There are several replies possible to the  article that follows. What is 
comes down to, however, are two  observations:
(1) We need far more than a simplistic understanding of  our Christian past 
since it also was ecumenical in many ways, and sometimes  embodied 
philosophical principles, and
(2) what are you going to do about it?
 
"Do about it" means exactly that. What kind of thoughtful  action will you 
take? This necessarily has to mean far more than simply voting  for 
candidates to better represent your interests or writing letters to the  
editor. 
Those are good things to do but are hardly sufficient to the  objective.
 
The article is too simplistic even if the author's heart  is in the right 
place.
Mostly of all, what are you going to do about it? How  will you answer the 
question?
BR
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Abandoning the Christian Values That Make America  Exceptional

 
 
By _Rev. Mark H.  Creech_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/author/rev-mark-h-creech/) , Christian Post 
Columnist
January 15, 2014

 
 
You may have heard the story about the two Navajo Indians who were having a 
 conversation across an Arizona valley by smoke signals. While they were  
speaking, the Atomic Energy Commission released an atomic bomb nearby, and 
when  the gargantuan mushroom cloud rose on the horizon, one of the Indians 
sent up a  smoke signal to the other saying, "Man, I wish I had said that." 
Recently, I came across a quote that made me feel the same way. It was from 
 William E. Simon, the famous successful businessman and philanthropist, 
who also  served our country as its 63rd Secretary of the Treasury. Simon 
commented: 
"How did we reach such a state – in this land  where, for generations, 
mothers and fathers bravely risked their lives and came  streaming to these 
shores to give their children freedom to worship God without  fear or favor? 
How 
can there be such a cowardice and silence in the face of this  outrageous 
trashing of America's treasured traditions? 
…It is one thing to preserve and defend the  Constitution. But who will 
preserve and defend the values which are the  foundation of our greatness? If 
it is no longer politically correct to revere  and defend our most basic 
rights, perhaps we might recall the words of an  American giant whose quiet, 
lonely, heroic courage personified the true meaning  of leadership. 
Beset by the crisis of his day, Abraham Lincoln  said: 'We have forgotten 
the gracious hand that preserved us in peace, and  multiplied and enriched 
and strengthened us; and we have vainly imagined in the  deceitfulness of our 
hearts, that all these blessings were produced by some  superior wisdom and 
virtue of our own…we have become too proud to pray to the  God that made 
us!' 
I have served my country in government and  enthusiastically participated 
in the business world for over forty years. But  the cumulative experience of 
all those years has only reinforced the simple and  timeless truth of 
Lincoln's eloquent words. 
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Vital as they are, sound policies – less  government, low tax rates, and a 
strong defense – are not enough. America will  never be healed and never be 
truly strong, until we acknowledge, once again, the  preeminent importance 
of our values, until we are willing to humble ourselves,  and until we are 
not too proud to pray." [1] 
The values Simon referenced were Christian values. He said, "Where is any  
debate, let alone recognition, that the bedrock, pro-faith and family values 
 upon which America rests are under 'frightful assault,' and that, 
day-by-day,  this nation is distancing itself from its Judeo-Christian roots?" 
[2] 
Simon  passed away in 2000, but his words ring truer today than when first 
reported in  the early nineties. 
Loud now and pervasive are the voices that argue religious beliefs ought to 
 be excluded from government function – they should never be included in 
the  decision-making process of public-policy. 
There is not enough time or space to write about all the ways the Bible has 
 influenced our nation for unprecedented good. It was the Bible's teachings 
that  essentially plowed the ground, as well as planted the seed for the 
growth of  literacy and education, capitalism and the free enterprise system,  
representative government, civil liberties, the dignity of all mankind,  
benevolence and charity, the highest standards of justice, regard for human  
life, and the elevation of women and children. This is just to name a few. 
Efforts to separate Christian influence from the nation's directives fail 
to  recognize there are religious reasons behind many, if not most of our 
laws. Yet  such does not necessarily constitute a violation of church and 
state. It's not  the same as an "establishment of religion," which the 
Constitution prohibits.  Most of our nation's criminal statutes were based in 
some way 
upon the Ten  Commandments. Measures against stealing, lying under oath, or 
murder, as well as  numerous others, come from the Decalogue, but they 
don't establish a particular  government church or religious body. 
Was Martin Luther King, Jr. establishing a religion, when as a Baptist  
minister, he preached to a wayward nation about its racial injustices from the  
Bible? The laws that would ultimately pass to end racial discrimination 
were  firmly rooted in a Christian code, but certainly no corroboration for a 
state  church. 
Moreover, it's the most spurious of contentions to say morality can't be  
legislated. In fact, nothing but morality can be codified. Every law passed 
is  based in a value system that is imposed on every one. Much of the current 
crises  in our country can be traced to the elevation of inferior value 
systems that  reject the superiority of Christian principles. 
We are foolishly abandoning what made us an exceptional nation. Simon also  
added that no matter how much America prospered economically it wouldn't 
make  any difference, "if the hull beneath continues to rot and the ship 
itself has  lost its way." [3] 
When I was a child, I and other kids in the neighborhood would play the 
game  "Simon Says." God hasten the day when Americans would demonstrate the 
humility  of a child and do as William E. Simon says. He said it as good, if 
not better  than anybody. 
Yeah, I wish I had said that.

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