-Caveat Lector-

http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig/snyder2.html

>>>Whoever has the address of the person who wrote this,

> You might
> well find yourselves fighting against God. By the way, in case you
> aren't familiar with this Book (most leftists never read it anyway)
> this comes from a MUCH higher authority than me...so it you have
> issues with it take it up with the author.

you might want to forward this to him. A<>E<>R <<<

}}}>Begin
Words
              We Do Not Want To Hear
by
              Jeff Snyder
Now,
              in the aftermath of the attack on the World Trade
Center and Pentagon,
              when the President is preparing for a mighty war, when
over 80 percent
              of Americans support him and want blood, whether in the
name of
              retribution or justice, now is the time to repeat the
words we do
              not want to hear.
Ye
                have heard that it hath been said, An eye for an eye,
and a tooth
                for a tooth:
But
                I say unto you, That ye resist not evil: but
whosoever shall smite
                thee on thy right cheek, turn to him the other also.
. . .
Ye
                have heard that it hath been said, Thou shalt love
thy neighbor,
                and hate thine enemy.
But
                I say unto you, Love your enemies, bless them that
curse you,
                do good to them that hate you, and pray for them
which despitefully
                use you, and persecute you;
That
                you may be the children of your Father which is in
heaven: for
                he maketh his sun to rise on the evil and on the
good, and sendeth
                rain on the just and on the unjust.
~
              Matthew 5: 38-39; 43-45.
This
              is all you need to know if you want to do what is right in this 
situation. We should not wage war on terrorists or the Taliban,
              nor try to bring them to justice. We should, however, pray for them
              and do good to them.
In
              the 1800’s a small number of men, including the abolitionist William 
Lloyd Garrison, spent a large part of their lives working out the implications of this 
teaching and trying to spread the word to their fel
low man. Much of this good work might have been lost or buried
              in oblivion but for the efforts of one of them, Leo Tolstoy, who
              gathered it together in making his own case, still available in
              the much ignored, The Kingdom of God is Within You (1894).
According
              to Tolstoy, the meaning of Christ’s command to "resist not evil" is 
plain enough: it is wrong to use force or violence
              to oppose evil. Since Christ’s command is unconditional, there
              are no exceptions. Not for a "just" war, not for retribution,
              not for justice, not even for self-defense at the time of the assault.
              Further, the clear implication is also that it is wrong to participate
              in any enterprise that employs force or violence against our fellow
              man (even if only to oppose evil). Christ’s command thus renders
              government illegitimate. The Christian who follows Christ’ teaching
              in the Sermon on the Mount, then, will not be a soldier, or participate
              in any of the institutions of government, the courts or elections,
              and will not have any recourse to the authorities, the police or
              the law.
Christ’s
              teaching forever severs the question of what is good or evil, just
              or unjust, from the question of the use of force, and pronounces
              the latter wrong and evil under all circumstances. Regardless of
              what is right, good or just, it is wrong, always, to use force or
              violence to establish, uphold, vindicate or maintain the right,
              the good or the just, and it is wrong to use force to punish or
              "reform" the wicked.
Instead,
              the Christian "resists not." As Tolstoy notes, "To
              submit means to prefer suffering to using force. And to prefer suffering
              to using force means to be good, or at least less wicked than those
              who do unto others what they would not like themselves."1
Tolstoy
              musters many arguments to demonstrate that Christ’s teaching is
              the only true and lasting foundation of peace and brotherhood among men, 
and to explain why violence cannot eliminate evil, but only
              beget more violence. One of his more powerful arguments concerns
              the impossibility of settling disputes by recourse to violence when
              there is no universally accepted, unquestioned criterion for 
distinguishing
              good from evil. In the absence of such criterion, the men who are
              the objects of our violence do not perceive or accept their acts
              as evil and do not experience the violence directed at them as just
              punishment for their deeds, but simply as unjust violence and a
              fresh insult that, in turn, prompts them to respond in kind. Thus,
              we can expect that a counterattack upon the terrorists who attacked
              the World Trade Center and the Pentagon and those who harbor them
              will kindle greater hatred in the Muslim world against us.
Tolstoy
              was no pie-eyed idealist blind to the nature of man. Although he
              quotes other advocates of non-resistance who argue on prudential grounds 
that refraining from the use of violence is, in the long
              run, a safer course than using violence to suppress evil, since
              it gives least occasion for the creation of ill-will, he did not
              maintain that those who adhered to Christ’s command would soon cease
              being the object of oppression or violence, or would be but rarely
              the objects of such acts.
Indeed,
              Tolstoy spends much effort addressing one of the strongest criticisms
              of non-resistance, namely, that without government, the wicked will
              oppress the good. It requires a strong disposition to follow Tolstoy
              here for, to his everlasting credit, he does not endeavor to support
              Christ’s teaching by prudential appeals to man’s rational self-interest
              through promises that adhering to Christ’s teaching will soon make
              life easy or better for men, nor pretend that eliminating government
              will end man’s inhumanity to man.
The
                champions of government assert that without it the wicked will oppress 
and outrage the good, and that the power of the government enables the good to resist 
the wicked.
But
                in this assertion the champions of the existing order of things
                take for granted the proposition they want to prove. When they
                say that except for the government the bad would oppress the good,
                they take it for granted that the good are those who are the present
                time are in possession of power, and the bad are those who are
                in subjection to it. But this is just what wants proving.
The
