A Deeply Flawed Human Being
Politics
Written by Douglas Wilson
Tuesday, 23 April 2013
One of the first things a reformer has got to get used to is the
experience of being despised and unpopular. Societies do awful things
(that which needs to be reformed) because they want to, and the reformer
is the one beckoning them to a state of affairs that they don't much
want.
"You shall not fall in with the many to do evil, nor shall you bear
witness in a lawsuit, siding with the many, so as to pervert justice,
nor shall you be partial to a poor man in his lawsuit" (Ex. 23:2-3, ESV).
Notice what this passage requires of us. There are times when the
doing of evil is popular. Many want to do evil, and they summon you to
join them. There are other times when you are being pressured to bear
false witness in a lawsuit, siding with the many, in order to pervert
justice. And if you didn't trip over the next verse, you weren't paying
attention. It prohibits every form of affirmative action, along with all
its ugly cousins. The man of integrity decides according to the law,
and not according to whether the plantiff has had a hard life.
A reformer has to be the kind of man who can stand up to the clamor
of the mob. This is the vertebrate mentality exhibited by Athanasius
when he was informed that "the world" was against him. Well, then, he
replied, let it be known that Athanasius is contra mundum, against the
world. A true reformer gives the PR department fits.
The reformer marches to a different drummer, to not coin a phrase,
but when he does this he elicits real hatred. There are two kinds of
non-conformity, and only one of them wears hipster glasses. The kind
that does wear them is a very popular form of pretending to be out of
the mainstream, in order to be the envy of it, and the other is a
radical form of unpopularity, calculated to get you slandered and
viciously attacked, on the way to changing the mainstream. One kind of
non-conformity requires courage, while the other kind requires nothing
more than vanity and a five dollar cup of fair trade coffee.
The reformer will be attacked by the establishment in the name of a
previous generation of reformers. The men who killed the prophets have
descendents, and those descendents identify themselves by building
memorials to the prophets (Matt. 23: 29-31).
The men who lionize the prophets, Jesus teaches, are the kind of men
who would have tied them to the nearest stake themselves. And the men
who are charged with attacking the legacy of the prophets are the true
sons of the prophets.
In short, the reformer cannot expect anything worthwhile to happen if
all he hears is polite golf applause floating toward him from the
establishment. And that reminds me of something . . .
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