My husband and I believe in exercising our minds while enjoying a meal. If at home, Paul grills. I steam veggies, broil some garlic bread, and mix a salad. Plates in hand, we settle by a window overlooking a forest of hickory and oak. Or, on a less humid day, we move out onto the deck. We discuss matters of family, theology, and culture. At some point, we slip on our worldview glasses. There are only two pair: God’s — and any other.
Family, theology and culture take on a different perspective depending upon one’s worldview. The same is true with life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
This Saturday is the Iowa Straw Poll. I plan to go, not so much to cast a vote, but to meander through the crowd. To listen. Watch. Learn which pair of glasses the people have chosen to wear. Most eyes are focused on the economy. But, my worldview tells me that our economic problems have deep moral roots. America may be collapsing on itself because its worldview of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness is hopeless.
Life. Abortion fails to see the value of life created by God and redeemed at high price. Abortion is about “me.” “My” fears. “My” needs. It sees no future. It acts in desperation. Legalized abortion is a root cause of our social security and health care woes. I have long been concerned that the babyboomers who ushered in abortion will be ushered out by euthanasia.
Liberty. To worship at the altar of sexual freedom is to eventually loose religious freedom. “Righteous” folk who “tell me” that I have no “right to liberated” behavior, but must instead practice self-control, are “bigoted” and “must be silenced”.
Pursuit of happiness. Some Americans think we are entitled to happiness or the right to instant gratification. But, wearing his worldview glasses, former Senator Rick Santorum disagrees. We are, he says, “gifted with the pursuit of happiness.”
Santorum, speaking in my town earlier this week, asked, “What is the pursuit of happiness? Is it doing what we want, or doing . . . .” He paused, waiting for someone to finish the sentence. From my place in the back of the room, I did so: It’s doing “what we should (ought).” Correct answer. I think many in the audience agreed. But, as citizens, have we correctly pursued happiness?
America has given its citizens the freedom to pursue happiness. But, believing happiness to be “my right to do whatever I want,” leads us to pursue wrongly. Selfishly. Dangerously. Right down a slippery slope into despair.
So, my husband and I remind each other to polish our worldview glasses. Clarify hope and change. Look for leaders who pursue not what they can, but what they should. And, correct our own pursuit of happiness.
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