                good cannot seize power, nor retain it; to do this men must love 
power. And love of power is inconsistent with goodness; but quite consistent with the 
very opposite qualities – pride, cunning,
                cruelty.
Without
                the aggrandizement of self and the abasement of others, without
                hypocrisies and deceptions, without prisons, fortresses, executions,
                and murders, no power can come into existence or be maintained.
                . . . .
.
                . . ruling means using force, and using force means doing to him
                to whom force is used, what he does not like and what he who uses
                the force would certainly not like done to himself. Consequently
                ruling means doing to others what we would not they should do
                unto us, that is, doing wrong.2
Since
              the good, by definition, cannot and will not wield power, "The wicked 
will always dominate the good, and will always oppress them."3 Moreover, in holding up 
the specter of imagined future dangers of
              violence and oppression by others, those who claim we need the 
government’s
              protection ignore or discount the magnitude of the actual existing
              violence and oppression already practiced by their own government
              against its own people and others. Tolstoy concludes that government’s
              ceasing to exist and to provide its "protection" may result in a change 
in the men who subject the good to oppression and violence,
              but will not, ultimately, change the overall lot of the good. Thus,
              good men who see the true nature of their government and its actions
              cannot be terrorized by specters of the harm that will befall them
              in government’s absence, because they realize that they already are, 
ever have been and ever will be oppressed and exploited by
              the wicked. A change in this state of affairs will come about only
              after most men have learned, through generations of bitter and futile  
experience, the inability of violence to put an end to evil, and
              to accept the truth of Christ’s counsel.
Tolstoy
              also takes strong issue, based on the evidence provided by history,
              with the belief that it is possible to subdue a nation, or improve it, 
with violence: "And indeed how could nations be subjugated
              by violence who are led to by their whole education, their traditions,
              and even their religion to see the loftiest virtue in warring with
              their oppressors and fighting for freedom? . . . To exterminate
              such nations . . . by violence is possible, and indeed is done,
              but to subdue them is impossible."4
Much
              of Tolstoy’s energy in Kingdom of God is directed at answering those who 
claim that Christ’s teaching cannot mean what it plainly says, or that it is too 
idealistic for men, because it does not
              agree with how men want to live, or would require too great a change
              in "the existing order of things." Curiously, although
              Tolstoy was apparently unaware of his work, the Danish philosopher,
              Soren Kierkegaard, often dealt with this characteristic response
              to God’s unconditional commands.
True
                worship of God consists quite simply in doing God’s will.
But
                this sort of worship was never to man’s taste. That which in all 
generations men have been busied about, that in which theological learning originated, 
becomes many, many disciplines, widens out
                to interminable prolixity, that upon which and for which thousands
                of priests and professors live . . . is the contrivance of another
                sort of divine worship, which consists in . . . having one’s own
                will, but doing it in such a way that the name of God, the invocation
                of God, is brought into conjunction with it, whereby man thinks
                he is assured against being ungodly – whereas, alas, precisely
                this is the most aggravated sort of ungodliness.
An
                example. A man is inclined to want to support himself by killing 
people. Now he sees from God’s Word that this is not permissible,
                that God’s will is, ‘Thou shalt not kill.’ ‘All right,’ he thinks,
                ‘ but that sort of worship doesn’t suit me, neither would I be
                an ungodly man.’ What does he do then? He gets hold of a priest
                who in God’s name blesses the dagger. Yes, that’s something different.5
Kierkegaard
              characterized man’s unbelieving or unwilling response to an unconditional
              demand of the Divine as man’s "sensibleness." It is a reaction that many 
who staunchly adhere to the Bill of Rights will readily recognize. For example, 
scarcely is the command, "the
              right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed"
              uttered, before learned law professors and judges hasten to assure
              us that the words, despite their unconditional and categorical form,
              do not prevent the state from enacting "reasonable regulations"
              in the interest of public safety. All sensibleness consists in this
              refusal to accept God’s unconditioned command as the binding ideal
              that distinguishes right from wrong, to build maneuvering room into
              it so that we can still think well of ourselves while pursuing our
              own will. According to Kierkegaard, it is human sensibleness that
              believes that
To
                require the unconditioned of human beings is basically madness,
                a ludicrous exaggeration that, like all extremes, as any sensible
                person easily sees, takes revenge by producing an effect the very
                opposite of what it aims at. All human wisdom consists in this
                glorious and golden principle: to a certain degree, there is a
                limit, or in this ‘both-and,’ and ‘also’; the unconditioned is
                madness. The mark of mature earnestness is precisely this: it
                insists that the requirement shall be of such a nature that a
                person can with pleasure and satisfaction amply meet it though steady 
effort. Obviously, what none of has done none of us, of
                course, can do; and if none of us can do it, then the requirement
                must be changed according to what we have shown we can do by having
                done it – more cannot be required. Therefore, we insist on a 
Christianity
         that can be brought into harmony with all the rest of our life,
                corresponding to the change that has occurred in the human race
                through increasing enlightenment and culture. . . .
Who
                will deny that the world has changed! For the better? Well, that 
remains a question. . . . But it is eternally certain that nothing
                so offends sensibleness as the unconditioned, and . . . the 
immediately obvious mark of this is that sensibleness will never unconditionally 
acknowledge any requirement but continually claims itself to be

