I already admitted my sinfulness. I said I was a murderer, adulterer, thief, and liar in thought and in deed. I consider myself unworthy of any blessings whatsoever. How about you?
I do think this is a test of patience and tolerance. Even as I respond to your comments I am tempted to respond in a sinful manner and, I'm certain, have done so in several ways. That's the challenge I face. That's not bragging about my character. That's admitting my shortcomings. How about you?
OK, then.
Well, I am passionate about America! I've studied its history, seen what other countries are like, severed in our armed forces in war, recognize the price paid by our forefathers, learned to respect and greatly value the character of those before me, and know without doubt that God has greatly blessed this nation since its beginning. I know what we have is worth something, difficult to attain, a challenge to hold, and a duty to defend and protect.
When I compare men who've honorably served their nation - especially in the most difficult and risky times - with men who talk trash about their nation I'm must likely going to side with the men who've served honorably. I have little to no use for those who seem to find nothing but evilness in America's foundation.
I will listen to honest criticism of mistakes and wrong paths upon which we may tread - especially when it comes attached to the original ideals - but it must be the words of reason, wisdom, patriotism, etc. and not designed to attack the foundation. When one seeks to destroy the foundation then they are on a path to destroy the entire structure and such talk needs to be put down quickly and soundly for what it is. When one sees a design flaw in the most recent structural addition - or one that doesn't even fit on the foundation - then that needs to be heard.
And what is the "foundation"? Much of the debate is over capitalism, and even that is said to not necessarily be a founding principle. It's a corruption of the "democracy" we were built on. But then I've seen conservatives go as far as to attack democracy (which would touch upon the "flaw" you mentioneD), favoring what they call "Republicanism" instead. And most of the things people are criticizing about the fouing include slavery and colonialism. So when you suddenly begin talking about God's sovereignty, it sounds like you are justifying everything they did, and then you shift to the other arguments; that those things weren't really that bad, they already enslaved each other, colonization actually improved things for them in the long run, etc.
But it seems that you get to dictate that a person either agrees with you on 'the foundations", or they are an enemy tearing the whole thing down.
The title of the thread is "
in every political system". The OP's point finished the statement by saying that the top 10% in such, end up taking advantage or profitting off of everyone else.
The objection was made that no, America's system is better, and from there, that we should be thankful to God for it (which then becomes the whole debate), and not allow these "socialists" to change it into something else. But the original point was that in either system, you have a top 10% abusing everyone else. That gets completely lost, as if it were something we quickly stifle because we don't want to deal with it.
I guess that's supposed to mean that the system where that top 10% use private business to control is OK, because it was founded by God; opposed to the system where the top 10% use government. But there is no scriptural support for that. According to scripture, both are the workings of sinful men.
So the argument is with scripture, not with anyone trying to destroy your "foundations". It's bad enough when people cannot agree on how to interpret dininely inspired scripture. Your "foundations" are even more prone to different intepretation.
I'm not stuck on thinking Americans are better than other peoples nor that our forefathers were somehow the equivalent of deity. They were simply blessed by God for reasons that pleased Him and the result was and is the best political and economic system ever known on the face of the earth.
And that is your opinion, and everone who does not agree with it is not attacking your "foundations".
I think rather highly of John Calvin, have read his Institutes of the Christian Religion, tested his words against his Biblical references, and find that he understood and wrote the truth.
Well that's a whole other debate, and we used to have a whole separate forum on it, which was one of the most heated places on the board. I can see where he misread scriptures used in his election doctrine, ending up with God deliberately trapping men in damnation. For one, he adopted his theology from Augustine, which right there should raise questions. He even claimed that God gave reprobates a false faith that He would take away. You wonder how there can be any eternal security at all. Any one of us can still end up one of those "vessels of wrath", then! You just have to presume you're elect, and then try to work as hard as you can to "prove" it. Different followers interpret that differently, and then, you have those who even extended this to temporal "chosenness", with material success as the immediate proof of election; and then you have "covenant theology", which basically re-constructs the national/geneological salvation Paul was fighting so hard against.
The Puritans for one were said to believe some of that stuff. I think it is a dnagerous doctrine, because I'm not just looking at my "blessings" from it and saying "too bad for everyone else; that's just what God wants". I tend to put myself in the other person's place, and realize that there are some people I would not have wanted to have been. I call it "
benefit vs expense". In the way things in life work out, some are beneficiaries, and some are expendees. I associate this "unfairness" with
the fallen nature of the world. Many people try to say it is from God, because they are on the benefit end, and in Calvinism, it extends into eternal salvation as well. I think that is a bit too presumptuous; especially as everyone ultimately
admits they cannot know how God works these things. But the concept of "sovereignty", coupled with "unknowability" always ends up being used to justify an unfairness in the interpreter's benefit, and knowing the way sinful man is; I question that, especially when it comes down to a matter of people's interpretations of both scripture and real life events.
You're pretty protective of your rights to not be controlled, and I think others have that right as well. Don't expect anyone to believe your ideology, or they are enemies of God's sovereignty, or the nation (which I see from this
are still being tied together).
You know what, EricB, I think perhaps you consider yourself better than the rest of us because you just can't seem to get it into your head that I'm not claiming such a thing, don't believe such a thing, and don't think that represents the true character behind the founding of our nation.
No, don't just try to throw that back at me. I'm not the one saying any group or system I identify with is any "better" than anyone else; let along trying to use God as the mascot to prove it. You're side tends to project your mindet on me; not the other way around.
You bet I recognize my sin debt and you bet I'm real glad that Jesus Christ paid it on my behalf. Today is a great day to take special note of that!
The writings of the patriots I've posted in this thread clearly demonstrate the humility that they felt about themselves toward their creator and savior. They knew where they stood and how blessed they were.
But what I see in many places is people who humble themselves before God, but
not before man. They become intolerant and abusive of them, and sometimes downright murderous. Hence, the reference to Calvin and Luther. (And it seems to tie in part to the whole "elect vs reprobate" concept. God hates them; so should we). Scripture clearly tells us in several places that is a wrong attitude. If you really acknowledge your sinfulness, then don't treat other [fellow] sinners those ways; and that includes accusing them of evils such as attacking the nation or denying God's sovereignty.
Everyone in America benefited from its founding as did our neighbors and eventually other nations around the world as well. We have participated in the liberation of countless of oppressed people. We have righted many wrongs. We have built a nation where every man stands equal before the law and has the opportunity exercise equal liberty. Not all things were concluded at the first instance but eventually they were and not from external force but for the force permitted within by the very structure that was established.
And the problem here is that you are looking at it
collectively or
corporately, rather than in terms of people as
individual souls. Because the descendant of a slave or native conquest might benefit 200 years later, that does not justify the expense of the slave or conquered person himself. They count too. Things hance changed a lot in God's economy since the Israalites and the Canaanites. We can't keep using that as the model for how God exercises His sovereighty. To insist so is to basically treat the Cross as if it never existed.
So you can see no possiblity of a person being thankful for his benefit, but nevertheless seeing what was done before as wrong, which God may have used for the later benefit, but nevertheless was still sin. They have to say it was
all right, and
all God's doing, in order to not be accused of "attacking the country".