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Chuck Colson on Rodney Stark's book, The Victory of Reason
[COMMENT: I am reading Stark's book, The Rise of Christianity, which is an extraordinary research on the sociological reasons for the success of Christianity. It is not offensive (subjecting the faith to honest scientific review) if you believe that Christianity is based on history and empirical and logical evidence. I recommend anything Stark publishes. Go to www.amazon.com and search for Rodney Stark.
There is much more than Colson talks about to the Biblical world being the foundation of freedom. See for example the Politics and Constitution Libraries. Biblical Inner Healing, due out in July 2006, will have much to say about that subject. And then more in the political realm to follow down the road. It is all built on the distinction between the Biblical and the secular/pagan worldviews. See also article, What is Freedom?
The truth is: there can be no significant and enduring political freedom apart from the Biblical worldview. If Jesus is not Lord, freedom will not endure. We are proving that daily in our contemporary political life, all through Westerns Civ. as we degrade ourselves back into secularism/paganism. E. Fox]
By Chuck Colson,
Breakpoint Commentary, 6-28-2006
[Note: to listen to this commentary on MP3, click
THIS LINK. You can also choose other listening formats on the
Breakpoint website.]
Last week, President Bush took part in ceremonies commemorating the
fiftieth anniversary of Hungary's 1956 uprising against its Soviet occupiers.
According to the president, the Hungarians taught the world that "Liberty can be
delayed, but it cannot be denied."
While the president was right, that still leaves the question: Who taught the
Hungarians, or the West, for that matter, about freedom? What moved the
Hungarians to give their lives to be free? Unfortunately, most Americans haven't
got a clue where this belief originated. If pressed, they might guess the
American Revolution or maybe even Enlightenment figures like John Locke.
But as Rodney Stark tells us in his classic work
The Victory of Reason, Locke and others built on a foundation laid by
Christianity. According to Stark, Western ideas about democracy and equality
stem from "the central Christian doctrine that . . . inequality in the most
important sense does not exist . . ."
By the eleventh century, the Christian belief that we are all made in God's
image and therefore equal "in the eyes of God and in the world to come" brought
an end to slavery in Europe. Slavery only returned after Christianity's cultural
influence had waned.
Another way that Christianity contributed to our concept of freedom was its
stress on the individual, especially in the moral realm. The Christian idea of
Free Will meant that, instead of being captives to fate, people were responsible
for their actions and choices. As a result, people increasingly saw themselves
as having control over their lives. Western ideas about freedom are rooted in
this Christian understanding of the individual.
In addition to changing the way ordinary people thought about themselves,
Western Christianity changed the way people thought about governance. The
idea that there are limits to the sovereign's power over his subjects is a
distinctly Christian one. It became particularly clear during the Reformation
that there were aspects of life over which the king had no legitimate authority.
The Reformers called it "sphere sovereignty" -- every sphere carrying out
its own responsibility before God.
These limits on state power, as Stark tells us, weren't limited to Church
matters. Christianity insisted that "the state must respect private property and
not intrude on the freedom of its citizens to pursue virtue." This is one reason
President Bush so frequently says freedom is a God-given gift to all humanity.
Sadly, this isn't what's being taught in our schools today. Instead, students
are taught that freedom resulted from putting as much distance between us and
our Christian past as possible.
This is what Stark calls the "myth" of the "Dark Ages." Like many myths,
it has little basis in fact, but it reflects what some people need to be true if
their secularist worldview is to make sense.
This not only does violence to the past, but it also hurts the present. It
leaves people unable to understand why "all men and women should be free."
Clearly as modern Western nations (including our own) continue to distance
themselves from Christianity, they imperil their freedom. A sobering, cautionary
thought for us as we prepare next week to celebrate our freedom.
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