by
Damien F. Mackey
“It
was only with the Christ that EQUALITY meant every human being, barring none.
From then on, no one was “barbarian.” Each bore in his own soul the mark of
being called to be a dwelling of the Father and the Son — being called beyond
all other calls a son of God. Neither mother nor father, neither civil society
nor state, can answer to this call for you or me. None has any deeper bond or
precedence than the relation of Creator and human creature. It is a bond of
Spirit and Truth”.
Michael Novak
Introduction
Australians, faced with the erosion of their culture - {labelled “Western”}
- by the Marxists who have entrenched themselves in the left-wing media, in
many corporations, and in the universities and schools, as lamented, for
instance, in this piece by Mark Latham, former leader of the Australian Labor
Party (ALP) http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/news/opinion/mark-latham-the-lefts-division-defeats-democracy/news-
Mark Latham: The left’s division defeats democracy
…. The Daily Telegraph
SOCIAL democracy is dying. Like a scene from George
Orwell’s Animal Farm, left-of-centre MPs and activists are now practising the
type of politics they had previously denounced — a divisive, segregationist
brand of identity fascism.
All our hopes for people working together
— the social democratic dream of a community rich in social capital — are
crumbling.
Today’s Labor/Green orthodoxy is to
turn people against each other on the basis of their gender, race and
sexuality. Left-feminists such as Tracey
Spicer and Kasey Edwards are actively segregating women from males:
refusing to let their daughters sit next to men on planes or to be supervised
by men on play-days. Under the guise of “diversity”, the ABC has promoted
Islamic supremacists on its roster, while refusing to report on segregationist
practices in places such as Punchbowl Boys High.
The national broadcaster [the ABC] is
running a protection racket for radical Islam.
Within the gay lobby, a militant
tendency has also emerged, using boycotts and intimidatory tactics to censor
anyone who disagrees with them. The group that, more than any other in
Australian politics, has pleaded with people to respect “difference” has become
intolerant of differing points of view.
I despair for what our nation has
become.
Barely a day goes by without someone
stopping me on the street to say: “Mark, what’s happening to Australia? We’ve
made people from all over the world welcome here but now, because of my skin
colour and my sex, I’m being made to feel unwelcome.”
The fed-up majority feels like an
alien virus has been injected into our way of life.
They see their country being lost to
the madness of political correctness and leftist social engineering.
And while the Greens and Labor egg on
this process, Malcolm
Turnbull and the Coalition are too weak to stop it. Or perhaps Turnbull
actually believes in the madness.
….
In the nation’s parliament, we are a
nation without leadership.
The consequences in the community are
horrendous, with a build-up of social distrust and identity resentment.
Instead of encouraging people to
cross gender, racial and sexuality boundaries and find common cause with their
fellow citizens, the Left is encouraging separatism.
So-called safe spaces in our
universities (such as the Aborigine-only computer room at the Queensland
University of Technology that provoked the recent 18C controversy) are harming
the prospects of indigenous reconciliation.
The fact that on Australia’s
long-term welfare dependency rolls there are 100,000 more men than women is
immaterial to the leftist elites.
They have moved past the point of
analysing statistics and listening to reason.
They have lost interest in poverty
and underclass as indicators of social injustice.
“White male privilege” is the Satan
of their new religion and it’s being prosecuted fanatically. Who would have
thought the word “white” could become a term of abuse in modern Australia?
Recently, at Sydney University, the
Labor senator Sam Dastyari laid into “white rich men” as “f ... ers”.
Meanwhile, the ABC presenter
Yassmin Abdel-Magied has attacked her hometown of Brisbane for being
as “white as f. k”.
Dastyari has praised Abdel-Magied as
a model Muslim, “a thoughtful and intelligent young Australian”. In suburban
and regional Australia, the rise of anti-white racism has fuelled a growing
backlash. People who work hard and do the right thing in their family and
community lives feel under siege for no other reason than being white, male and
straight.
Quite legitimately, they are saying:
“Our tolerance to minorities is being repaid with bigotry and censorship, so
why should I be so generous in the future?”
Let me give another example of how
bad things have become. This Friday I was to speak at a Labor fundraising event
at Smithfield in Western Sydney, taking as my theme the contents of this
column. In front of an audience including the NSW Opposition Leader Luke Foley,
I hoped to persuade people of how identity fascism is killing off the good
society, and setting back multiculturalism and reconciliation.
But then the Left faction, led by
Rainbow Labor and Rose Jackson, made a push to rub me off the speakers’ list.
None of them were even going to the function. They wanted to run it by remote
control, not trusting anyone from Smithfield to make up their own mind about my
speech.
The pigs are in the farmhouse,
walking upright on their hind legs.
[End
of quotes],
have begun to
suggest with regard to Islam - and picking up on a comment made by the President
of Egypt - that the religion needs to undergo an “Enlightenment”.
Thus the former PM of Australia
(who was dumped in a spill), Tony Abbott, suggested in a
wide-ranging interview with Sky News (December 2015), “On Islam …”
“We’ve got to work closely with live-and-let-live Muslims because there
needs to be, as president [Abdel Fattah] Al-Sisi of Egypt has said, a religious
revolution inside Islam”.
