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Thursday, February 01, 2007
Marvin Olasky :: Townhall.com Columnist
Remembering a Hero
by Marvin Olasky
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Will the Dems' health care Christmas Present to America be an improvement or detriment to our health care system?


You'll probably hear something about William Wilberforce this month, because an important 200th anniversary is coming. On Feb. 23, 1807, two decades of determination by Member of Parliament Wilberforce finally brought results when the House of Commons voted to abolish the British slave trade. Year after year, voted down, he had not responded bitterly, and this time the other MPs stood and gave three hurrahs as Wilberforce bowed his head and wept at the culmination of his long battle.

Others are cheering in 2007. Washington, D.C. has a Wilberforce Forum, under Chuck Colson's auspices, and that organization, plus the Trinity Forum, sponsored Wilberforce Weekends last month. A major film biography of Wilberforce, "Amazing Grace," is scheduled to hit theaters across the United States on the bicentennial, Feb. 23. A documentary, "The Better Hour: William Wilberforce, A Man of Character Who Changed The World," is scheduled for television broadcast this fall in the United States and the United Kingdom. Members of the state legislature in Alaska have a Clapham Fellowship, named after the British group Wilberforce headed.

Furthermore, John Templeton is funding a national essay contest on Wilberforce for U.S. school kids: It's scheduled to begin in September 2007 with awards coming in spring 2008. I hope students will learn about Wilberforce's theology, including his complaint about those who "either overlook or deny the corruption and weakness of human nature. They talk of frailty and infirmity, of petty transgressions, of occasional failings, and of accidental incidents. (They) speak of man as a being who is naturally pure."

Wilberforce contrasted that view with "the humiliating language of true Christianity. From it we learn that man is an apostate creature. He has fallen from his high, original state. He is indisposed toward the good, and disposed towards evil. He is tainted with sin, not slightly and superficially, but radically, and to the very core of his being. Even though it may be humiliating to acknowledge these things, still this is the biblical account of man."

His realistic view of man allowed him to deal with many kinds of disappointment. Example: As a young man Wilberforce was one of 40 MPs called the Independents who covenanted "not to accept a plum appointment to political office, a government pension, or the offer of hereditary peerage." And yet as years went by, only Wilberforce and one other stuck to that resolution. (Sounds like the Republic Revolutionaries of 1994.)

His realism also helped when he faced sharp attacks. James Boswell, famed now for his biography of Samuel Johnson, wrote of Wilberforce, "I hate your little whittling sneer/ Your pert and self-sufficient leer begone, for shame/ Thou dwarf with big resounding name." (Wilberforce stood only 5 feet tall.) But Wilberforce did not respond in kind. Instead of speaking of his own accomplishments, he often said that one line of prayer summarized his only hope: "God be merciful to me a sinner."

Wilberforce emphasized teaching about Christianity but not imposing it, and wrote that Christians should "boldly assert the cause of Christ in an age when so many who bear the name of Christian are ashamed of Him. Let them be active, useful, and generous toward others. Let them show moderation and self-denial themselves. Let them be ashamed of idleness. When blessed with wealth, let them withdraw from the competition of vanity and be modest, retiring from ostentation, and not be the slaves of fashion."

He proceeded boldly but not arrogantly, knowing that he could commend belief but not command it. He stated, "the national difficulties we face result from the decline of religion and morality among us. I must confess equally boldly that my own solid hopes for the well-being of my country depend, not so much on her navies and armies as on the persuasion that she still contains many who love and obey the Gospel of Christ. I believe that their prayers may yet prevail."

Amen.

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About The Author
Marvin Olasky is editor-in-chief of the national news magazine World, provost of The King's College, and a professor of journalism at The University of Texas at Austin. For additional commentary by Marvin Olasky, visit www.worldmag.com.
 
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DA
Jesus said “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me." John 14:6

He also said, "Enter through the narrow gate. For the gate is wide and the road is broad that leads to destruction, and there are many who go through it. How narrow is the gate and difficult the road that leads to life, and few find it." Matthew 7:13-14

He made a lot of other claims that are available for you to read in the Bible. He didn't give an invitation for us to join ALL religions. He gave us an invitation to follow the One True God, of Whom He was the Incarnate representation.

The invitation was given to all of us, but it is an invitation to only one party. We don't get to chose to come by another way. It's not our party. It's His!

DA Actually, he came down and invited

DA: "Actually, he came down and invited them to join many religions; including but not limited to: Jehovah's Witness, Mormon, Islam, Hinduism, Sikhism."

I don't know what you are reading and I don't know where you got the book. But, Jesus said, "Follow Me." That was the invitation.

He said, "I am the truth, and the life, and the way." He did not say that He was 'a way' but rather 'the way'. There is only 'one way to the exclusion of all others. He also said that there were two ways, the broad way that leads to death and many would find it, and the narrow way that few would find that leads to the strait gate and to life. Jesus was very exclusive about who to follow.

You argue like a Liberal with the same talking points and the same whines so naturally I assumed that you are a Liberal.

DA: "If you want to see atrocities, you need only look at religion."

The point of the column was that slavery was an atrocity and it was eventually ended because of Christian intervention. Slavery is still prcaticed in Muslim countries. Since you feel that Christianity is evil you must believe that the institution of slavery could (should?) not have been ended by Christian intervention. Perhaps you believe the practice of beheadings, amputations, and stonings as applied by the Muslims is the answer to the world's spiritual problems? You are looking at the world with a Liberal mindset.

DA: "As for your children being taught evolution. That is science, not religion. If you are typing on a car or going to the physician, then you must accept science, or you are a hypocrite. PET scans, MRI's, antibiotics, and vaccines are all possible because of science."

I accept science. I believe that you can experience that freezing and melting of water. It can be observed and tested. I believe that wood can be reduced to ashes with fire. I do it all the time in my fireplace. I believe that if you breed dogs you will get dogs... everytime. That has been demonstrated over and over again. I believe that two objects cannot occupy the same space at the same time. That is proved over and over again on the highways. I believe the earth hangs in space suspended by nothing as we can see from the space shuttle.

What I don't believe is that dogs can be bred from cats. It never happened and can never be tested. I don't believe that 250 million old coal can have any trace of carbon 14. The fact that C14 can be found in coal says that something is wrong with the dating systems. I believe we have evidence that animals existed thousands of years ago (we have their bones). I don't believe the fairy tales made up by evolutionists to explain those bones. If what evolutionists say was true, then those evolutionists would not have to revise the story time and time again.

Evolution is a theory at best. It is not proven science. It cannot be tested. It should not be taught with my tax dollars as fact. If you think that it should then you believe the government is entitled to my paycheck and that is a form of slavery. You believe in slavery too.

I think you are confused about what you are. To me you have the feel of because you sound like a Liberal. I would have expected better things from a Captain in the Armed Forces.
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