Friday, January 30, 2009

Principles of Liberty (Eight)

Principles of Liberty (eight)
By William Pressgrove

“Men are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights.” (The 5000 Year Leap, Cleon Skousen)

Here is where things get interesting for me. We live in a day when Christianity seems to be under attack from all sides, but nowhere as much as in the realm of government. The term “separation of church and state” has been repeated so many times that many people, including many of my high school students, believe that those words are either in the Constitution or in the First Amendment.

The reason I find it interesting is because if it weren’t for the foundation in Christianity, the Founding Fathers would not have incorporated so many principles, based on Chritian teachings, into the Constitution as they did. The Declaration of Independence unarguably focuses on the principle of Christianity that dictates that there is a God and that that god or Creator was at the core of all their teachings and their endeavor to separate themselves from a despotic monarchy which put the crown above God as the provider of rights.

Thomas Jefferson made no bones about it. This country was founded on a belief that “all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator [God] with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”

Unalienable rights have to come from someone who is the ultimate authority, who is above temptation to revoke those rights when they are no longer convenient for him, who will allow you to violate those unalienable rights and suffer the consequences for your actions even though it pains him to have to witness it.

Here’s the rub—those who are so anxious to separate religion from government also want to make sure man’s rights to “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” are safeguarded. However, their method of safeguarding these rights is to pretend that government has given these rights to the people and has a responsibility to protect them by passing a whole series of laws they call “civil rights”. To paraphrase a biblical term, what the government giveth, the government taketh away. Civil rights are no more unalienable than the right to drive on American highways. The government can tell you any time it wants to that you can’t drive on a highway. Those who think government protects unalienable rights only has to take a look at the laws that now invade homes, confiscate property, prohibit fireworks on national holidays, or any number of other things that were not considered unlawful when I was growing up to realize that unalienable rights don’t come from the government.

On the other hand, God will not interfere with our rights to life, liberty, and property (the pursuit of happiness) so long as we don’t violate the principles He has purposely places there for our happiness. When we do violate those principles the consequences are always natural consequences not consequences contrived by government. Governments can and will make laws that violate your rights to life, liberty, and property when it suits them, with the main objective in mind to gain more control. The more the government makes laws, the less freedom you have to act of your own free will and choice to take advantage of your unalienable rights.

What a lot of people don’t realize is that when they concede responsibilities to the government, the government will gladly take those responsibilities but at what cost? Here is an example. Before the “New Deal” people were responsible for providing for their own retirement, if they wanted to retire in stead of earning their living “by the sweat of their brow” until they die, they had to put away sufficient funds to be able to retire on for themselves. With the New Deal, the government started a “retirement suppliment program” called Social Security. Now the government has run it into the ground and doesn’t know where the money is going to come from to pay the baby boomers now that they are retiring. The point being, when the government took over the individual’s responsibility for providing for themselves, they started taking away property from the individual to be distributed to the masses at a later date. Both are now seeing the loss. The individuals being taxed to pay for social security lost control over the funds he could have otherwise used to provide for his own retirement, and the government lost control of spending and spent the funds that would have otherwise been there for all the retirees when they retired.
What it boils down to is this. Unalienable rights are given to man by God and with those rights man is also given responsibility to guard them and use them to procure his life, liberty, and happiness unaided or inhibited by government. The more the citizens give the government responsibility for those things, the less they can rely on the rights being unalienable. When government takes control of our responsibilities and unalienable rights there are always strings attached, and where there are strings attached, so much for the rights to life, liberty or the pursuit of happiness.

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