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What if all
politicians thought they had to give an account to their Maker?
Just a few days ago, newspapers revealed that Tony Blair
believes he will one day be called to account before his Maker for decisions
he made about the Iraq war.
Marxists and most Libertarians believe that such talk is nonsense. They
say that God does not exist and we can forget about accountability to
God or to any higher and eternal moral law. The disastrous effects of
Marxism have been well demonstrated in history. By contrast Libertarianism
has received little critical scrutiny in Britain. This political philosophy
has emerged from the political right, but its influence, especially
on social policy, extends right across the political spectrum.
Does conscious accountability to your Maker lead to more freedom or
less? And what is true freedom? Do individuals have the right to consume
hard-core pornography or take drugs? Does the State have the right to
levy taxes? What is the true purpose of the State? A new analysis published
today by The Christian Institute says we cannot know the answers to
these questions without reference to God our Creator.
The report, written by author and journalist Philip Vander Elst, is
a Christian critique of Libertarianism. He questions whether in the
end Libertarianism really promotes freedom.
‘Libertarianism’ teaches that the individual is an end in
himself, and the right to personal liberty is absolute as long as that
does not infringe the equal rights of others. Libertarianism: a Christian
critique acknowledges the truths in Libertarianism but also shows its
errors and explains how Libertarian thinking reinforces cultural and
social decay by turning liberty into licence.
Colin Hart, Director of The Christian Institute, said, “This is
a thought-provoking critique of Libertarianism. It provides a timely
antidote to the assumptions underpinning so much of contemporary political
debate. The Prime Minister is accountable to his Maker for all his actions,
not just for launching a war on Iraq.”
Author Philip Vander Elst said, “I hope, as a former atheist and
admirer of Libertarianism, that my critique of its arguments will provoke
intelligent debate about the values and assumptions which now dominate
our culture and help to determine social policy.”
Key quotes from Libertarianism: a Christian critique
From page 6:
…the spread of ‘political correctness’ is gradually
eroding freedom of thought and speech by discouraging legitimate criticism
of contemporary ideas and fashions. The most obvious example of this
is the change that has taken place in the meaning of ‘tolerance’.
Instead of signifying, as it used to, a readiness to respect the right
of individuals to express opinions or engage in activities of which
one disapproves, the whole concept has been turned on its head so that
‘tolerance’ now implies approval. As a result, those who
dare to criticise homosexuality or non-Western cultures and religions,
for example, are increasingly stigmatised as ‘intolerant’
‘homophobes’ and ‘racists’ whose ‘bigotry’
and ‘hate-speech’ ought to be curbed to safeguard ‘minority
rights’ and ‘multi-culturalism’, concepts which are
never properly defined or explained.
Underlying this Orwellian corruption of the old liberal idea of tolerance,
is the politically correct but question-begging assumption that all
cultures and lifestyles are ‘equal’, and that it is therefore
wrong to make critical or ‘judgmental’ comparisons between,
say, single-parenthood and the traditional family, or Christianity and
Islam. But is this moral and cultural relativism really justified? Does
history suggest that all religions, ideologies and institutions have
been equally beneficial? Is it logical to suggest that conflicting philosophies
or belief-systems are equally true? Furthermore, if all ‘truth’
is subjective and therefore illusory, what is the moral justification
for making the politically correct value judgment that it is ‘wrong’
to be ‘judgmental’?
Given this background of intellectual confusion and cultural decay,
close analysis of the ideology of Libertarianism can throw valuable
light on many contemporary political and social issues.
From page 13:
How relevant, though, is Libertarianism to life in 21st century Britain?
Extremely, is the short answer. At the political level, it has exerted
a strong influence on the younger and more intellectual elements within
the Conservative Party, whilst the numerous publications of the London-based
Libertarian Alliance attract many intelligent readers and political
activists. It is, however, the cultural impact of Libertarianism which
is most significant today. In a nutshell, it both appeals to and reinforces
that dislike of authority which is such a marked feature of contemporary
British and Western culture. Whilst its attitude to taxation, government
regulation, and the Welfare State, is only shared by a small minority,
its agnosticism in the area of ‘personal morality’ and its
indifference or hostility towards Christianity puts it firmly in the
cultural mainstream.
From page 30:
If it is the case that a belief in objective moral values sustains our
inner freedom and teaches us our duties towards each other, what is
likely to happen if people stop believing in God? The answer ought to
be obvious. Belief in the absoluteness of the Moral Law will tend to
wither, and the fear of violating it will also tend to vanish, since
it is no longer perceived to have an eternal sanction behind it. This
in turn will sooner or later have a predictably harmful effect on personal
behaviour.
That is precisely what has happened in our increasingly godless and
secularised Western societies. As high-minded 19th century agnostics
like T.H. Huxley and George Eliot feared, not to mention Matthew Arnold
and Dostoyevsky, the erosion of religious belief and Christianity in
the West has been followed, after a long time-lag, by the cultural and
social decay we see around us today. As a result, liberty itself is
now in danger of committing suicide, because the moral self-discipline
required to sustain a free and civilised society is rapidly disappearing.
Libertarianism: a Christian critique is available from The Christian
Institute priced £2.50
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ENDS -
Note
for Editors
The Christian Institute, Registered Charity No 100 4774 seeks to promote
the Christian faith in the UK. Registered Office: 26 Jesmond Road, Newcastle
upon Tyne, NE2 4PQ
For more information contact: Colin Hart on 0191 281 5664
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