Category Archives: General

Book review–“The Rise of America”

“You say you want a revolution? Well, we all want to change the world” is the famous line from the Beatles’ hit “Revolution”. It also seems to be the underlying theme of the book by author John D. Diamond entitled “The Rise of America: Fighting the Next American Revolution and the Constitutional Crisis” (Dryden, New York, Authors and Artists Publishers, 2006).

The book, the first in a proposed three volume series, is another in a long line of tomes to say that the responsibility for America’s moral decline sits squarely on the shoulders of 9 people in black robes, and that if we just go back to the social mores of the 1940’s, we will engender God’s favor again. However, “Rise” posits something unique: America is in both a Constitutional and a moral crisis, and “the former has created the latter”(pg.xii)! Really? America’s moral crisis is because Americans don’t know the Constitution? Hardly.

I will be the first to agree that a large majority of Americans have virtually no idea of what the Constitution actually says versus what they have been trained to believe it says, and less idea of why knowing this “organic law” of the land is vitally important. America’s moral crisis has less to do with ignorance of the 1789 document than it does with ignorance of the Bible.

I have met the author of this work, and believe that he is truly, sincerely, concerned about the future of our Constitutional republic, our families and the free exercise of our faith. Those concerns are commendable. Sadly, to come to the conclusion that “if we just get OUR guys in the black robes on the bench everything will be hunky dorey” is too simplistic a solution to be legitimate. I may be being somewhat trenchant in this summary, so I will save further comments until I see whether future volumes dig any deeper than this current work.

All one has to do is to look at the multiple times that folks who consider themselves to be Christians, conservatives, etc. have been led down the primrose path by savvy political handlers and corrupt candidates with the lure of appointing the “right” judges to the bench to see that more of the same won’t produce a better outcome. Think O’Connor, Souter, and yes, Roberts and Alito (and yes, I am being predictive with these last two). It has become such a neat formula that political parties, when presenting voters with a presidential choice that is, to be charitable, unpalatable, often try to sell the candidate as “the only one who will guarantee the “right” kind of justices on the bench.

That would be great, only if that president didn’t have to go through the Senate Judiciary Committee in order to get such a nominee seated. It would be great that, even if the “right” justices were picked, they didn’t immediately fall to the tradition of “stare decisis” or believe that something is “settled law”, especially if that law violates the US Constitution. It would be great, if truly all that was need to turn America’s moral compass back to true north was the overturning of a few pernicious rulings.

The truth is, the work to bring this nation to a position of acknowledging and submitting to God’s rule will be messier than nominating fights in the US Senate, and those engaging in the work will have to dig to the root of the problem: antinomianism and apostacy in the Church. Culture, as one insightful historian was noted as saying, is religion externalized. Worshipping at the altar of the nine black robes won’t bring a moral revival in America; it will bring wholesale judgment on us that much more rapidly.

Book Review- Ten Books That Screwed Up The World

Book StackBy Bruce Purdy

With all of the books that I consume on an annual basis, I sometimes find it a delight to come across one that is truly enlightening. That’s not to say I don’t learn something from each of them. Just that they don’t always provide me the same level of insight. I originally bought this book because the title caught my attention. However, the more I immersed myself in the books’ content, the more I began to connect the dots of why our world is so screwed up.

Here is an author that takes on the daunting challenge of taking deep philosophical writers of the last 500 years and actually making them understandable. I don’t know about you but I find it a real intellectual battle to read (and actually understand) such authors as Descartes, Rousseau, or Nietzsche. Dr. Wiker, in this simple book, not only takes on that challenge but truly accomplishes it.

Before he gets into expounding on the philosophical errors central to his thesis, he sets a firm foundation by introducing his readers to four books which, by their titles, are most likely familiar to most of us. Let me briefly describe the principle errors that I gleaned from these literary discourses. I tried to condense one simple core concept from each chapter.

The Prince (Machiavelli)

Pragmatism – the ends justifies the means. Utilize “whatever works” as the philosophy that will allow you to govern those you rule over.

Discourse on Method (Descartes)

Reality is whatever you imagine it.

Leviathan (Hobbs)

Man, in his natural state, has no conscience. Good is defined as getting what you want; evil defined as whatever hinders that goal. Anarchy is the result. The only reason we have laws is so that we can live together without killing each other.