“All of those things that Islam has never had — a Reformation, an
Enlightenment, a well-developed concept of the separation of church and state —
that needs to happen.
“But we can't do it; Muslims have got to do this for themselves. But we
should work with those who are pushing in that direction.
“All cultures are not equal and, frankly, a culture that believes in
decency and tolerance is much to be preferred to one which thinks that you can
kill in the name of God, and we've got to be prepared to say that”.
[End of quote]
Broadcaster Alan
Jones, interviewing Mark Latham on 2GB radio this morning (26th
April), favourably referred to Abbott’s call for a Muslim “Enlightenment”.
The foundations
of Australia’s so-called “Western” culture, and that of every other culture
thus designated, is neither the Reformation nor the Enlightenment, however, but
the Judeo-Christian ethic, as explained by Former Australian Federal Treasurer,
Peter Costello, as follows https://peterpilt.org/2016/01/24/a-succinct-explanation-of-the-judeo-christian-ethic-that-australian-society-is-founded-on/
A Succinct Explanation Of The Judeo-Christian Ethic That Australian Society Is Founded On
By Peter Pilt on •
At times you hear the statement that Australia is founded
on the Judeo-Christian Ethic. What does this actually mean? Former
Australian Federal Treasurer Peter Costello made a speech back in 2004 at
a National Thanksgiving Service about this and I think it’s a succinct
explanation of the concept and its importance to our Australian way of life.
“When Jesus told his
disciples that they would be witnesses in Jerusalem, Judea, Samaria and the
uttermost part of the earth, the known world consisted of the Roman Empire –
the Mediterranean and surrounds. No one in the Roman world, no one in the
Jewish world, knew of Australia. From the then known world of the
Mediterranean, Australia was beyond even the uttermost parts of the
earth. And yet the teaching of Jesus came to Australia. It took nearly 18
centuries. And we can pinpoint quite accurately the first time a Christian
service was held on Australian soil. The sermon was preached by the Rev.
Richard Johnson, Chaplain of the First Fleet. It was preached on Sunday 3
February 1778 under a large tree in Sydney. His text was from Psalm 116 Verse
12: “What shall I render unto the Lord for all his benefits toward
me?” The first Australian Christian service was a thanksgiving service. It
was thanksgiving for a safe passage in dangerous sailing ships, on a dangerous
mission half-way around the world.
Two hundred and
twenty six years later we meet tonight to mark a “National Day of Thanksgiving”
for all the benefits rendered to us, in the modern Australia. Of course,
the members of the First Fleet were not the first people to come to Australia.
The Aboriginal people were here long before that and I am proud to honour
descendants of those first Australians. But it was the First Fleet that brought
the first chaplain and first knowledge of the Christian faith to Australia.
This was the critical and decisive event that shaped our country. If the
Arab traders that brought Islam to Indonesia had brought Islam to Australia and
settled, or spread their faith, amongst the indigenous population our country
today would be vastly different. Our laws, our institutions, our economy would
all be vastly different. But that did not happen. Our society was founded
by British colonists. And the single most decisive feature that determined the
way it developed was the Judeo-Christian-Western tradition.
As a society, we are
who we are, because of that heritage.
I am not sure this
is well understood in Australia today. It may be that a majority of Australians
no longer believes the orthodox Christian faith. But whether they believe it or
not, the society they share is one founded on that faith and one that draws on
the Judeo-Christian tradition. The foundation of that tradition is, of
course, The Ten Commandments. How many Australians today could recite them?
Perhaps very few.
But they are the
foundation of our law and our society, whether we know them or not.
·
The first Commandments: Thou shalt have no
other God before me; Thou shalt not make any graven image; Thou shalt not take
the name of the Lord in vain; Remember the Sabbath and keep it holy; are the
foundation of monotheism.
·
The Commandments: Honour thy father and
mother; Thou shalt not commit adultery; are the foundation of marriage and the
family.
·
The Commandment: Thou shalt not to kill; is
the basis for respect for life.
·
The Commandment: Thou shalt not steal; is
the basis for property rights.
·
The Commandment: Thou shalt not bear false
witness against thy neighbour; and Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour’s
property; is the basis of respect for others and their individual rights.
These are the great
principles of our society. On them hang all of the laws and institutions that
make our society what it is.
When Moses gave the Ten Commandments he initiated the rule of law. From the moment that he laid down these rules it followed that human conduct was to be governed according to rules – rules which were objectively stated, capable of being understood and, if necessary, enforced by the Hebrew judges. Prior to that the people of the ancient world were governed by Rulers rather than rules. The ruler was much more subject to whim and capricious behaviour. Rulers were not subject to independent review or interpretation. The rule of law is the basis for our constitution and justice system.
And so we have the
Rule of Law, respect for life, private property rights, respect of others –
values that spring from the Judeo-Christian tradition.”
Speech from Peter
Costello 2004
[End of quote]
Was the Age of
the Enlightenment (C17th-C18th AD), culminating in France in the Revolution,
truly an “enlightenment”? The French Revolution was an all-out war on the very
foundations of Judeo-Christianity. Many will say yes, it was enlightening, and
many will disagree with that.
