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Hope for the Dead
by
Andrew P. Napolitano
Recently
by Andrew P. Napolitano: Can
the Government Force You To Eat Broccoli?
What does freedom
have to do with rising from the dead?
When America
was in its infancy and struggling to find a culture and frustrated
at governance from Great Britain, the word most frequently uttered
in speeches and pamphlets and letters was not safety or taxes or
peace; it was freedom.
Two acts of
Parliament broke the bonds with the mother country irreparably.
The first was the Stamp Act, which was enforced by British soldiers
writing their own search warrants and rummaging through the personal
possessions of colonists looking to see whether they had purchased
the government's stamps. The second was the imposition of a tax
to pay for the Church of England, which the colonists were forced
to pay, no matter their religious beliefs.
The Stamp Act
assaulted the right to be left alone in the home, and the tax for
the Church of England assaulted the freedom to choose to support
one's own means of worship. The two taxes together caused many colonists
to realize they needed to secede from England and form their own
country in which freedom would be protected by the government, not
assaulted by it.
Today it seems
the power of the government continues to expand and the freedom
of the individual continues to shrink. The loss of freedom comes
in many forms. Sometimes it is direct and profound, as when the
government stops you from doing what you formerly had the freedom
to do – like choose your own doctor and your own health care insurance
or choose not to have health care insurance. Sometimes it is more
subtle – like when the government prints money to pay its bills
and, as a result, all the money you already have loses much of its
value. And sometimes the government steals freedom without you knowing
it – like when federal agents write their own search warrants, authorizing
themselves to learn of your computer use or medical or banking records;
and they never tell you what they've done.
Freedom is
the ability of every person to exercise his own free will, rather
than be subject to the will of someone else. Free will is the essence
of humanity, and humanity is God's greatest gift. When the government
affirmatively takes away freedom, the government violates the natural
law; it prevents us from having and utilizing the means to the truth.
Your moral ability to exercise your free will to seek the truth
is your natural right, and the government may only morally interfere
with the exercise of that right when you have used fraud or force
to interfere with the exercise of someone else's natural rights.
We know from
the events 2,000 years ago, which Christians commemorate and celebrate
this week, that freedom is the essential means to discover and unite
with the truth. And to Christians, the personification, the incarnation,
the perfect manifestation of truth is the Son of God.
On the first
Holy Thursday, Jesus attended a traditional Jewish Passover Seder.
Catholics believe that at that last supper, He performed two miracles
so that we could stay united to Him. He transformed ordinary bread
and wine into His own body, blood, soul and divinity, and He empowered
His disciples and their successors to do the same.
On the first
Good Friday, the government executed Him for claiming to be the
Son of God. He had the freedom to reject this horrific event, but
He exercised His freedom so that we might know the truth. The truth
He manifested is that His acceptance of the destruction of His body
would demonstrate to us that we can liberate our souls from the
slavery of sin and our free wills from the oppression of the government.
Three days later, on Easter, that manifestation was complete when
He triumphed over death by rising from the dead.
Easter is the
linchpin of human existence: With it, life is worth living, no matter
its cost or pain. Without it, life is meaningless, no matter its
fleeting joys or triumphs. Easter has a meaning that is both incomprehensible
and simple. It is incomprehensible that a human being had the freedom
to rise from the dead. It is simple because that human being was
and is God. Easter means that there is hope for the dead. And if
there's hope for the dead, there's hope for the living.
But, like the
colonists who fought the oppression of the king, we the living can
only achieve our hopes if we have freedom. And that requires a government
that protects freedom, not one that shrinks it.
Do we have
such a government today?
Reprinted
with the author's permission.
April 5, 2012
Andrew P. Napolitano
[send him mail],
a former judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey, is the senior
judicial analyst at the Fox News Channel, and the former host of “FreedomWatch”
on the Fox Business Network. His latest book is It
is Dangerous to be Right When the Government is Wrong: The Case for
Personal Freedom.
Copyright
© 2012 Andrew P. Napolitano
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