Orrin Woodward on LIFE & Leadership

Inc Magazine Top 20 Leader shares his personal, professional, and financial secrets.

  • Orrin Woodward

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    Former Guinness World Record Holder for largest book signing ever, Orrin Woodward is a NY Times bestselling author of And Justice For All along with RESOLVED & coauthor of LeaderShift and Launching a Leadership Revolution. His books have sold over one million copies in the financial, leadership and liberty fields. RESOLVED: 13 Resolutions For LIFE made the Top 100 All-Time Best Leadership Books and the 13 Resolutions are the framework for the top selling Mental Fitness Challenge personal development program.

    Orrin made the Top 20 Inc. Magazine Leadership list & has co-founded two multi-million dollar leadership companies. Currently, he serves as the Chairman of the Board of the LIFE. He has a B.S. degree from GMI-EMI (now Kettering University) in manufacturing systems engineering. He holds four U.S. patents, and won an exclusive National Technical Benchmarking Award.

    This blog is an Alltop selection and ranked in HR's Top 100 Blogs for Management & Leadership.

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Archive for March, 2008

Failure is an Event not a Person

Posted by Orrin Woodward on March 10, 2008

Here is another super video on the benefit of failures for future successes.  I believe every great achiever had to go through a significant failure to learn from.  Failure forces you to confront the brutal reality and make the necessary changes to win.  Failure is not final, but only a stepping stone to further success.  Don’t be afraid of failure – be afraid of playing it safe.  People who play it safe in life still end up dying, but they never end up living.  How about you?  Are you busy living (and failing) or are you are busy dying (and playing it safe)?  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

Posted in All News | 1 Comment »

R.C. Sproul – Duty and Honor

Posted by Orrin Woodward on March 9, 2008

This Sunday’s article is from R.C. Sproul.  I had the opportunity several months back to have lunch with R.C. Sproul along with Tim Marks and Chris Brady.  I enjoyed the lunch and learned so much in the couple of hours we spent together.  This article on Duty and Honor exemplifies the leaders of the Team.  You do not hear the words duty and honor used much in this cynical culture.  I believe a restoration of our culture is possible when we begin to speak of duty and honor again.  Enjoy the article and ask yourself about your sense of duty and honor. God Bless, Orrin Woodward

 

RC Sproul pictureToday, the word honor has all but disappeared from the English language. I speak about honor because the dictionary lists the term honor as the chief synonym for the word integrity. My concern in this article is to ask: “What is the meaning of integrity?” If we use the pedestrian definitions given to us by lexicographers, such as we find in Webster’s dictionary, we read several entries. In the first instance, integrity is defined as “uncompromising adherence to moral and ethical principles.” Second, integrity means “soundness of character.” Third, integrity means “honesty.” Fourth, integrity refers to being “whole or entire.” Fifth and finally, integrity means to be “unimpaired in one’s character.”

 

Now, these definitions describe persons who are almost as rare as the use of the term honor. In the first instance, integrity would describe someone whom we might call “a person of principle.” The person who is a person of principle is one, as the dictionary defines, who is uncompromising. The person is not uncompromising in every negotiation or discussion of important issues, but is uncompromising with respect to moral and ethical principles. This is a person who puts principle ahead of personal gain.

 

We also see that integrity refers to soundness of character and of honesty. When we look to the New Testament, for example, in the epistle of James, James gives a list of virtues that are to be manifested in the Christian life. In the fifth chapter of that letter at verse 12, he writes, “But above all, my brothers, do not swear, either by heaven or by earth or with any other oath, but let your ‘yes’ be yes, and your ‘no,’ be no, so that you may not fall under condemnation.” Here James elevates the trustworthiness of a person’s word, the simple statement of yes or no, as a virtue that is “above all.” What James is getting at is that integrity requires a kind of honesty that indicates that when we say we will do something, our word is our bond. We should not require sacred oaths and vows in order to be trusted. People of integrity can be trusted on the basis of what they say.

 

We look back to the Old Testament to the experience of the prophet Isaiah in his vision recorded in chapter 6 of that book. We remember that Isaiah saw the Lord high and lifted up as well as the seraphim singing the Trisagion: “Holy, Holy, Holy.” In response to this epiphany, Isaiah cried out, “Woe is me,” announcing a curse upon himself. He said the reason for his curse was because “I am undone” or “ruined.” What Isaiah experienced in that moment was human disintegration. Prior to that vision, Isaiah was perhaps viewed as the most righteous man in the nation. He stood secure and confident in his own integrity. Everything was being held together by his virtue. He considered himself a whole, integrated person, but as soon as he saw the ultimate model and standard for integrity and virtue in the character of God, he experienced disintegration. He fell apart at the seams, realizing that his sense of integrity was at best a pretense.

 

Calvin indicated that this is the common lot of human beings, who as long as they keep their gaze fixed on the horizontal or terrestrial level of experience, are able to congratulate themselves and consider themselves with all flattery of being slightly less than demigods. But once they raise their gaze to heaven and consider even for a moment what kind of being God is, they stand shaking and quaking, becoming completely disavowed of any further illusion of their integrity.

