For Billy. :-)  Hope he and his computer rejoin us soon... :-(

http://www.doggieheadtilt.com/graphic-novel-part-8/

Graphic Novel (pt. 8)

In 1999, NASA was forced to destroy the Mars Climate Orbiter as the craft 
entered the Martian atmosphere. The mission unraveled because engineers were 
talking past one another. The same-sex marriage debate is suffering the same 
fate. The country is unraveling as we talk past one another. What’s the 
solution?

You might not remember the Mars Orbiter incident. NASA engineers do. A problem 
emerged as the craft began its orbit insertion into the Martian atmosphere at 
an altitude of about 57 km. It was supposed to commence insertion at 140–150 
km. Atmospheric friction at an altitude of 57 km would disintegrate the craft. 
NASA engineers had only one choice: destroy the $125 million spacecraft.

The culprit – discovered later – was that engineers were using two different 
sets of programming language to measure the strength of thruster firing. At the 
Jet Propulsion Lab they used metric measurements (newtons), while at Lockheed 
Martin in Denver, engineers used English units (pounds). The mission unraveled 
because the engineers were working from two different reference points.

In his new book Coming Apart, Charles Murray says American culture is 
“unraveling.” America’s four founding virtues are faltering. “Two of them are 
virtues in themselves – industriousness and honesty – and two of them refer to 
institutions through which right behavior is nurtured – marriage and 
religion.”1 Murray assigns most of the blame for this unraveling to America’s 
elites – the “new upper class” – who “barely recognize their underlying 
American kinship” with the founding virtues. They have a different reference 
point. To see it, you have to first see the founders’ point of reference.

Murray, an agnostic, recites Catholic theologian Michael Novak’s distillation 
of the American experiment in self-government. Liberty is the object of the 
Republic. Liberty needs virtue. Virtue among people is impossible without 
religion.2 Murray then quotes Tocqueville: “Religion in America takes no direct 
part in the government of society, but it must be regarded as the first of 
their political institutions; for if it does not impart a taste for freedom, it 
facilitates the use of it.” The founders’ point of reference was essentially 
the ancient Judeo-Christian religion. Religion (“to rebind”) had the power to 
bind people to an unchanging standard of virtue required for sustaining liberty.

The founders did not however establish America as a “Christian nation.” There 
was no “sacred” public square where the Christian faith received preferential 
treatment. Nor was there a “naked” public square, where people can hold to a 
faith, but only if it is relegated to the private realm. The founders knew this 
would marginalize religious belief. Rather, they found limited agreement in a 
third option – a “civil” public square in which citizens of all religious 
faiths, or none, engage one another in the continuing democratic discourse. 
Today, we’re losing our limited agreement. If you follow history, you’re 
familiar with how this happened.

In the late 1800s, Darwinism and Freudianism reframed American views on life, 
love, and liberty. In Darwinism, human life matures – evolves – from lower to 
higher life forms. In Freudianism, liberty is unbounded sexual freedom. These 
two paradigms became legal precedent in 1958 when the U. S. Supreme Court 
conjured that there are “evolving standards of decency that mark the progress 
of a maturing society.” This is why many elites sound mature when they describe 
their views on same-sex marriage as “evolving.” But this makes a mockery of 
religion, removing it as a binding force for sustaining virtue and liberty and 
relegating it to personal preference.

In this atmosphere, the American experiment is at risk of disintegration. For 
eons, there were no dissenting voices among Jews and Christians regarding 
marriage being defined as a heterosexual male-female union. Jewish writers, 
including Philo and Josephus, speak with one voice regarding homosexual 
practice as being “contrary to nature.” Dr. Robert Gagnon and his research team 
surveyed the Jewish cultural milleu in the period of time preceding Jesus and 
concluded “early Judaism was unanimous in its rejection of homosexual conduct. 
We are unaware of any dissenting voices.”3 This was the founders’ understanding 
of marriage, an institution that – along with religion – was necessary for 
industriousness and honesty. In binding marriage to a specific religious 
reference point, they weren’t being homophobic. The founders were acting as 
students of history.

In ancient Rome, as homosexuality increased, industriousness declined.4 This is 
one of several reasons why the stakes in the same-sex debate are higher than 
one’s sexual preferences. Since I started writing about human sexuality several 
weeks ago, many friends have asked what I believe about same-sex marriage. It 
doesn’t matter what I believe about same-sex marriage. History warns that if 
the institutions of religion and marriage devolve, industriousness and honesty 
collapse. However, noticing this subtle shift requires thinking institutionally 
rather than individual preferences – not a strong suit for most Americans, 
including Christians. The stakes in this debate are literally whether the 
American experiment in self-government will go forward. As Charles Murray 
points out, the behaviors of industriousness and honesty are already 
collapsing. Americans sense it. Only 10 percent of them trust America’s 
political leaders to tell the truth.

The lesson from the Mars Climate Orbiter catastrophe is that truth is 
unattainable when working from different reference points. If America’s 
cultural elites continue pimping religion to promote personal positions on 
sexuality, we’ll keep talking past one another. The culture will continue 
unraveling and the American experiment will continue on a course most likely 
leading to fiery destruction.

_____________________
1 Charles Murray, Coming Apart: The State of White America, 1960-2010 (New 
York: Crown Publishing Group, 2012), p. 130.
2 Michael Novak, On Two Wings: Humble Faith and Common Sense at the American 
Founding (San Francisco: Encounter Books, 2002), p. 34.
3 Robert Gagnon, The Bible And Homosexuality: Texts and Hermeneutics 
(Nashville: Abington, 2001), p. 160.
4 C.f. Rodney Stark’s The Rise of Christianity.


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