                the one that declares what kind of requirement is to be made.6
If
              you are like me, it is sensibleness you will feel welling up within
              you when you read Christ’s words to "resist not evil."
              It is sensibleness that will question whether they really mean what
              they seem to say, that will hasten to assure you that there are,
              there must be, just causes for which violence and resistance are
              righteous, that will not be willing to accept that we cannot avenge
              our murdered citizens, or bring the men responsible to justice,
              believing that somewhere, somehow, there must be maneuvering room
              in Christ’s command to love one’s enemies sufficient to kill them.

It
              is sensibleness that renders Tolstoy’s work an obscure volume relegated
              to the status of a curiosity penned by a great novelist who should
              have stuck to writing fiction. People do not try to answer his arguments.
              They are just sensibly ignored. When the Massachusetts preacher,
              Adin Ballou, died in 1890, after spending fifty years of his life 
writing about and preaching non-resistance based on Christ’s teaching, his obituary in 
the Religio-Philosophical Journal made no
              mention of this his life’s work. Sensible, surely, for why malign
              the man by pointing out how much of his life was spent in foolishness,
              and why disturb readers by raising concerns over what can only be
              an improper interpretation of the meaning of Christ’s command?
Similarly,
              you are not likely to hear Matthew 5 : 38-45 preached this, the
              next or any other weekend soon, though if the Christian religion were 
supposed to have relevance to men’s lives, it would appear
              to be timely.
For
              those who can accept and have the courage to pursue it, however, the 
standard has been laid down. While we may admit (I admit) that we do not (I do not) 
feel Christian love for our enemies, we can
              at least partially act as required: we can refuse to go to war;
              we can refuse to try to bring the perpetrators to justice. And if
              we cannot quite bring ourselves to heed Christ’s counsel in full,
              perhaps we can at least take George Washington’s advice to avoid
              foreign entanglements, bring our troops home from across the globe,
              stop selling arms to foreign nations and cease meddling in foreign
              affairs. Not, be it noted, because we hope or believe that we will
              thereby gain release from further terrorist assaults. Those who
              destroyed the World Trade Center hate us, and it is possible that
              nothing we can do will change that, and that they will not stop
              until they exhaust themselves in their hate. If it is to be done,
              it must be done only because it is the right thing to do. And this
              would be a good start: to not go to war.
There
              is one other consideration that ought compel those of us who believe
              in God to give this matter the thought it deserves. That is the 
knowledge that, although God is longsuffering and of great mercy,
              He by no means clears the guilty, but visits the iniquity of the
              fathers upon the children, and the children’s children, unto the
              third and fourth generation.7 President
              Bush is warning us that this war will not be over soon. But I wonder
              how far his vision extends.
Leo
                  Tolstoy, The
                  Kingdom of God Is Within You (1894), translated by Constance
                  Garnett, Nebraska University Press, ©1984, at p. 243.
Ibid,
                  at pp. 241 – 242.
Ibid,
                  at p. 244.
Ibid,
                  at 259.
Soren
                  Kierkegaard, Attack
                  Upon "Christendom" (1854-1855), translated
                  by Walter Lowrie, Princeton University Press, © 1944, tenth
                  printing, 1991, p. 219.
Soren
                  Kierkegaard, For
                  Self-Examination and Judge For Yourself!, translated
                  by Howard V. Hong and Edna H. Hong, Princeton University Press,
                  © 1990, pp. 154 – 155.
Exodus
                  34 : 7; Numbers 14 : 18.
September
              21, 2001
Jeff
              Snyder [send him mail] is
              an attorney who works in mid-town Manhattan. His
website is www.nationofcowards.net.
Copyright
              2001 LewRockwell.com

End<{{{
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