In our day, even adults have adopted an attitude that everything we do is justified, and never deserving of punishment. Yet we expect actions done to us to be punished. That means that we have not lost a sense that wrong action deserves correction. We merely exempt what we do from the standard of right and wrong that
Patrick Henry |
This is why we are seeing in our day what Scripture tells us about Hebrew society before the establishment of the monarchy: "In those days there was no king in Israel. Everyone did what was right in his own eyes" (Judges 21:25). No king? But we have never had a king, have we? On the contrary, though we live in a Republic, the Founders built their Republic with a king in view: "It cannot be emphasized too strongly or too often that this great nation was founded, not by religionists, but by Christians; not on religions, but on the Gospel of Jesus Christ!" While the quote has been challenged, it is attributed to Patrick Henry. Whether or not he did say it, it still represents the attitude of the Founders, who, though they created a republic, based it on the presupposition of the kingship of Jesus, and that alone can be the basis of rebuilding a moral basis for a peaceful society.
"The feeling of ill desert
drinks up the spirits, and 'conscience makes cowards of us all.' This,
then, is the peculiarity which distinguishes guilt - it is a conviction
that punishment is due, that it ought to be inflicted, and that , under a
righteous government, sooner or later, it will be inflicted; and it is
precisely this sense of guilt which the truths of natural religion are
adapted to produce within us. It is the echo of our own hearts to the
fearful condemnation of a holy God.."
James Henley Thornwell, "The Nature and Necessity of Christianity"
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