“Make it your goal to live a quiet life, minding your own business and working with your hands.”
(I Thess. 4:11)
I have often wondered who might be the
Thomas Paine of our day, one who writes precient insights to
sway a nation. Would it be someone with the wit of the late Christopher Hitchens, or a Sam Harris who gives voice to countless unbelievers? Is
there a Mark Twain, a G. K. Chesterton, a George Orwell in Will, Krugman, Noonan, or (the lates) Wolfe or Krauthammer?
Can any of our top-shelf writers – and the list is very long – change our thinking?
Perhaps the better question is, “What can do such a thing?” and the answer is, always and forever more, ideas.
Ideas hold the power.
This is where writers do battle,
assessing, insisting, construing, advocating. Trump won on an idea:
“The political class is entrenched and self-serving. 'Drain the
swamp!'” The other side was hapless against that idea: “All opposed, say 'No!'”
And say “No!” they continue to do with inspired troopery.
But what idea has the power to hold us
together? We are polarized so badly we decide national elections on a
chad. When we finally have a winner the other side sees doomsday. I was shocked at the vulgar anti-Obama rhetoric in 2012. We
are loosing common ground.
Is there an idea with the power to capture us enough to lay aside polarizing bombs? Are we doomed to the hyper-political every two years so we seek solace anywhere – in political newcomers or billionaires who buy the election? Might we ever realize the dream of life free of crushing election cycles and endless ads?
Maybe Google will save us by deciding
for us, our votes not so free after all.
I'm the arm-chair amateur with an idea
about the Idea that held us together and could again if we would hear
it. That idea is freedom: freedom to do as one should, not merely as
one might wish to do.
Unconstrained freedom is a pipers'
dream with followers, betimes, among all. Life has stubborn contraints, so we
painfully learn. The protestor's sign, “Sworn to fun;
loyal to none” leads nowhere fast.
Behind it all is the question of who guarantees such freedom. If we have rights,
someone has to be responsible. Policemen must keep the beat, judges
must act with integrity, our fellow citizens must have the strength of
will to insist on things like free speech and “innocent until
proven guilty.” And we have to defend ourselves against enemies
“foreign and domestic.”
This idea of freedom, earned and
maintained through responsible, vigilant living – is a treasure
worth living and dying for. It is the founding idea of our nation,
the jewel the constitution intends to protect.
But we have mission fatigue. We are
losing the will to insist on freedom. This is demonstrated not least by our national debt, a mind-numbing amount of 25,000 billion dollars. If we had 2000 years to repay, interest free, the
monthly payment would be over one billion dollars.
This is alarming in the extreme and
undercuts freedom, because debt always does exactly that. Without financial strength
and agility we are vulnerable. However, the lack of will that got us here
is the deeper problem.
Can we endure through this difficulty?
Will there emerge a unifying idea with the power to carry us? I think
so, but it may not be freedom. The idea that unites a vulnerable
nation may well be security. If our leaders – or God forbid – the
leaders of an invading nation, can promise security we may take it, a
bowl of poor porridge to replace the dying heritage of
freedom.
I still believe in freedom – personal
and national. But we will lose this treasure if we fail to pay its
price in personal responsibility and determined fortitude. This means
paying our bills, providing for our own, caring for our neighbor. And it means we lay aside our
polarizing swords. This last is not entirely possible, for persons with
opposing primary ideas can never be agreed: discussion only leads
them further apart. But we have to try, for political rivals are people, too!
And so I ask, “What can hold us
together?” It is not freedom alone, for there are a thousand
attending ideas. But freedom seems to be at the core. I want that,
but I feel the fatigue. Will you join me in doing the right thing:
- Speak truth with humility, knowing you do not see all things clearly.
- Refuse to see the world through a political grid, but have patience with those who do.
- Strive for self-reliance, in part so you can help those who cannot help themselves.
In all this I find a landing point in
the timeless edict of St. Paul in the New Testament: “Make it your
goal to live a quiet life, minding your own business and working with
your hands.” (I Thess. 4:11) That's a tall order, a simple way, hard
for most of us to accept. But I want to learn it, for the good of my
family and community, and for the hope of our nation. I hope you do, too.
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