that theology can be very divisive, they concluded that the only way to restore comparative harmony was to expunge theology from the public square and drive theological determination and debate into the recesses of the conscience and safely behind the walls of the church building. Hence, the lacking in force and effectiveness of present-day American Christendom.
J. Stanley Mattson, Founder and President of the C.S. Lewis Foundation of Redlands, CA, wrote the Foreword to Indian philosopher Vishal Mangalwadi’s masterly study The Book that Made Your World: How the Bible Created the Soul of Western Civilization [2011].
Demolishing one of the key tenets of liberalism, Mattson wrote: “If there is no truth to be discovered – if all truth is merely a function of social constructs – then reason itself has no genuine authority, and in its place, academic fashion and marketing determine what a culture believes. More foreboding still, the risk is real that outright coercion may replace the authority that the modern world once ascribed to Truth. Questions concerning the nature of reality, the meaning of life, of honor, of virtue, of wisdom, and of love are understood to be nothing more than curious relics of old-fashioned thinking.”
The American Founders deemed Scripture to be culture’s lifeline. The sacred book provided them with wisdom’s communicable attributes, which enable one to sway nations3 and “kings to reign and rulers to decree justice.”4
They warned that the light of America would grow dim and that culture would collapse if the Word was removed from the education of America’s youth.
Yet, with Gideons and Rahabs beginning to stand, there is reason for optimism. Men and women of Issachar are coming to a public square near you, in anticipation of 1 Kings 18:44: “Behold, a little cloud like a man’s hand is rising from the sea.”
David Lane
American Renewal Project
1. Benjamin F. Morris, The Christian Life and Character of the Civil Institutions of the United States [1864].
2. Archie P. Jones, Foreward to The Christian Life and Character of the Civil Institutions of the United States [1864].
3. Bruce K. Waltke, Proverbs Commentary.
4. Proverbs 8:15.