Discourse on the Inequity among Men (Descartes)

Civilization and morality are evil. The “noble savage” is not evil because they do not know what it means to be good. Private property enslaves us because then we have to fight off others to keep it.

There is one book from the core ten (from which the title comes from) that I just have to comment on. That is Beyond Good and Evil by Frederick Nietzsche. Most readers have heard the “infamous” phrase from this author who declared, “God is dead”. However, you need to know the context from which this statement is gleaned. Permit me to offer a short excerpt from the book.

The author, Benjamin Wiker, writes, “While many know that Nietzsche said, “God is dead,” very, very, few know what he meant. It was not a cry of triumph, but of despair uttered against an ever more trivial and dwindling civilization that Nietzsche thought was sapping humanity of all greatness, producing something just barely above the animal: the last man.”

Wiker quotes from Beyond Good and Evil, “Indeed, in its first sustained exposition of Nietzsche’s works, it is uttered by a “madman” who cries out, “Whither is God?…I will tell you. We have killed him – you and I. All of us are murderers…Is there any up or down? Are we not straying through an infinite nothing? Do we not feel the breath of empty space? Has it not become colder? Is not night continually closing in on us?…God is dead. God remains dead. And we have killed him.”

I won’t ruin your chance to glean your own insights from this great resource by telling you about the rest of this list. However, suffice it to say, you will not be disappointed if you take the time to read this book. Who knows, once you have taken the time to sit and read this book, you might actually be inclined to dive into the deep end and read the source books being referenced. I know that I will.

Milestones

milestone

From time to time God provides milestones that allow us to evaluate how well we’re doing in our stewardship responsibilities. I was recently provided with one of these milestones. But first a little background.

Four years ago my wife and I came to the decision that the Westerville School District was not providing the kind of education we wanted our 3 girls to have. Sure, they got good instruction in math, science and English. History is another story, however. One of the first things I always checked was my daughter’s history textbooks. In my children’s last year at Westerville I learned from my daughter’s history text the circumstances of the first Thanksgiving celebration. According to the text, the Pilgrims held the celebration not to give thanks to God but to the Wampanoag tribe. Thus, historical truth was swept under the rug of political correctness in order to maintain supposed religious “neutrality.” My daughters were subjected to constant but subtle attacks on the moral training my wife and I provided. In history, “social studies” and even English classes my children were subjected to training in situational ethics, moral relativism, post-modern and existential philosophies and religiously dogmatic treatment of the “forces of naturalism” as the only possible explanation for life.

Yes, I’ve heard the arguments for why I should have kept my kids in the Westerville school system. The district has many Christian teachers, my kids needed to be in the school to be salt and light, they won’t be properly “socialized” and so on. Well, it is clear that the district could have a faculty consisting of 100% Christians and it would not matter because of federal, state and district mandated policies and curricula. Most children aged 5 to 18 are not equipped with the education, training or willpower to counter the constant assault on their faiths that they encounter in the modern public education system. Most Christian kids are particularly poorly suited to standing up to teachers who single them out since they are trained to respect authority. As for socialization, I’ve never run into a homeschooler who didn’t have lots of friends, both in and out of public schools.

Recently my oldest daughter went with some of her friends (see what I mean? Plenty of socialization) to see the movie “21,” about college students who develop a card counting system to beat the odds at casino black jack tables. I told her that I had read a review of the movie which stated that the audience’s sympathy was with the students because they saw the casinos as corporate thieves and asked her what she thought. Her answer was definitely a milestone. She said, “Dad, I couldn’t root for either the students or the casinos. Both of them were dishonest. It was like watching two thieves fight over a stolen wallet. There weren’t any heroes in the movie, even though the director tried to make the students the heroes.”

My daughter showed me that my wife and I made the correct decision to pull our children out of Westerville City Schools 4 years ago. Her answer revealed not a hint of moral relativism, situational ethics or post-modernism. Unlike her public school trained contemporaries, she was able to see through a direct appeal to her emotions to the crux of the dilemma that the director was trying to convey. She was also able to see that the underlying question was not an “either/or” choice and that she was free to reject both sides as immoral.