According to
Alan Jones on the radio this morning it was an age of reason, one that, lifting
man out of the Dark Ages of medievalism, has helped to shape our modern world.
Quite a
different picture of the Era of the Enlightenment, though, emerges in the books
and articles of Dr. Gavin Ardley, philosopher-scientist, who is far from being narrow-minded
and unable to give credit where it is due. In his excellent books on the philosophy
of science, Aquinas and Kant (1950)
and Berkeley’s Renovation of Philosophy
(1968), Ardley conjures up an impression of an age that had departed somewhat from
the foundations of common sense, had abandoned objective reality and had, in
some instances, become a victim of philosophical scruples, which have at their
roots, as he argued, a problem of morality.
Philosophically,
our culture would probably be considered to be Greco-Roman based. Hence, the solution
for the enlightenment of Islam, according to the western-minded Josef Ratzinger
(Pope Benedict XVI), was Greek thought. He, in his controversial Regensburg address (2006), remarked “… as a tradition,
Islam needs to engage with the intellectual heritage of Greece”.
Rather, I think, Islam needs to rediscover its roots in Old Testament
Israel.
Somewhat more reasonable, I believe, is
Ratzinger’s other view that: “… the attempt to graft on to Islamic societies
what are termed western standards cut loose from their Christian foundations
misunderstands the internal logic of Islam as well as the historical logic to
which these western standards belong”.
In my opinion, our
western culture’s roots are, where Peter Costello fixed them, in Mosaïc Law and
ethics (= Judeo) and in the teachings of Jesus Christ (= Christian): Judeo-Christian.
Not in pagan philosophy, not with an Aristotle, but with Jesus Christ who was
the true Philosopher, “the Metaphysician par
excellence” according to Saint Bonaventure.
And these thoughts lead me into
the opinion of the recently-deceased (2017) American philosopher, Michael
Novak, regarding the Enlightenment – connecting, as they do, with the Judeo-Christian
ethic (http://michaelnovak.net/the-first-enlightenment/):
The First Enlightenment
Those
of us who are of Catholic mind do not believe that the Enlightenment began with
Kant (“What is Enlightenment?”), or Locke or Newton, or even with Descartes. We
cherish Plato, Aristotle, Cicero. But the first Enlightenment began with Christ
Our Lord.
It was
only with the Christ that EQUALITY meant every human being, barring none.
From
then on, no one was “barbarian.” Each bore in his own soul the mark of being
called to be a dwelling of the Father and the Son — being called beyond all
other calls a son of God. Neither mother nor father, neither civil society nor
state, can answer to this call for you or me. None has any deeper bond or
precedence than the relation of Creator and human creature. It is a bond of
Spirit and Truth.
Thus
was revealed each human’s LIBERTY primordial, and in that liberty, EQUALITY
with all. No other but self can say to the the Father “No,” or “Yes.” That
choice is for each single one of us inalienable. That choice brings each into
the universal brotherhood and sisterhood of all who are equal in the sight of
God.
And
that is how universal FRATERNITY became a human principle and an object of our
striving.
By Michael Novak on December 25, 2009 in Published Articles
Moreover,
a singular feature of the coming of the Christ is that all have access to him —
rich pagan kings riding from the East, Roman centurions (those who would put
him to death, even they), Jew and Greek, and those of every nation, station,
and state of virtue or of sin. From Bethlehem went out the message of the First
Globalization — the global call to become one human family. But only by the
narrow path of the free choice of each.
This
was the First Enlightenment. There has been no deeper nor more all-embracing
since.
From
the streaming light of the marks of Christ’s coming — LIBERTY,
FRATERNITY,
EQUALITY — the Second Enlightenment (of Newton, Locke, Kant, Voltaire, and all
the others) is derivative. Except that the second one would like to have these
ideals, this vision, without God. And, if possible, while destroying the
Christian Church. “Strangling the last king with the intestines of the last
pope.” A dream of bloodshed. Christophobia.
And
now we enter a period in the United States in which it is no longer true that
our courts and laws consider ours a civilization uplifted by Christianity.
Hatred for Christianity is running deeper, swifter. The day is upon us in which
priests, bishops, evangelicals of all kinds, lay and clerical and of all
Christian communities will be sent to jail.
To vote
one’s conscience, or even to speak one’s conscience, on the matter of
homosexual “marriage” more and more brings torrents of abuse.
The
day has come, in the minds of some in power, that it is an abuse of human
rights to hold abortion wrong. One would have thought that cutting short a life
violates the natural right of the independent human being in the womb, just as
surely as enslavement used to do. Turning things the other way, today some hold
that for a doctor to refuse to take part in the abortion of a living child is
to violate a woman’s right to kill the living one she carries.
If
Christians must suffer even for the truths of reason that they hold, how will
that be different from the first century after Christ was born, and many more?
The world became Christian once by the hearing of the word. That did not
prevent every one of the first apostles from being thrown in jail. The
tradition may be coming back.
Published
in National Review Online’s The Corner December 25, 2009
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