
The Story of Man
By Michael S. Heath
Apr 30, 2008 - 6:32:23 PM
This column was published in the Kennebec Journal and Waterville Sentinel on Wednesday, April 30, 2008.
After a particularly hard winter, Mainers, along with the
rest of Creation, are rejoicing at the long-awaited return of the sun.
Spring gives us an opportunity to ponder why the sun, blazing out with
its life-giving power, is an emblem of God, and why the story of man
begins in a garden. The gardener digging in the cool, dark earth can
see that each green, tender shoot springs up in pursuit of warmth and
light. The warmth and light they seek comes from another world, a world
that is high above them. What warmth and light are to a young plant,
human reason is to the life of man. It too comes from high above us, as
does the gift of divine revelation. Just as the plant grows according
to inborn laws, man’s life is governed by laws which are discovered by
human reason. This is called natural law. When a gardener raises a
young plant according to the laws pertaining to its growth, he can
expect a fine result, whether it is a field of golden grain ripening
under a Midwestern sun, or a solitary rose growing quietly by a cottage
in Maine. In the same way, those who govern us -- if they govern
rightly -- produce a well-ordered society.
Failure to obey the correct laws results in
waste and desolation, the kind of waste and desolation suggested in
Thomas Moore’s famous question about relaxing the laws pertaining to
marriage. In the play, "A Man for All Seasons" Moore asks, "When the
last law is down.... where will you hide... do you really think you can
stand upright in the winds that would blow then? " Moore meant to draw
a picture of the disaster that would result if Henry VIII were to
obtain a divorce and remarry.
The king’s desire for more sexual freedom was, of course,
a pretext for his own personal and political ambition. Moore
understood that to violate a fundamental principle of sexual morality
would let loose a storm which would rage long and hard enough to topple
many other laws and many other standards of morality. As wise and as
learned as Moore was, he could not have foreseen the type of storm
raging across America today. He could not have foreseen, for example,
the annual Portland Gay Pride parade, in which marchers carry a black
and blue striped flag to celebrate sadomasochism.
This of course, is the pattern behind
liberalism. Any ‘freedom’ based on a repudiation of natural law and
human reason leads inevitably to license and licentiousness, and a
gradual disintegration of society.
The gay rights movement is the bell-weather
which tells us our society is unraveling. This gradual unraveling may
take the form of a call for same sex marriage, normalizing
homosexuality in the eyes of kindergarteners, or invading St. Patrick’s
cathedral during a gay pride march.
We cannot judge the morality of a society by
the words and slogans it uses. Instead, we must judge by results. We
must ask how successful our leaders have been in cultivating a safe and
wholesome society. What are we to think about the practice of giving
birth control to middle school students? What are we to conclude when
it is alleged that a prosecutor in the Attorney General’s office has
child pornography on his computer? What are we to say about the 45
million abortions performed since Roe v. Wade? Perhaps the time has
come to set aside our self-serving professions of tolerance and
compassion. Perhaps the time has come to judge society by the method
Jesus recommended – that is, we should judge any idea by the fruit it
produces. A good tree, Jesus said, yields good fruit, and a bad tree
yields rotten fruit. Only then will we understand how the sexual
revolution, and its radical wing, the gay rights movement, have reaped
for Maine and the nation a harvest of barrenness, sterility, and shame.
Michael S. Heath is Executive Director of the Christian
Civic League of Maine. He is collecting signatures for the "Yes for
Marriage and Equality" campaign. Go to www.leaguerecord.com for more information.
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