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Wednesday, November 30, 2022

The Golden Age of Righteousness: America's Moral Decline?

One of the recurring themes of conservative Christian groups is the moral decline of our society. For these folks, the evidence of that decline is all around us. They point to the headlines and lead stories from various news media to demonstrate the truth of their assertion. They do, of course, realize that things like rape, murder, domestic violence, and substance abuse have ALWAYS existed, but they insist that these things are getting worse. Nevertheless, most of these folks prefer to emphasize what they see as the more general or systemic moral failures of our society to prove that their narrative about America's moral decline is true - things like abortion, homosexuality, transgenderism, and the rise of "secular humanism." Implicit in all of this, of course, is the notion that America was formerly more righteous (a decline suggests a previous higher standard). But is that narrative historically accurate?

In short, was there ever a golden age of American righteousness? OR was there, at least, a time when America was MORE righteous than she is today? Before we answer those questions, we should do a quick review of our history as a people. After all, this entire narrative is premised on the notion that America's current moral standing is demonstrably inferior to its previous condition. Unfortunately, our history over the last four hundred years does NOT support such a conclusion!

In the beginning, European colonists came to this continent uninvited and immediately proceeded to dispossess Native Americans of their lands. And, over the next two hundred years, those same colonists were responsible for the deaths of millions of Native Americans (some historians have estimated that 90% of their population was wiped out through disease and warfare). Moreover, the subsequent record of the United States government relative to honoring its commitments to these folks under numerous treaties is NOT one of moral righteousness.

We would also do well to remember that America's European forefathers enslaved their African brethren - forcibly removing them from their homeland, causing the deaths of many thousands of them on the voyage to America, and forcing them to labor for them under the harshest conditions. Indeed, it would be hard to exaggerate the dehumanization that African Americans were subjected to during this period (beatings, murders, not to mention the inadequate housing, clothing, food, and educational opportunities they were subjected to). Moreover, even after slavery was finally ended, I would dare anyone to characterize the treatment of African Americans as moral or righteous! The NAACP has estimated that more than 4,700 souls were lynched between 1882 and 1968! How many thousands of African American children died because of inadequate housing, nutrition and medical care through the years that followed emancipation? And can there be any doubt that discrimination and segregation were responsible for those deplorable conditions?

What about the abuse and exploitation of the resources that European Americans stole from Native Americans? Didn't God command man to dress, care for, and preserve the earth? What about the wholesale destruction of forest lands, indiscriminate mining, and agricultural soil erosion which took place as a consequence of the activities of our ancestors? Our ancestors were responsible for the extinction of the passenger pigeon, the elimination of predator species from most of our lands, the extinction of numerous other species of birds and freshwater mussels, the near extinction of the buffalo, the disappearance of the American Chestnut, American Elm, and numerous other native plants? What about the indiscriminate pollution of our rivers, lakes, and air that took place as a consequence of the Industrial Revolution?

Moreover, the same greed which led to the destruction of so many of our natural resources also led to the exploitation of women, children, and labor more generally. I'm thinking about the concentration of wealth, low wages, long working hours, and unsafe working conditions. These things are FACTS of history. They happened! They cannot be excused, justified, or explained away, and they could certainly never be characterized as moral or righteous behavior!

Unfortunately, the widespread and systemic mistreatment of the handicapped, disadvantaged, and immigrant populations among us has also been an integral part of the history of America. Asylums, sanatoriums, poor houses, orphanages, and ghettos are part of America's story. Straitjackets and lobotomies are part of our history as a people. Discrimination against (and mistreatment of) Irish, Italian, Chinese, Japanese, Mexican, and Polish immigrants to this country is well-documented. We also should never forget that America's record on the toleration of other faiths is NOT spotless! Think about the way that Catholics, Muslims, Mormons, and Atheists have been treated in times past.

We also must not forget that our ancestors instituted a kind of civil religion in the United States. This arose from a kind of arrogance and pride in American institutions and "success" on the world stage. It manifested itself in patriotic hymns, celebrations, and rituals. It glorified American military might and led to some behaviors that could never be characterized as "Christian" or "righteous." I'm thinking now of Manifest Destiny and the Mexican-American War. I'm thinking of America's participation in imperialism and the Spanish-American War. Moreover, some of us would characterize some of the practices of that civil religion as a kind of idolatry - putting devotion and allegiance to country on a par with our obligations to Almighty God. In connection with all of this, I'm thinking of statements like "America, right or wrong!"