Could she have come to the same conclusion had we looked the other way as she was trained in a system of moral thinking that is not just “morality neutral” but openly hostile and antithetical to a Christian worldview? The answer to that question can be found in examining the worldviews of the millions of Christians who have been trained in America’s public schools. In a recent survey performed by George Barna, only 9% of adult professing Christians had anything close to a Christian worldview. We think the answer to the question is “No!”

As much as I would like to, neither my wife nor I cannot take any credit for this. God planted the seed within my children. My wife and I have been entrusted by Him with the care and nurturing of that seed so that He may eventually harvest the crop and use the resultant seed to plant more. In this way does Christ grow His Church. We are merely the conduits through which He works.

Thus we have been given a milestone to measure our stewardship. Thank God!

Warning- Blatant plug ahead.

If you’re looking for good Christian worldview training, especially in the civil government realm, then consider sending your teens to Camp American

Book Review- Quiet Strength

Book Stack

QUIET STRENGTH by Tony Dungy – Tyndale House Publishers, 2007
Forward by Denzel Washington (301 pages).

It seems most Christian Sports books are full of fluff often focusing on athletic success or the powers of the athlete to overcome great odds to achieve success in some miraculous manner. Seldom do they focus on the daily challenges that all normal humans face. This often makes the successful athlete’s experience unrealistic and something to which the amateur athlete or non-athlete cannot personally relate. This is not the case with Tony Dungy’s autobiography, Quiet Strength. This book is different in that it connects the faith journey of Tony Dungy, the coach of the 2007 Super Bowl winning Indianapolis Colts, to the life experiences and challenges many of us encounter. This book is primarily about life and faith so the person who is looking for a pure sports book might be a bit disappointed. But there is plenty about football though covering Dungy’s college days as a quarterback and the lack of opportunity as a professional quarterback because of his race, his emergence as a coach, and exciting football moments in his coaching career. It is also insightful to see how Dungy is connected to many of the great coaches of all-time such as Chuck Noll and Bill Walsh, and current coaches such as Lovie Smith and Herm Edwards (two of Dungy’s closest friends). But the book is not primarily about sports.

This book’s main character is seemingly Coach Dungy, however the true central character is really Jesus Christ. Dungy clarifies how he was raised in a family of faith but that it was necessary for him to learn to trust Christ through the various trials he experienced in daily living. He describes in detail several specific challenges where he experienced the sovereign hand of God directing him, such as his college career, his professional teammates who were a testimony of faith to him, his failures as a professional athlete leading to the discovery of his profession, his failures and firings as a coach, his eventual meeting of his future wife, dealing with his son’s suicide, and his eventual winning of a Super Bowl.

Dungy’s most difficult experience was his son Jamie’s suicide. He does not sensationalize the situation, nor does he placate the voyeuristic desires of the readers who want to know the whys and hows of the suicide. Instead he elaborates on the support he found from Christian friends, his Church’s care, and on his own words at the funeral service including some stirring anecdotes about Jamie. Dungy concluded his remarks at the funeral with the following, “The last and most important thing I want to leave you with is this. Despite my having shed a few tears here, this is really a celebration in the midst of tragedy. When Jamie was five years old, he accepted Christ as his Savior. When Lauren and I would talk to him about his identity, about who he was and who he wanted to become, that was one thing we could tell him for sure, for certain—that his identity was in Christ. The apostle Paul wrote that nothing can ever separate us from the love of God that’s in Jesus Christ” (p. 255). The one constant through all these experiences is the theme that God is ultimately in control directing the events of life and that faith is the appropriate response to every situation.

Near the end of the book Dungy summarizes, “And so we press on. We press on with our memories, our hearts buoyed by a God who loves us and wants us to know him deeply. We press on with our sense that life’s not always fair. And we press on with the knowledge—and—assurance that even though we can’t see all of God’s plan, He is there, at work and in charge, loving us. We press on with the conviction that even though we don’t deserve the gifts and blessings we’ve been given, He gives them anyway. We press on with the conviction that even though we don’t deserve the gifts and blessings we’ve been given, He gives them anyway. We press on into an abundant life on earth, followed by an eternity with God” (p. 297). Dungy understands the appropriate roll of sports, something that all athletes and parents of blooming athletes should understand. He writes, “But football is just a game. It’s not family. It’s not a way of life. It doesn’t provide any sort of intrinsic meaning. It’s just football. It lasts for three hours, and when the game is over, it’s over” (p. xiv).

