Title : "I believe that scripture, the Bible is very clear that God is the one that raises up those in authority."
link : "I believe that scripture, the Bible is very clear that God is the one that raises up those in authority."
"I believe that scripture, the Bible is very clear that God is the one that raises up those in authority."
Said Mike Johnson, orating just before taking the oath as Speaker of the House:Excerpt:
Our mission here is to serve you well, to restore the people’s faith in this House, in this great and essential institution. My dad... was a firefighter. He was an assistant chief in the Fire Department in my hometown of Shreveport, Louisiana, a little town in northwest Louisiana. On September 17th, 1984, when I was 12 years old, he was critically burned and permanently disabled in the line of duty. All I ever wanted to be when I grew up was the Chief of the Fire Department in Shreveport, but after the explosion on that fateful day, he nearly died and it was a long road back and it’s changed all of our life trajectories. I’m the oldest of four kids and my dad, he lived with pain all the rest of his life for decades more and I lost my dad to cancer three days before I got elected to Congress, three days, and he wanted to be there at my election night so badly. I’m the first college graduate in my family. This was a big deal to him. So several weeks after that, it was early 2017, it was my freshman term and it fell to me to be in the rostrum one night to serve here as Speaker Pro-Tem. I thought that was a big deal until I figured out that’s what you do for freshmen late at night and I think, if my memory serves, Ms. Jackson Lee was winding down one of her long, eloquent speeches, and not that I was not enraptured by her speech, but I looked up at the top of the chamber there and I saw the face of Moses staring down and I just felt in that moment the weight of this place, the history that is revered here and the future that we are called to forge, and I really was just kind of almost overwhelmed with emotion. It occurred to me in that moment it had been several weeks and I had not had an opportunity yet to grieve my dad’s passing and I just had this sense that somehow he knew and I had tears come to my eyes and I was standing here and I’m wiping them away and then it suddenly occurs to me the late night C-SPAN viewers are going to think something’s very wrong with the new young congressman from Louisiana. It wasn’t....
He saw Moses staring down... and later he expressed the idea that God has more or less chosen him:
We are the beacon of freedom and we must preserve this grand experiment in self-governance.... We’re only 247 years into this grand experiment. We don’t know how long it will last, but we do know that the founders told us to take good care of it. I want to tell all my colleagues here what I told the Republicans in that room last night. I don’t believe there are any coincidences in a manner like this. I believe that scripture, the Bible is very clear that God is the one that raises up those in authority. He raised up each of you, all of us, and I believe that God has ordained and allowed each one of us to be brought here for this specific moment in this time. This is my belief. I believe that each one of us has a huge responsibility today to use the gifts that God has given us to serve the extraordinary people of this great country and they deserve it and to ensure that our republic remains standing as the great beacon of light and hope and freedom in a world that desperately needs it....
It's one thing to recognize the role of Moses and God, but Johnson also cited G. K. Chesterson:
G. K. Chesterson was the famous British philosopher and statesman and he said one time, “America is the only nation in the world that is founded upon a creed” and he said, “It’s listed with almost theological lucidity in the Declaration of Independence.” What is our creed? We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal, not born equal, created equal, and they’re endowed by the same unalienable rights, with the same unalienable rights, life, liberty, pursuit of happiness. That is the creed that has animated our nation since its founding, that has made us the great nation that we are and we’re in a time of extraordinary crisis right now and the world needs us to be strong. They need us to remember our creed and our admonition....
And Ronald Reagan:
In his farewell address, President Reagan explained the secret of his rapport with people and I like to paraphrase his explanation all the time. He said, “You know, they call me the great communicator, but I really wasn’t that.” He said, “I was just communicating great things and that the same great things have guided our nation since its founding.”
As for those great things, Johnson made a list — a list of "the seven core principles of American conservatism" and "quintessentially the core principles of our nation."
Here's the list:
- individual freedom
- limited government
- the rule of law
- peace through strength
- fiscal responsibility
- free markets
- human dignity
It's a good list. Does anyone — conservative or not — have a problem with anything on the list?
