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Wednesday, March 19, 2008
Terry Jeffrey :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Problem With Obama's -- Not Wright's -- Vision
by Terry Jeffrey
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The greatest barrier to Barack Obama becoming a leader who truly advances the cause of justice is not found in the racially polarizing and unpatriotic comments of his longtime pastor, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, but in Obama's own vision of civil rights, which cannot be reconciled with the vision Martin Luther King Jr. used to achieve victory for the civil rights movement.

King's vision was as simple as it was unifying: An unjust law is a law that is not consistent with the natural law and the law of God.

The question King put to Americans was: Is racial discrimination consistent with the natural law and the law of God? The question had only one answer: No.

The reason Americans answered correctly is perhaps best explained by St. Paul, who said in his letter to the Romans that all people have the natural law "written on their hearts."

Whether they like it or not, human beings know the basic rules of right and wrong. Great leaders -- like Martin Luther King Jr. -- achieve positive change by forcing people to confront injustice and appealing to what is already written in their hearts to remedy that injustice.

Obama cannot unabashedly embrace this simple vision for a simple reason: He advocates policies that not only violate the natural law, but do so egregiously because they especially victimize children, who because of their vulnerability especially deserve society's protection.

These policies are legalized abortion, which allows unborn children to be killed, and granting same-sex unions the same legal status as marriage, including the "right" to adopt children, which results in children being denied either a mother or a father by the deliberate policy of the state.

Martin Luther King Jr.'s vision derived its political force from at least three factors: It was rooted in a moral tradition that transcends denominational divisions, it was exactly the same vision articulated in the Declaration of Independence, and it was true.

King, an African American Baptist clergyman, explained his vision in the Letter from Birmingham Jail, where he referenced not only the Declaration of Independence, which was drafted by a Deist, but also the writings of two Catholic saints, one of whom died in 430, the other in 1274.

"I would agree with St. Augustine that 'an unjust law is no law at all,'" wrote King. "Now, what is the difference between the two? How does one determine whether a law is just or unjust? A just law is a manmade code that squares with the moral law or the law of God. An unjust law is a code that is out of harmony with the moral law. To put it in terms of St. Thomas Aquinas: An unjust law is a human law that is not rooted in eternal law and natural law."

This is precisely what the Founding Fathers were saying when they cited "the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God" and insisted that all men "are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights." Continued...

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About The Author

Terence P. Jeffrey is the editor-in-chief of CNSNews

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The big picture
Kudos and thanks to Freedomknight and Chas for their thoughtful and well expressed big-picture viewpoints!

2 - I understand Obama’s message
If you remove the racism, and the religion, it is at the core still about hating the rich because they are rich, and hating the powerful because they are powerful. It is about using the government to take from the rich and powerful and give to the poor and empowering the powerless. Remove the racism ad you have the messages of Hillary and Ted Kennedy. Remove the religion and you have George Soros and Romm Emanuel. This despair subculture of Marxism and Cultural Marxism, are mostly Democrats in our government, who say anybody who opposes them doesn’t care about the poor and the powerless. The other Democrat candidates are just as bad, they just haven’t used racist terms to describe their revolution. About half the country is a part of this despair subculture from the rock and roll generation wanted to change the world and that spit on the troops. They are the reeds blowing in the wind that vote D no matter how bad everything gets.

If you for a moment put yourself in the mindset of Rev. Wright’s church, as I have described it, then go and examine all of Obama’s positions they all make sense. That tribe is the only world view, beliefs, values, he has ever seen. Just making a bad idea popular, applauding it, and voting on it will not turn it into a good idea.

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