Finally, as was suggested at the beginning of this article, things like abortion, homosexuality, murder, rape, alcoholism/drug addiction and riots have ALWAYS been a feature of American society/culture. "Yes, but it wasn't accepted/tolerated/legalized!" my conservative Christian friends will protest. OK, but the point is that it still happened! Abortions happened before the procedure was legalized by a Supreme Court decision (Roe v Wade), and many thousands of women died as a consequence of botched amateur procedures. Yes, homosexuality existed in the shadows where it engendered a whole lot of heartache, alienation, and MORE immoral behavior (lies, promiscuity, infidelity, etc.)! Yes, we are in the midst of an opioid epidemic, but what about the bootlegging and alcoholism of our ancestors? Yes, things like the Tulsa race riots happened, but they were quickly covered-up and forgotten! Indeed, I suspect that there is so much attention in our own time to things like same-sex marriage, because of the abysmal record of failure among heterosexual marriages (divorce) bequeathed to us by our forebearers! In other words, if we are really concerned about the deterioration/decline of the "traditional" family, then why aren't we more interested in the historical phenomenon of divorce?

Full disclosure, my majors in college were history and political science. Hence, we see from this very brief and general overview of American history that there wasn't any golden age of American righteousness. In times past, there was a whole lot of sinning going on - our ancestors were just as human and fallible as we are in the present! Hence, the notion of America's moral decline is shown to be invalid. God may indeed be angry with our people; but, if he is, it is undoubtedly a long-standing anger. In other words, the current moral failings of the United States are no worse than they were four hundred or two hundred years ago! We are no more worthy of Divine punishment today than we were in 1700, 1800, or 1900! It may be comforting and validating to look back with longing to the good old days, but it is obviously an exercise in delusional thinking!

4 comments:

  1. The strategy is not subtle. Convince your audience that the USA is in sharp decline. Then motivate the audience by pointing to another better time that fits in with your agenda. We are, therefore, enjoined to look to the wonderful world tomorrow or to the past when America was great. While spinners grimly recite dubious statistics, the careful observer should not neglect the obvious political expediency and fund raising effectiveness of all of this arm waving.

    I am in agreement that the idea that America fell from noble heights to its present sad state just does not play. It is patently nationalistic and ahistorical to see America as having had a golden era in the past. America was the nation of “the Irish need not apply” and limiting the number of Jewish students who could attend Harvard and slavery and genocide. We must have a balanced view of our history, seeing both the good and the bad, if we are to find our way in the world.

    Part of the problem of misjudging who we are as a nation has to do with unbridled patriotism crowding out ethics. I once heard, in WCG Spokesman Club, a man at the lectern recite the patriotic achievements of his ancestors. The list included having waged war against Native Americans. This put a patriotic varnish on what was simply genocide. It was also nicely contrarian in a church that proudly held many contrarian views in relation to the larger society. American society at that time was just beginning to become sensitive to the mistreatment of Native Americans. So the bold statement from the lectern served the dual purpose of condemning modern decadent America and also justifying the evils of past America. In the WCG, I heard from the pulpit that slavery was bad but the slaves had a much better life in America than they would have had in Africa. And besides, some held, God decreed that Canaanites should be enslaved. But slavery is not a Christian institution and no amount of creative license in misconstruing history to meet the needs of nationalism can make it so. Add to this that archaeogenetics has now revealed to us that West Africans are not Canaanites – the Canaanites (or Phoenicians) are the modern day Lebanese. And the Phoenicians were for a time enslaved by the Assyrians and Babylonians but then so were the Jews. In some quarters, when nationalism enters in, ethics must retreat beaten and bloodied.

    When George Orwell wrote up the fictional Ministry of Truth in his novel 1984, he meant, of course, the Ministry of Rationalization. We have all served some time in that Ministry. For humans the truth is pliable. That is why Jesus called us to vigilance when he said: “Wisdom” is justified of her children.