I note that belief in God did not make the final cut into the 7 principles. I presume that if asked, Johnson would answer that for a religious person, religion lies behind the understanding of and the commitment to these principles, but that those who do not believe in God can and should find their way to these same principles. These are great principles — the argument should go — and you can find them through reason alone.
Excerpt:
Our mission here is to serve you well, to restore the people’s faith in this House, in this great and essential institution. My dad... was a firefighter. He was an assistant chief in the Fire Department in my hometown of Shreveport, Louisiana, a little town in northwest Louisiana. On September 17th, 1984, when I was 12 years old, he was critically burned and permanently disabled in the line of duty. All I ever wanted to be when I grew up was the Chief of the Fire Department in Shreveport, but after the explosion on that fateful day, he nearly died and it was a long road back and it’s changed all of our life trajectories. I’m the oldest of four kids and my dad, he lived with pain all the rest of his life for decades more and I lost my dad to cancer three days before I got elected to Congress, three days, and he wanted to be there at my election night so badly. I’m the first college graduate in my family. This was a big deal to him. So several weeks after that, it was early 2017, it was my freshman term and it fell to me to be in the rostrum one night to serve here as Speaker Pro-Tem. I thought that was a big deal until I figured out that’s what you do for freshmen late at night and I think, if my memory serves, Ms. Jackson Lee was winding down one of her long, eloquent speeches, and not that I was not enraptured by her speech, but I looked up at the top of the chamber there and I saw the face of Moses staring down and I just felt in that moment the weight of this place, the history that is revered here and the future that we are called to forge, and I really was just kind of almost overwhelmed with emotion. It occurred to me in that moment it had been several weeks and I had not had an opportunity yet to grieve my dad’s passing and I just had this sense that somehow he knew and I had tears come to my eyes and I was standing here and I’m wiping them away and then it suddenly occurs to me the late night C-SPAN viewers are going to think something’s very wrong with the new young congressman from Louisiana. It wasn’t....
He saw Moses staring down... and later he expressed the idea that God has more or less chosen him:
We are the beacon of freedom and we must preserve this grand experiment in self-governance.... We’re only 247 years into this grand experiment. We don’t know how long it will last, but we do know that the founders told us to take good care of it. I want to tell all my colleagues here what I told
It's one thing to recognize the role of Moses and God, but Johnson also cited G. K. Chesterson:
G. K. Chesterson was the famous British philosopher and statesman and he said one time, “America is the only nation in the world that is founded upon a creed” and he said, “It’s listed with almost theological lucidity in the Declaration of Independence.” What is our creed? We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal, not born equal, created equal, and they’re endowed by the same unalienable rights, with the same unalienable rights, life, liberty, pursuit of happiness. That is the creed that has animated our nation since its founding, that has made us the great nation that we are and we’re in a time of extraordinary crisis right now and the world needs us to be strong. They need us to remember our creed and our admonition....
And Ronald Reagan:
In his farewell address, President Reagan explained the secret of his rapport with people and I like to paraphrase his explanation all the time. He said, “You know, they call me the great communicator, but I really wasn’t that.” He said, “I was just communicating great things and that the same great things have guided our nation since its founding.”
As for those great things, Johnson made a list — a list of "the seven core principles of American conservatism" and "quintessentially the core principles of our nation."
Here's the list:
- individual freedom
- limited government
- the rule of law
- peace through strength
- fiscal responsibility
- free markets
- human dignity
It's a good list. Does anyone — conservative or not — have a problem with anything on the list?
I note that belief in God did not make the final cut into the 7 principles. I presume that if asked, Johnson would answer that for a religious person, religion lies behind the understanding of and the commitment to these principles, but that those who do not believe in God can and should find their way to these same principles. These are great principles — the argument should go — and you can find them through reason alone.
Thus articles "I believe that scripture, the Bible is very clear that God is the one that raises up those in authority."
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