Tuesday, December 31, 2013

TOLERANCE

No concept has more currency in our modern politically correct culture then the concept of tolerance, a once noble virtue that is fast becoming a vice promoted by secular progressives. By definition, tolerance means to permit or allow a point of view one disagrees with while respecting the person in the process. Notice the critical point: We cannot tolerate someone unless we disagree with them. We don’t “tolerate” people who share our views – our tolerance of others is reserved for those we disagree with. This essential element of tolerance, to disagree, has been deleted from the modern dialogue so that disagreement with someone’s point of view is now labeled as “intolerant.” The bases for this change is the postmodern myth that true tolerance consists of neutrality—that all views have equal merit...  equal value, and, therefore, none should be considered better than another. This is a chapter right out of relativism, and obviously turns morality and ethics into figments of one’s imagination. The elephant in the room: Disagreement, the basis of true tolerance is now intolerant, making true tolerance impossible, and opening the flood-gate of label mongering. 
Tolerance can apply to people, behavior, or points of view... opinions. Historically, our Judeo-Christian culture has promoted tolerance of people, but never carte-blanche tolerance of all opinions or behavior. In the current rhetoric of relativism tolerance is most frequently advocated for broad moral limits... or no limits, on behavior, while at the same time allowing little tolerance for the expression of opposing viewpoints on issues of morality: They want to tolerate most behavior, but won’t tolerate opposing beliefs about those behaviors. Relativistic tolerance denies moral absolutes... while holding to the moral absolute that there is no moral absolute. This concept saws off the limb it sits on.
Our first amendment rights are based on a simple principle first spoken by Voltaire: "I do not agree with what you have to say, but I'll defend to the death your right to say it." This is the essence of free speech and tolerance in a democratic society. Tolerance does not demand acceptance or respect of contrary views, beliefs or behavior, but merely recognizes their right to exist... to “tolerate” them. Intolerance refuses their right to exist... is “intolerant” of them. Tolerance must be understood relative to its object, people, behavior, or points of view: Quoting Peter Kreeft: “Be egalitarian regarding persons. “Be elitist regarding ideas”, and behavior, I might add. Tolerance applies to how we treat people we disagree with, not how we treat points of view we think false or behavior we think immoral.  Treat people courteously... with respect... always, no matter what their views or behavior, but recognize not all views have equal worth, merit, or truth,  and not all behavior is moral. We must believe in the equality of people, that people deserve equal rights and opportunities -- not the equality of points of view, or behavior.
We live in a time of spiritual erosion and the rapid advance of secularism. Now we have groups within our society that try to impose their views on others -- silence opposing viewpoints – through the offensive label of intolerance or through threats of harm. Quoting Ravi Zacharias: “This is the new America of tolerance, another vacuous word defined by relativists whose only absolutes are the denial of any other reality except their own.” Do not allow the topic to be switched from the principle of free speech to a particular topic or social issue. Intolerance is to be denied the free expression of one’s personal views on a matter by ostracism or by the threat of harm – attacking someone because they do not think or believe like you do... like I do. This kind of intolerance is censorship in disguise.

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

CHRISTMAS PRAYER

Father, 
Thank You for family, Your school of love, where we learn to love people Your way. Thank You for food and shelter when so many have neither. Thank You for faith when so many walk in fear. Thank You for Your love that lights our way and warms our heart. And... most of all, thank You for Jesus, and for the Blessed Hope we have in Him. Soften our hearts Lord, that we might live as You lived, love as You loved, and give as You gave, finding our kinship in Your humility, compassion, forgiveness and mercy. Let us expend our life as beacons of radiant light to those walking in darkness, as salt licks adding the flavor of Christ to otherwise tasteless lives. In Jesus name, Amen...