The book is chronologically structured, practical, and well-written. The central theme is the need to put one’s priorities in order and to consistently live out these priorities as a role model for others. Often Dungy pauses to raise great questions and usually provides his own answers. At one point pondering the issue of fame Dungy asks, “What will people remember us for? Are people’s lives better because we lived? Did we make a difference? Did we use to the fullest the gifts and abilities that God gave us? Did we give our best effort, and did we do it for the right reasons?” (p. 144). In response he states, “God’s definition of success is really one of significance—the significant difference our lives can make in the lives of others. This significance doesn’t show up in win-loss records, long resumes, or the trophies gathering on our mantels. It’s found in the hearts and lives of those we’ve come across who are in some way better because of the way we lived” (p. 144).

Reviewed by Mark Hamilton

Slow Posting Lately….

RadarYes, yes we know. It’s been a little slow here lately. Well we’re working on a boatload of stuff, but the research and writing takes some time to get right. And we know what happens when we get things wrong. Just look at the commentary from my “Real Thanksgiving” post to see what can happen when you do a hurry-up piece.

Anyway, we’re working on an analysis of Governor Strickland’s State of the State address, where the Ron Paul presidency should go from here, more police brutality and what it all means, our long awaited report from the Constitutional Coalition meeting, reports on Ohio State Senator Tim Grendell’s efforts in changing Ohio’s eminent domain law and his efforts to change an awful interstate compact with international implications to keep the southwestern states from diverting Great Lakes water, a report on HB 429 which eliminates the small business killing delivery-based state sales tax collection method in favor of the old purchase-based system (this has been an economic nightmare for small business since its proposal and inception and the state spent MILLIONS trying to get a working computer program that would at least allow a “simple” calculation. It’s a nightmare to use if any volume at all is involved).

We’re a little short-handed due to illness, travel, and the fact that only two of us (not me) lobby, or do policy analysis on a professional basis. In other words, most of us have jobs to do, businesses to run, or classes to teach (when we’re healthy).

Thank you for your patience!

A Great “First Friday” Event with Institute On The Constitution

Over this past weekend (Friday December 7, 2007) while on a trip to Annapolis MD for a family activity, I took some time to visit the folks whom I have begun to look on as my second family. I visited the offices of Michael Peroutka in Pasadena MD.

The occasion was Michael’s annual staff and friends of the Institute On The Constitution (IOTC) Christmas party (note: not a “holiday” party) and quite a party it was! Michael played guitar and was accompanied by several talented musicians and also some budding talent in the children there who played various percussion instruments. The emphasis of the party was on the coming of Jesus Christ, family and fun. We sang Christmas carols, listened to Christmas hymns sung by incredibly talented singers and received generous gifts. This celebration of Christ and family was part of the “First Friday” program run by IOTC. Oddly enough, “First Friday” happens on the first Friday of each month and features speakers on various subjects from Buddy Hanson on developing a comprehensive Christian worldview to Coach David Daubenmire. You can buy DVD or Audio copies of “First Friday” presentations and a number of very good books related to IOTC’s mission of training citizens in the US Constitution here.

I was able to catch up with friends from the old Constitution Party National Committee (pre-Tampa, before it became a pathetic derelict of a party, smashed on the rocks of pragmatism and devoid of all of its best thinkers and workers) like Scott Whiteman (there with his lovely wife and 4 sweet, beautiful and well-behaved children), other friends like John Lofton co-host of The American View radio show and IOTC’s Susan Scanlon who I’ve talked to several times on the phone but never met. I also met several folks I knew of but had not met like Pastor David Whitney, who is very involved in IOTC, having served as co-host with Michael on radio presentations on the US Constitution. Pastor Whitney has a great “pastor’s voice” and if you have listened to any of the IOTC audio materials on the Constitution, you’ve very likely heard it. It is one of those very recognizable voices.

Michael was a most kind, gracious and generous host, and I had a wonderful time and was uplifted by being there.

