I’ve argued that the case for freedom is—and can only be—the case that freedom is moral.
Then let’s go to our moral guide. Let’s go to Scripture.
I’ve argued that the case for freedom is—and can only be—the case that freedom is moral.
Then let’s go to our moral guide. Let’s go to Scripture.
If the United States was truly exceptional, what has happened to it?
How did the U.S. fall from its place as the world’s beacon of freedom and individual rights? How did the nation of achievers and owners become the “entitlement state” of looters and moochers?
The United States has been exceptional as the country founded upon a moral idea: individual rights.
The founding fathers recognized man’s rights as inalienable. Rights are discovered, not granted.
Previously we looked at John Frame’s scriptural argument that government should offer protection from theft, not be an agent of redistribution.
I agree with this vision of justice. Scripture doesn’t support the modern idea of “social justice.”
Here I’m going to summarize theologian John Frame’s views on Christianity and government.
It’s helpful to recognize that a respected theologian shares the basics of the view I’m advocating and to see how he derives his view from Scripture. His discussion makes a good starting point to orient us to what Scripture says on the issue.