All posts by Amanda Legere

God as our rock

In my junior high years, my mother became increasingly cruel. One night she was upset with me about something. I possibly deserved some sort of punishment, God knows I wasn’t perfect, but my mother rarely handled anything correctly, and by no means was she always provoked by bad behavior on my part. I remember being chased around the house and crying uncontrollably. She always resulted in calling my father, who I loved. I worked hard to make him proud, and when she’d call him it hurt me to upset him. This particular occurrence, I was handed the phone with my father on the line. I was crying. He asked me to go into a closet where no one could hear me. He repeated that he couldn’t understand what I was saying, and then said, “Are you in a closet? Can anyone hear you?” To which I responded confused, “Yes, I’m in a closet. No they can’t hear.” “Mandy, I am not upset with you. I know your Aunty. I know she is mean.” She’d put phrases in my head about how awful I was-bitch, ass whole, inconsiderate, worthless-the list goes on. My dad hurt knowing I was stuck there, and the abuse was not going to stop. He cried with me. He knew how painful it was for me, and he knew that words hurt, but he begged me to let them go. I heard him saying, “What to do, what to do?” Then he told me he was going to read to me. My dad took out his Bible and he started reading until I stopped crying. Afterward he prayed.

It was in those moments my father planted a seed. Not everyone that is abused has moments like these with someone there to point them in the right direction and comfort them, but God did the comforting in these precious moments.

Lord we lift up abused children to you. We ask you to free them from the  psychological chains that hold them captive. We pray that they would feel the love of God and come to believe that they are worthy of it. Also we lift up the abuser. That their eyes would be open and their hearts would be healed. We ask this in Jesus name, Amen.

The LORD is my rock, my fortress and my deliverer; my God is my rock, in whom I take refuge, my shield and the horn of my salvation, my stronghold. -Psalm 18:2

Conservative principles are rooted in timeless truths

I believe the greatest accomplishment of political philosophy is natural law. Natural law is defined as a body of unchanging moral principles regarded as a basis for all human conduct; an observable law relating to natural phenomena. Two of the great philosophers of the past who defined natural law are – Thomas Aquinas and John Locke. They were influenced by Roman law, Greek philosophy and ancient Buddhist texts; also by Plato, Aristotle, and Cicero’s writings. Natural law is a philosophy that certain rights or values are inherent and can be universally understood through human reason. Historically, natural law refers to the use of reason to analyze both social and personal human nature to deduce rules for moral behavior. Natural law theorist’s believe that humans have an innatImage result for john locke natural rights quotee ability to know what is naturally right. An example of natural law is: it is universally accepted that to kill someone is wrong, and that to punish someone for killing that person is right, and necessary. Some other examples of Natural Law are the first & second law of thermodynamics, gravity, and the golden rule. The political philosophers of history who defined natural law set the precedent for America’s belief that rights are inherent. Our rights are inherent by what or whom? That’s an answer we come to by faith. Conservative principles align with natural law theorists, and history’s greatest political philosophers, in defining rights as inherent. Government is believed to protect natural rights. Unnatural rights, such as abortion and gay marriage are man-made and therefore not guaranteed. In fact, proponents of unnatural rights directly assault the rationale that sustains our judicial system and our society, because natural law (natural rights) is the only way to ensure a consistent unchanging set of moral principles that can be enforced to govern society fairly.

Conservative principles align with history. The Founding Fathers accepted natural law and believed it was the only political philosophy that was capable of creating a free and just society. The evidence of their widespread acceptance of natural law is found in the following documents: The Declaration of Independence, The Constitution, and The Articles of Confederation. Evidence is also found in the Pledge of Allegiance. Every time these documents reference God it is in the context of establishing man’s rights and recognizes their belief in inherent rights. The Founding Fathers knew our rights must be inherent from a higher power, because they believed deeply that if men established rights, men can also take away rights; something they experienced first-hand and a driving force of the Revolutionary War. They believed that men were easily corrupted by power and that if rights were inherent no one, not man, not society, not government could ever strip people of their rights and freedom. Conservative principles recognize that rights are inherent (by the Creator). This belief held by the Founding Father’s is the foundation of the freedom we’ve long enjoyed.

Denouncing natural law and the achievements of the political philosophers throughout history is equivalent to denouncing Einstein’s greatest achievements. If we chose to ignore the achievements of these great philosophers, we are not progressing into something better, we are in fact moving backwards.

If we, as a nation, forget that our rights are inherent (from God), if we as a nation continue to denounce the greatest philosophical works of the past, the foundation of our legal system, the only consistent path to “right and wrong,” what will stop injustice from prevailing and what will stop us from losing freedom?

Conservative principles are not outdated, they are grounded in the only philosophy that produces  unchanging moral principles.

 

Lets practice confidence

I used to read quotes on a regular basis. I signed up for something on the internet, I have no recollection of what it was exactly, but I started receiving an email with the “Quote of the Day.” I liked them and read them regularly. I stopped receiving them for a little over a year and today I got one! Anxious to see what it said I opened it, and behold:

Great quote, right? But do you see the problem with this little nugget of hope other than the terrible image they laid it over? How do you actually combat feelings of jealousy? You cannot just stop being something, jealous in this particular case, if you are not practicing to be the antithesis of it. Today I read this quote and I didn’t just agree with it. I studied it with the hope of finding something applicable from it, and concluded.

Today, lets practice confidence. Put time into thinking about your strengths, and building them. Be aware of your weaknesses but don’t put so much value on them. It’s not our weaknesses that improve the world around us, it’s our strengths.

http://zenhabits.net/25-killer-actions-to-boost-your-self-confidence/

 

Virtue or Vice

“…only a virtuous people are capable of freedom. As nations become corrupt and vicious, they have more need of masters.” -Benjamin Franklin

“Trying to become virtuous merely by excluding vice, however, is as unrealistic as trying to cultivate roses solely by eliminating weeds.” -Donald DeMarco

If virtue is what enables are freedom of self-governance it must not be taken for granted. We need to understand virtues, acquire, and develop them, but where do virtues come from?

This question has been asked by history’s greatest theologians and philosophers. Aristotle used the word hexis to describe moral virtue. Moral virtue is derived from action. Virtues can be passed down from family and cultures if children are taught to habitually embrace them.

How much do we really know about virtues and how often do we seek to understand and practice them?