Weekly Opinion Editorial
THE
PURPOSE OF THE TEN COMMANDMENTS
by Steve
Fair
It has been a tough couple of weeks for
political conservatives. First, the U.S.
Supreme Court ruled the Affordable Care Act tax credits were applicable to
those who signed up through the federal exchanges, even though the bill as
written had not allowed for that. The
second was the ruling on same-sex marriage, where the high court ruled that
every state had to recognize every other state’s marriage laws.
The third blow to conservatives was the
ruling by the Oklahoma Supreme Court on the Ten Commandments monument displayed
on state property near the Capitol. In a
7-2 ruling, the state Supreme court ruled the monument must be removed because
it violates Article II, section 5 of the state constitution. Governor Mary Fallin said the monument will
stay and Attorney General Scott Pruitt says he will appeal the ruling. They both believe the Ten Commandments are
the recognized historic basis of American law as evidenced by the fact Moses
and the Ten Commandments are displayed in the SCOTUS courtroom. A number of Republican state legislators said
they will run a Joint Resolution that will allow Oklahomans to vote on
repealing the offending section of the constitution. Some
conservatives have said this was an indication of how secular our government
has become and is a result of the deterioration of our society. Three observations on the three rulings:
First,
the ruling on ObamaCare was wrong because the court didn’t interrupt the actual
law, but instead ruled on the reported ‘intent’ of the law. That is a dangerous precedent- the court didn’t
rule on what was definitive- they ruled on what they believe the ‘intent’ was
of those who wrote the law. Intent is
key in contract law, but the overriding rule of thumb is if a provision is not
expressly in the contract, it doesn’t exist.
This ruling was not sound and most objective lawyers(liberals and
conservatives) admit that. The ACA
decision was political and is another example of an activist judiciary.
Second,
the ruling on same-sex marriage was also flawed constitutionally. In his 29 page dissent, Chief Justice John
Roberts said the ruling was unconstitutional. In the minority opinion, Roberts and Justice
Scali asked the question; how is it possible that great legal minds like Daniel
Webster didn’t see how the 14th amendment was applicable to marriage
in the past 150 years? Government just needs to get out of the marriage
business- period.
Third,
the Oklahoma
Supreme Court ruling was based on their belief the Ten Commandments are
exclusively religious. The Decalogue
is certainly religious, but it has been the recognized basis for human law for
centuries. The Mosaic Law has both historic
and secular value. Those who object to
the public display of the Ten Commandments cite a variety of reasons, but the
main one is they are ‘offended by the demands of the law.’ Al Mohler, President of Southern Seminary,
says, “The God who gave us the Ten
Commandments fully expects to be God. That's bad news for the idea of a
"free, independent, sovereign individual who exists for his own
sake."
The vast majority of those scrambling to
defend the display of the Decalogue at the Capitol have no idea the true purpose
of the Ten Commandments. It is not a
guideline for humanity to live by, as Jesus proved in the Sermon on the
Mount. In that famous sermon, the Lord
took the most well known commandments and showed that ‘sin is in the heart
before it is in the hand.’ He said man
violated the commandments in their thoughts and intents. In his letter to the church at Galatia, Paul
called the Mosaic law a ‘schoolmaster’ to drive man to Christ. Any honest man knows he can’t ‘keep’ the Ten
Commandments because he has a fallen sin nature. His only hope is the mercy of God. The law condemns man- Christ liberates him. Woe on a society or country that forgets where
the true gauge of right and wrong came from and this court ruling flies in the
face our nation’s history.
President John Quincy Adams said, “The law given from Sinai was a civil and
municipal, as well as a moral and religious code… laws essential to the
existence of men in society and most of which have been enacted by every nation
which ever professed any code of laws.”
Displaying the commandments is a noble
gesture by society, but displaying them and understanding them are two completely
different things. May God open unregenerate
hearts in America
so they understand the real purpose of the Decalogue.
2 comments:
Great article! Thanks for putting it in!
Thanks for reading!
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