Where Are the Christian Churches When We Need Them Most?
by Mark R. Crovelli
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One of the
most important functions of religious faith, observed
St. Thomas Aquinas, is to allow people of limited intelligence
and people with limited time for study to know important truths
about God without having to investigate them personally. After all,
few ordinary people are in a position to spend years rationally
investigating the tenets of their faith, so, if they are to have
any chance at finding Truth during their lives, they need to have
it prepackaged for them to swallow on faith alone with the assistance
of the Church.
This infinitely
wise observation is just as true today as it was in the thirteenth
century, and the Christian churches would do well to remember it
during these especially turbulent political and economic times.
In fact, with the world’s masses aflame with revolutionary ideas
at the very same time that governments are going bankrupt, the need
has never been greater for the Christian churches to remind their
unthinking, gullible, and emotional flocks of what is true and just
and good. If they fail to do this, and right quick, there
is a very real and dangerous possibility that the Christian masses
will get swept away by exciting and profoundly immoral ideas that
will doom Western civilization for the foreseeable future.
Specifically,
the Christian masses desperately need to have the foundations of
Christian ethics beaten into their dense skulls to keep them on
the right path during these hours of intellectual temptation. Since
many of the ideas floating around the world right now are both alluring
and morally dangerous, the Christian masses need a simple set of
criteria by which to judge what is right and what is wrong. Fortuitously,
God was provident enough to provide Christians (and Jews and Muslims)
with a list of ten
moral criteria so undemanding that even the most intellectually
challenged among them should be able to determine right from wrong.
The list contains
two ethical commandments of especial importance today because of
the extreme danger that the Christian masses will unthinkingly violate
them. The first and most important is that it is wrong for Christians
to kill people. One would think that the Christian masses would
have been able to memorize and abide by this simple proscription
in the two thousand years that Christians have been walking the
Earth, but apparently the density of the mass
man’s mind continues to defy penetration. Christians in recent
years are definitely no
less likely to kill than any other peoples, and the danger is
that they will kill even more frequently in coming years as economic
and political conditions deteriorate further.
Thus, the Christian
churches must intervene right now to remind the Christian
masses that it is wrong to kill human beings and it is wrong for
other people to kill in one’s name. The Christian flocks are increasingly
angry, frightened, and impoverished by the political classes’ extravagances,
and the temptation will only grow to take out their frustrations
on other groups of people, such as the wealthy, Muslims, immigrants,
or even their own neighbors. This is all the more true today, when
it is so easy to aid in killing other people simply by voting. The
majority of Christians do not need to bloody their own hands by
shooting
unarmed women and old men, for example, but they do irreparably
stain their consciences by supporting such killings and paying for
them with their tax money. And let’s not forget about the hordes
of professional "Christian" killers (i.e., "soldiers")
that are presently plying their bloody trade in the three immoral
wars that the supposedly "Christian" West is prosecuting
in the Middle East.
The task of
reigning in Christian killing before it gets even
more out of hand will be impossible, however, unless the Christian
churches simultaneously reign in their flocks’ nationalistic sentiments.
Like most peoples today, Christians have come to worship their own
governments with religious fervor, a
serious Christian sin in its own right. They thus do not view
killings by "their" government soldiers and police as
morally analogous to killings by rapists and robbers. Unless this
nationalistic moral blindness is corrected by the Christian churches,
or
by human reason, by emphasizing that the lines drawn on maps
identifying different countries are completely morally irrelevant,
Christians will never curtail their killing, because they will inevitably
view government-sponsored killing of "other people" as
somehow morally acceptable. Without help from the Christian churches,
the unthinking Christian masses will continue to value, not human
life as such, but their "own" people’s lives, and to hell
with the rest of the people of the world.
The Christian
churches must also urgently emphasize that Christians should not
torture, imprison, beat, or otherwise physically abuse other human
beings. Nor should they countenance such depraved activities done
in their name by their governments. This proscription follows
directly from the prohibition against killing, because to
put a man in a cage deprives him of his life and dignity during
that time just as surely as killing him would, and torturing him
makes him envy the dead, which is worse than actually killing
him. It should go without saying that Christians ought not to do
these things or accept that they be done in their name with their
tax monies, but the Christian masses keep approving of them nonetheless.
This will only increase as political and economic turmoil increases,
and the Christian churches will be morally responsible to a certain
extent if they do not do all they can to head it off now.
The second
important ethical precept that the unthinking Christian masses urgently
need to be reminded of is God’s prohibition against stealing. It
is unequivocally wrong for Christians to take property from other
people without their consent, and it is equally wrong for them
to encourage or to pay other people (e.g., tax collectors or mob
strongmen) to do the same thing. Like the prohibition against killing,
God’s
prohibition against stealing is about as clear as man could possible
desire: "Thou shalt not steal." One might be tempted
to think that the Christian masses would be able to comprehend something
as simple as that, but apparently God vastly overestimated the mental
abilities of His progeny. The Christian masses accept stealing,
by governments in particular, just as much as any other people,
and they tend to particularly approve of stealing from (i.e., taxing)
the rich. They apparently think that it is morally acceptable for
their government to take money from rich people by force just because
Jesus was poor and defended poor people. The fact that Jesus’ own
Father explicitly forbade them to steal – even from rich people
– does not seem to enter into their moral reasoning. The Christian
churches desperately need to undermine this invidious tendency before
the increasingly impoverished and desperate Christian masses fall
on their rich prey with a vengeance. Failure to head this tendency
off will doom Western civilization for the foreseeable future, as
the rich take flight with their capital to places that actually
care about God’s Commandments. The loss of this valuable economic
capital at a time when it is most needed to rebuild after the government
created recession will send the Christian West back to the stone
age.
Along
a similar vein, there is an urgent need for the Christian churches
to remind their mindless flocks that it is immoral to counterfeit
money. It is just as wrong for me to print fake money to buy your
car, for example, as it would be for me to steal it from you outright.
The need for the Christian churches to emphasize this ethical precept
does not, however, stem from a danger that the Christian masses
will resort to the printing press themselves. Instead, the danger
lies in the likelihood that the Christian masses will have their
entire life savings and livelihoods wiped out by profoundly immoral
economic idiots
working in collusion with government who believe that prosperity
grows on trees. Again, one would think that the Christian masses
would already be aware that counterfeiting money is sickeningly
immoral and economically destructive, but Christians of all stripes
have done virtually nothing to stand up to this form of robbery.
This testifies, yet again, to the appalling stupidity of the Christian
masses – even when they themselves are being victimized, and the
desperate need for the Christian herd to be morally guided by the
Christian churches.
One hopes that
the Christian churches will begin to lay seeds in the minds of their
followers that will counteract these deadly immoral trends. With
economic conditions deteriorating and political "leaders"
plumbing new moral depths, the need has never been greater for the
Christian churches to lead their herds back to the ethical path
laid by Jesus and His Father. And that means, first and foremost,
that the Christian churches must do their best to stop Christians
from killing and robbing other people. One shudders to think that
the Christian Churches even need to be reminded of something as
fundamental as this.
May
20, 2011
Mark R.
Crovelli [send him mail]
writes from Denver, Colorado.
Copyright
© 2011 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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