
I grew up in an inexpensive
house. I knew we were poor when we
visited my Uncle Dave. They lived in a
beautiful two-story home with immaculate furnishings. The style of our furniture was Early
Goodwill. My father and a friend built
an addition onto the kitchen. At the
time, it looked big, but it didn’t look so big when I came back as an adult.
Many of you may have seen the
Canadian comedy show, “Red Green.” Red
fixed everything with duct tape. My dad
fixed everything with Liquid Nails. It
often didn’t look that pretty, but was sometimes functional.
The house had a forbidden
corner. It was where a water pump once
stood, so the floor sagged in that corner.
It wasn’t good for anything except storing bathroom linens. My dad would say, “You kids don’t get too
close to that corner, you might fall in!”
We were scared to get near it, except to retrieve a bath towel and wash
cloth. I would stand at some distance
and reach as far as I could without falling into that chasm where I would
disappear for all eternity. If you ever
dropped any change in the kitchen, it would probably roll down there, and the
rescue of that coin wasn’t worth the danger.
Fast forward to the present. We bought a house that had problems we
weren’t aware of. The house is not
level! Our ground is clay near a drainage
ditch. When it rains, the clay acts like
a sponge, expanding the foundation.
Now, if a friend falls indoors, we only have to go to the Northeast
corner of the room to find where they rolled.
Well, it’s not that bad, but you get the point.
FOUNDATIONS ARE IMPORTANT for
houses and for nations. Friday is
Independence Day in the U.S. Our nation has certain foundational principles and
ideas. Those principles came from four basic sources. The four major
influences were ancient thought, Enlightenment philosophy, the English
tradition, and Protestant Christianity. (1)
Ancient world thinkers and their failures taught the Founders a lot when
constructing the American republic. (2) Enlightenment
thinkers emphasized that the people should rule themselves through a limited
government that would protect natural rights and secure the liberties of the
people. (3) The British protected basic rights, such as the right to
trial by jury, property rights, and no taxation without consent. The government
would be limited, especially the monarchy. (4) The writings
associated with the Protestant Reformation emphasized individual
liberty from civil and religious oppression. Protestant ideas, based on Scripture,
of resistance against tyranny were generally consistent with the other three
strains of republican thought. (For further reading on this, click here.)
If you start to erode any of these
four building blocks of the foundation of America, it causes instability. If enough is chipped away, the nation can
fall. The one area that has most eroded is
the Biblical principles because they are the easiest to attack and misinterpret. We have gone on a witch hunt for Christian
teachings that were used to build our original foundation. After all, it was Jesus who told the story
about the foolish man who built his house on a foundation of sand. The winds and rain came, and the house was
destroyed. The wise man built his house
upon a rock, and it withstood all that came against it. (Matthew 7:24-27). We know how we built our foundation. If we let it erode, we only have ourselves to
blame.
As we consider these things, let’s be thankful for the wisdom of our founding fathers. They gave us a great start. It is our responsibility to preserve it.
HAPPY INDEPENDENCE DAY!
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