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    1. Yes, you concisely articulated how well this meshed with Armstrongite theology and messaging. Thanks too, for reminding us that Jewish Americans were one of the groups that has suffered persecution at the hands of our country. Ken Burns documentary about American resistance to doing more to welcome and save European Jews during Hitler's reign of terror was very compelling.

      Nationalism is often wrapped in patriotism to make it seem more reasonable and compelling, but the dark and self-interested nature of that beast is hard to hide! As you know, history is a complex mix of good and bad - just as we humans are individually and collectively. I glory in what is good about America (and I do see much of that). However, when we ignore the ugly parts of our past, it not only distorts our perception of what happened then - it also distorts our understanding of who we are in the present, and where we might be headed in the future.

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  2. It is instructive that one of the characteristics that separates us advanced hominids from the rest of earth’s creatures is a sense of history. And in that historicity we look for our origins. I think this search for origins is a subcategory of the larger question of “What does life mean.” Science has unveiled the mystery of human origins to a degree but many do not accept even these findings. So creation stories proliferate within the disparate tribes comprising humankind. Most of these stories are mythological but they demonstrate humanity’s willingness to manipulate history for nationalistic purposes and aspirations.

    The Germans, after their losses in World War I, began to search for the superiority of their nation in pre-history. Their unscientific and race based findings were picked up by such Nazi organizations as the Ahnenerbe. Himmler had Ahnenerbe archaeologists searching world-over to find support for the idea that Germans were Aryans. Doubts had been raised. Unsurprisingly, the occult began to invade this movement. And, of course, the Nazis asserted that Jesus was not Jew but an Amorite Aryan. Any careful outside observer could have seen one that coming. And, it seems, the august German people originated in noble Atlantis. It was a chaotic mess but served the politics of National Socialism quite well. It was a case of glorious history tuned to politics on demand. And German archaeology then lost its scientific integrity and became a whore to politics.

    One of the leitmotifs in the history of human civilization is the expedient re-casting of history by partisan scholars. Herman Hoeh’s “Compendium of World History” is a story about how the Northwest European nations have always been the mainspring for the advancement of human civilization. If anything important ever happened in human history, Northwest Europeans ("Israelites") were, like Forrest Gump, actively involved. The hypothetical idea that the USA is in decline has a carefully drawn but disputed pedigree. And it is up to us to divide history from politics. And, in any case, Jesus is the One for Christians in all times and seasons.

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  3. A friend recently shared with me an article by Clarence Haynes Jr. titled "Is It Correct to Say That America is a Christian Nation?" I gave the article a hardy "Amen," and I wanted to share a few excerpts with my readers:
    Mr. Haynes wrote that "there is no such thing as a Christian nation. This does not just apply to nations; it can be more local than that. For example, there is no such thing as a Christian football team or a Christian business. You might think these are harsh statements to make, but they are not. You can have a nation, a team, or a business that is guided by Christian values or influences, but that does not make the entity a Christian."
    He went on to point out:
    "Attempting to describe America as a Christian nation causes you to think of Christianity from a nationalistic point of view. Here is the problem. God doesn’t save nations, he saves individuals. When Jesus died on the cross, he wasn’t dying for America, the nation; he was dying for the individual people that make up America. This means you, me, and everyone you see around you.
    He was also dying for the people in all the nations of the world. That’s why any person who calls on the name of the Lord for salvation will be saved, regardless of what nation they belong to.
    This might be a surprise to you, but God is not interested in building Christian nations; he is interested in building his kingdom. His kingdom is filled with people from every nation in the world, all who belong to the body of Christ."
    He went on to observe:
    "The reason there is debate over America being a Christian nation is simply because we who profess to be Christians have not lived up to the standard of being like Christ. If Christians in America truly reflected Christ, then maybe there would be no need to debate this question.
    For anyone who is a follower of Jesus Christ, who is part of the body of Christ, it is time to look in the mirror I talked about earlier. Debating whether America is a Christian nation is not going to move the needle in our society. However, if you devote yourself to being like Jesus and being his arms and hands extended, that will make a difference."

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