Religious
Liberty
Civilization on the Brink:
Cultural Observations
by Dr. R. Albert Mohler Jr.
September 16, 2004
As
historian Will Durant once noted, "Civilization begins with
order, grows with liberty, and dies with chaos." Durant, who
along with his wife Ariel surveyed the span of Western civilization,
provided a short summary of the process of civilizational decline,
as order gives way to a corrupted view of liberty that finally dissolves
into chaos. In our times, civilization is standing at the brink
of disaster.
Evidence of this comes from many sources, and the
common thread running throughout various controversies and issues
is the refusal to see the truth, to acknowledge moral authority,
and summon the courage to deal responsibly with threats to social
order, moral integrity, and the institutions necessary to civilization
itself.
Item One: Take, for example, the confused response
of many of the world's leading journalists to the terrorist attack
on innocent children and hundreds of others in Beslan, Russia. As
the death toll reaches almost four hundred persons, many of them
children, journalists have been offering their own editorial commentary
on the moral nature of this attack, often cleverly disguised in
the selective use of terminology. In other words, they are refusing
to call the attackers "terrorists."
Daniel Pipes, one of the world's leading experts
on terrorism, compiled a list of euphemisms and evasions used in
the aftermath of the September 3 attack in Beslan. National Public
Radio referred to the terrorists as "assailants." United
Press International called them "extremists," while The
Washington Post referred to them as "fighters." The Los
Angeles Times identified the terrorists as "hostage-takers,"
and The New York Times offered a headline identifying the terrorists
as "insurgents." Other leading newspapers and media outlets
referred to the terrorists as "kidnappers," "militants,"
"perpetrators," "radicals," "rebels,"
and "separatists." Adding insult to injury, The Pakistan
Times referred to the terrorists as "activists."
Activists? These terrorists were not carrying placards
while walking in a protest march; they were murdering innocent people
by the hundreds, and killing children after refusing them so much
as water after they were taken as hostages. Why do these journalists
refuse to use the word "terrorists?" Pipes suggests that
the reason can be traced to the response of liberal journalists
to the Arab-Israeli conflict. Added to this is the refusal of many
in the media to deal with the Islamic identity of the terrorists,
and their ties to international terrorist organizations. As Pipes
laments, "The multiple euphemisms for terrorist obstruct a
clear understanding of the violent threats confronting the civilized
world. It is bad enough that only one of five articles discussing
the Beslan atrocity mentions its Islamist origins; worse is the
miasma of words that insulates the public from the evil of terrorism."
Language is our most important tool for communication.
When language is debased and euphemisms rule, we are robbed of any
opportunity for a serious moral conversation. When we refuse to
call terrorists what they really are, and hide in a thicket of linguistic
cowardice, we grant the terrorists an extended victory. We should
call terrorists what they really are--mass murderers.
Item Two: Even as the 2004 presidential election
is underway, memories of the 2000 race continue to interrupt. In
a fascinating article, journalist David Remnick of The New Yorker
offers an insight into the current state of mind of former vice
president Al Gore, the 2000 Democratic presidential nominee. The
article, published in the September 13 issue of The New Yorker,
is not flattering to Gore. Remnick presents him as a largely self-absorbed
and glaringly eccentric public figure, living with the knowledge
that he came so very close to the Oval Office just four years ago.
Remnick followed the former vice president around Nashville as he
visited a jazz club and traveled around Nashville with his new friend,
Robert Ellis Orrall, an eccentric musician and visual artist.
Liberated from public responsibilities and the weight
of elected office, Gore freely spoke his mind about a range of political
issues and President George W. Bush. "He certainly is a master
at some things, and he has a following," Gore observed. "He
seeks strength in simplicity, but, in today's world, that's often
a problem." Nevertheless, he called President Bush "a
bully," and suggested that the war on terror is being fought
more out of fear than as a rational response to the threat.
When asked about President George W. Bush's Christian
faith, Gore responded with vigor. As Remnick relates: "Gore's
mouth tightened. A Southern Baptist, he, too, had declared himself
born again, but he clearly had disdain for Bush's public kind of
faith. 'It's a particular kind of religiosity,' he said. 'It's the
American version of the same fundamentalist impulse that we see
in Saudi Arabia, in Kashmir, in religions around the world: Hindu,
Jewish, Christian, Muslim. They all have certain features in common.
In a world of disconcerting change, when large and complex forces
threaten familiar and comfortable guideposts, the natural impulse
is to grab hold of the tree trunk that seems to have the deepest
roots and hold on for dear life and never question the possibility
that it's not going to be the source of your salvation. And the
deepest roots are in philosophical and religious traditions that
go way back.'" Al Gore may call himself a Southern Baptist,
but when Remnick asked Gore and his wife Tipper where they currently
attend church, Gore responded, "We're ecumenical now."
Gore went on to explain, "The influx of fundamentalist preachers
have pretty much chased us out with their right-wing politics."
During his years as vice president, Al Gore took
positions that diametrically opposed the convictions held by Southern
Baptists on issues ranging from homosexuality and abortion to a
larger range of moral and political issues. Some news reports indicated
that the Gores, while in Washington, had joined a Baptist church
in the area that featured a woman as pastor. As with former President
Bill Clinton, Gore's identification as a Southern Baptist is far
more ethnic than theological in form.
Nevertheless, his comments about President Bush's
Christian faith should be genuinely alarming. A former vice president
of the United States refers to evangelical Christianity as "the
American version of the same fundamentalist impulse that we see
in Saudi Arabia." Furthermore, he goes on to suggest that conservative
Christian convictions are grounded in intellectual and personal
insecurity.
When evangelical Christianity is compared to militant
Islam by a man who, as recently as four years ago, stood a heartbeat
from the presidency and won a plurality of votes in a presidential
election, we are in big trouble.
Item Three: Finally, we face signs that Americans
are growing weary of making moral distinctions and may be caving
in to demands for special rights for Muslims.
New Jersey's Six Flags Great Adventure theme park
announced that Friday, September 17 would be "Great Muslim
Adventure Day" at the facility, and only Muslims would be welcome
to attend.
The Muslim Youth Division of the Islamic Circle
of North America and the Muslim American Society were reported to
have arranged exclusive use of the theme park for the entire day.
According to WorldNetDaily, the ICNA website boasted, "First
Time Ever-All Day-Entire Park Exclusively for Muslims!"
Debbie Nauser, spokeswoman and vice president of
the Six Flags theme park, confirmed claims that the park would be
restricted on Friday for "Muslims and their friends."
In the past, the ICNA has featured events that included
speakers who have empathized with suicide bombers and blamed Jews
for the war on terror, claiming that a conspiratorial plot was designed
to put the blame on Muslims. The organization Judicial Watch traces
ICNA links to Hamas and world terrorism.
What is going on here? Can you imagine the outcry
if a major theme park, serving as a public accommodation, advertised
a "Christians Only Day?"
We are living in confused and confusing times, and
our contemporary challenges require clear thinking, moral focus,
and intellectual discipline. With civilization standing at the brink,
Christians must be both observant and analytical, ready to bring
biblical truth and Christian conviction to the firing line of contemporary
debate. If not, we will soon face the chaos Durant promised.
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