I thank the Lord for men like Michael Perouka, John Lofton, David Whitney, Scott Whiteman and the many contributors to the efforts of IOTC. They don’t just talk a good game they play it, and they play it to win! May God grant us more such men!

To listen to The American View radio program in central Ohio tune to WLRY FM 88.9 MHz on Saturday mornings at 11:00 AM (available online, as well). You can also get it on iTunes or at The American View website.

Important Prayer Request- Update

Prayer RequestOur Chairman, Dr. Mark Hamilton, is having liver transplant surgery on Saturday November 3, 2007 at 10:00AM.

Please pray for a successful transplant operation, for the Lord to guide the hands of the surgical team, for Mark’s quick recovery, and for comfort for the family who has lost a loved one- the liver donor.

Thanks in advance.

Too close to the fire

I recently had the pleasure of viewing again a classic movie that I had not seen in years, and I still marvel at just how current the message of the movie really is, even after 65 years.

“Keeper of the Flame” is a 1942 MGM feature starring two of Hollywood’s biggest names of the era, Spencer Tracy and Katharine Hepburn, whose cinematic chemistry is on full display and adds texture to the suspenseful tale of the mysterious death of politician Robert Forrest.

In this tale, based upon an unpublished novel that I really wish would have been, Tracy stars as renouned international reporter Stephen O’Malley and Hepburn as the widow Christine Forrest. After learning of the untimely death of Forrest, whose car crashes into a ravine after a bridge collapse, O’Malley determines to write a (hagiographic) biography of the wildly popular candidate.

As O’Malley works his way into the Forrest family compound, a mystery begins to build about the events surrounding the recent tragedy. He is faced with confusing comments from the servants he meets, and is initially rebuffed by the grieving widow as he attempts to find out more about the man behind the image. This starts his internal struggle of trying to align his feelings of admiration of the deceased with what he is learning from those closest to him, while at the same time coming to grips with his growing suspicions that the “accidental” death was anything but accidental.

Ultimately, O’Malley begins to unravel a bigger mystery, and begins to see something that he at first doesn’t want to believe: Robert Forrest, patriotic American everyman, has more affinity for tyranny than for liberty. This revelation, and his deepening relationship with Christine Forrest who begins to trust this “honest man” and reveal more about the real Robert Forrest, carries some interesting commentary about the American character, the faith of the American people, and the seductive desire for power that comes with the rejection of God’s authority.

One of my favorite scenes occurs when O’Malley is conversing with Forrest’s executive assistant (called a secretary in this early 40’s dialogue) about the assistant’s future now that his employer would no longer be requiring his services. The assistant asks if O’Malley could help him locate a new position. O’Malley refers to a firm in New York, and the assistant asks what the firm does. The answer: They manufacture “rousing affirmatives” in the form of positive public relations via manipulation of the media for their clients; these “rousing affirmatives” are the responses of the general masses of the American public to the managed message, and ultimately to the carefully crafted image of the person. The assistant reacts as if he might have been just bitten by a snake, which deepens the mystery.

Without revealing the final plot device, I will leave this review to say that the character Robert Forrest will look familiar to many, especially those who pay attention to national politics. The dialogues, one about how people need those to look up to, and another about the dangers of hero-worship replacing our due worship to God, are remarkably poignant in this postmodern era. Given that in 1942 the world was beginning to come to grips with real tyranny in the forms of many national leaders makes this movie all the more a stunning indictment of the idea of “pure democracy.”

This movie was re-released on VHS (sorry, can’t seem to find any DVD edition forthcoming) in 2000. It is available at some online outlets, but it’s slightly expensive. If you can find a copy at your local library (or don’t mind shelling out up to $30 for a VHS copy), then take the opportunity to see a rare example of Hollywood (perhaps) unintentionally speaking deep truth.

Take A Look At The New Store

We’ve upgraded our online store. Now it’s easier to join, subscribe, get books and donate to the Institute in our new and much easier to navigate store.

Please check out and check out with some of the resources we have in our stock. Checkout is through our secure Pay Pal site. You don’t have to have a Pay Pal membership-just a Visa, Master Card, Discover or American Express Card.

Let us know what you think of the new shopping experience!