Tuesday, July 3, 2012
The Fourth of July
In 1993 Henry Bennett compiled the “Index of Leading Cultural Indicators” for the Heritage Foundation. I saw it reprinted recently. While it is dated, the statistics have only grown worse, not better in the intervening years. Among the findings, he stated since 1960, while the gross domestic product has nearly tripled, violent crime has increased at least 560%. Divorces have more than doubled. The percentage of children in single-parent homes had tripled. And by the end of the decade 40% of all American births and 80% of minority births will occur out of wedlock. In 1940 teachers identified the top problems in America’s schools as: talking out of turn, chewing gum, making noise and running in the hall. In 1990, teachers listed drugs, alcohol, pregnancy, suicide, rape and assault.
He went on to say, “There is a coarseness, a callousness and a cynicism to our era. The worst of it has to do with our children. Our culture seems almost dedicated to the corruption of the young. We have become inured to the cultural rot that is setting in. People are losing their capacity for shock, disgust and outrage.” Solomon warned against this kind of development.
A hot-tempered man stirs up strife, but he who is slow to anger quiets contention. The way of a sluggard is like a hedge of thorns, but the path of the upright is a level highway. A wise son makes a glad father, but a foolish man despises his mother. (Proverbs 15:15-18 ESV).
The King James Version translates the word “sluggard” as “sloth.” Ancients called it acedia, an aversion to spiritual things and an undue concern for the external and the worldly. It does not mean mere laziness. The slothful heart is steeped in the worldly and carnal, hates the spiritual and wants to be free of its demands. When the novelist Walker Percy was asked what concerned him most about America’s future, he answered, “Probably the fear of seeing America, with all its great strength and beauty and freedom gradually subside into decay through default and be defeated, not from without, but from within, from weariness, boredom, cynicism, greed and in the end helplessness before its great problems.”
I realize this is a tough indictment. If my diagnosis is wrong, then why, amid our economic prosperity and military security, do almost 70% of the public say we are off track? I submit that only when we turn to the right things will life get better. We must return to the Gospel. It is the Gospel that provides us with moral bearings, and the solution to our chief problem of spiritual impoverishment. Today, much of society ridicules and mocks those who are serious about their faith. America’s only respectable form of bigotry is bigotry against people of faith. And the only reason for this hatred is that it forces us to confront matters many would prefer to ignore.
Today we must carry on a new struggle for the country we love. We must push hard against an age that is pushing hard against us. Bennett ended his essay by writing: “If we have full employment and greater economic growth, if we have cities of gold and alabaster, but our children have not learned how to walk in goodness, justice and mercy, then the American experiment, no matter how gilded, will have failed.” I believe he is correct! We must not surrender!
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