 

The Christian is to reflect the character of God. The Christian is to be uncompromising with respect to ethical principles. The Christian is called to be a person of honor whose word can be trusted.

Posted in Faith | 1 Comment »

A Great Leader is a Great Follower

Posted by Orrin Woodward on March 8, 2008

I read another fantastic leadership article by Executive Coach Carol Giannantonio.   Carol is a success coach to the executives at major corporations.  There are a couple of key points in the article and it is nice to see more leadership gurus in the world referencing the thoughts from Chris and my book – Launching a Leadership Revolution.  The readers of this blog deserve the credit and praise for promoting the book and selling over 100,000 copies for charity.  Keep it up and let’s see who else will reference the leadership principles.  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

 

“The world needs transcendent leaders whose eyes we trust, whose heart we know, whose soul is rampant in all that they do” – Robert Rabbin.

 

What does it really take to be a great leader?

 

As an Executive and Business Coach, I ask my clients this question when setting leadership goals. One of the first steps in achieving success in leadership is creating a vision of what a great leader means for you. This vision, along with a plan, continuous action, courage and commitment create some of the “greatest” leaders.

 

Many of these great leaders “follow in the footsteps of other great leaders and use coaching to reach their leadership goals. Why? Because coaching is a powerful tool that involves lifting a person’s vision to higher sights, raising their performance to a higher standard, and building a personality beyond its normal limitations to its full potential.

 

So as you set off on your quest to becoming a great leader, here are two steps you may want to “follow”.

 

1. Develop “Double vision” – Great leaders have a “vision” of what being a great leader means for them. They know what it looks like and feel like and they act accordingly by practicing good leadership skills. It also means having “vision” In this case I mean the ability to talk about the future as if it were already here. Steve Jobs often does this. He creates a clear picture in people’s minds of how a new product will change the world — before it’s even launched. He gets people excited about the future he sees in his mind. That’s an innate talent. Stepping out on a limb like that comes much more naturally to some people than to others. The good news is, if you haven’t got that skill, you can develop it!- It’s not so much about your own technical expertise as it is about inspiring other people to be better at what they.

 

2. Become a great follower. Along with the skill of vision and leading comes the skill of “ability to follow”. What I mean by this is the ability to identify and follow the patterns of success within your organization-follow the footsteps of others who are “great leaders”.

 

Here is what other great minds say about this concept.

 

In “Reinventing Leadership”, Warren Bennis wrote, “Good leaders should also be good followers. If you’re coming up within an organization, you must be a good follower or you’re not going to get very far. Leaders and followers share certain characteristics such as listening, collaborating, and working out competitive issues with peers.”

 

In “Launching a Leadership Revolution”, Chris Brady and Orrin Woodward, stress the importance of becoming a Performer in leadership development-the need to create a record of performance. “You need to become a great follower, a great contributor.”

 

According to Brady and Woodward, the quickest way of gaining a track record of performance is to master the patterns of success already established in your organization.

Thus, the goal of every leader is to become a “Performer” who successfully works with and master the existing patterns of success within the organization.

 

As a successful “Performer” you have the knowledge and expertise to help others accomplish similar results. You gain recognition, respect and power in the organization. You have influence, another key ingredient to successful leadership.

 

Sam Rayburn says it all in this wonderful quote: “You cannot be a leader, and ask other people to follow you, unless you know how to follow, too.” 

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Mel Gibson – William Wallace – Sons of Scotland

Posted by Orrin Woodward on March 7, 2008

This is my all time favorite movie scene!  William Wallace teaching the Scots that life without freedom is no life at all.  Honor is not a subject that is covered in today’s schools, but it should be.  Never take our God given freedoms for granted.  Freedom from tyranny is never free and eternal vigilance is the price to maintain the hard earned freedoms won in Western civilization.  Study the history of your country and study the history of man’s quest for freedom against tyranny.  Do you know the price paid for our freedoms?  Very inspiring stuff!  What is your favorite inspirational moment from the movies?  Remember that our lives are not dress rehearsal and we only have one life to live.  How you live that life will echo throughout eternity.  Live a God honoring life and make a difference in your sphere of influence.  Here are my favorite freedom quotes.  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

He that would make his own liberty secure, must guard even his enemy from opposition; for if he violates this duty he establishes a precedent that will reach himself. – Thomas Paine

 

History does not teach fatalism.  There are moments when the will of a handful of free men breaks through determinism and opens up new roads. – Charles de Gaulle

 

Freedom has its life in the hearts, the actions, the spirit of men and so it must be daily earned and refreshed – else like a flower cut from its life-giving roots, it will wither and die. – Dwight D. Eisenhower

 

The patriot’s blood is the seed of Freedom’s tree. – Thomas Campbell

 

Here is my advice as we begin the century that will lead to 2081.  First, guard the freedom of ideas at all costs.  Be alert that dictators have always played on the natural human tendency to blame others and to oversimplify.  And don’t regard yourself as a guardian of freedom unless you respect and preserve the rights of people you disagree with to free, public, unhampered expression. – Gerard K. O’Neill

 

Those who deny freedom to others deserve it not for themselves. – Abraham Lincoln

 

It is easy to take liberty for granted, when you have never had it taken from you. – Dick Cheney

 

We on this continent should never forget that men first crossed the Atlantic not to find soil for their ploughs but to secure liberty for their souls. – Robert J. McCracken

 

For what avail the plough or sail, or land or life, if freedom fail? – Ralph Waldo Emerson

 

Those who expect to reap the blessings of freedom, must, like men, undergo the fatigue of supporting it. – Thomas Paine

 

In the truest sense, freedom cannot be bestowed; it must be achieved. – Franklin D. Roosevelt

 

We have to call it “freedom”: who’d want to die for “a lesser tyranny”? – Mignon McLaughlin

 

Freedom is the oxygen of the soul. – Moshe Dayan

 

There are two freedoms – the false, where a man is free to do what he likes; the true, where he is free to do what he ought. – Charles Kingsley

 

No one is free when others are oppressed. – Author Unknown

 

Nations grown corrupt

Love bondage more than liberty;

Bondage with ease than strenuous liberty. – John Milton

 

Most people want security in this world, not liberty. – H.L. Mencken

 

Men fight for freedom, then they begin to accumulate laws to take it away from themselves. – Author Unknown

 

Liberty has never come from the government.  Liberty has always come from the subjects of it.  The history of liberty is a history of resistance. – Woodrow Wilson

 

They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. – Benjamin Franklin

 

We have enjoyed so much freedom for so long that we are perhaps in danger of forgetting how much blood it cost to establish the Bill of Rights. – Felix Frankfurter

 

No man can put a chain about the ankle of his fellow man without at last finding the other end fastened about his own neck. – Frederick Douglass

 

Let freedom never perish in your hands. – Joseph Addison

 

I believe there are more instances of the abridgment of the freedom of the people by gradual and silent encroachments of those in power than by violent and sudden usurpations. – James Madison

 

Freedom has a thousand charms to show,

That slaves, howe’er contented, never know. – William Cowper

 

The contest for ages has been to rescue liberty from the grasp of executive power. – Daniel Webster

 

Men fight for liberty and win it with hard knocks.  Their children, brought up easy, let it slip away again, poor fools.  And their grandchildren are once more slaves. – D.H. Lawrence

 

I prefer liberty with danger to peace with slavery. – Author Unknown

 

Liberty means responsibility.  That is why most men dread it. – George Bernard Shaw

 

The people never give up their liberties but under some delusion. – Edmund Burke

 

Freedom is never free. – Author Unknown

 

Many politicians are in the habit of laying it down as a self-evident proposition that no people ought to be free till they are fit to use their freedom.  The maxim is worthy of the fool in the old story who resolved not to go into the water till he had learned to swim. – Thomas Macaulay

Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty. – Holy Bible

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Rocky Balboa & Attitude Makes the Difference

Posted by Orrin Woodward on March 6, 2008

Rocky Balboa’s shares his view of life and the attitude to win!

Do you have an attitude of victory or defeat?  If we are going to make a difference in the world, we must first start with our own attitude and thinking.  Here are my favoritie quotes on attitude.  What is your favorite quote on attitude?  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

Attitude is reframing the thinking about the events in your life to empower you towards victory, instead of disempowering you towards defeat. – Orrin Woodward

 

A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.  – Herm Albright

 

Attitudes are contagious.  Are yours worth catching?  – Dennis and Wendy Mannering

 

Wherever you go, no matter what the weather, always bring your own sunshine. – Anthony J. D’Angelo

 

If you don’t get everything you want, think of the things you don’t get that you don’t want. – Oscar Wilde

 

If you don’t think every day is a good day, just try missing one. – Cavett Robert

 

Oh, my friend, it’s not what they take away from you that counts.  It’s what you do with what you have left. – Hubert Humphrey

 

Attitude is a little thing that makes a big difference. – Winston Churchill

 

Every day may not be good, but there’s something good in every day. – Author Unknown

 

Happiness is an attitude.  We either make ourselves miserable, or happy and strong.  The amount of work is the same. – Francesca Reigler

 

If you don’t like something change it; if you can’t change it, change the way you think about it. – Mary Engelbreit

 

So often time it happens, we all live our life in chains, and we never even know we have the key. – The Eagles, “Already Gone”

 

The only people who find what they are looking for in life are the fault finders. – Foster’s Law

 

He who has so little knowledge of human nature as to seek happiness by changing anything but his own disposition will waste his life in fruitless efforts. – Samuel Johnson

 

Think big thoughts but relish small pleasures. – H. Jackson Brown, Jr.

 

Every thought is a seed.  If you plant crab apples, don’t count on harvesting Golden Delicious. – Bill Meyer

 

To be upset over what you don’t have is to waste what you do have. – Ken S. Keyes, Jr.

 

Defeat is not bitter unless you swallow it. – Joe Clark

The only disability in life is a bad attitude. – Scott Hamilton

 

If you aren’t fired with enthusiasm, you will be fired with enthusiasm.  ~Vince Lombardi

 

I don’t like that man.  I must get to know him better. – Abraham Lincoln

 

There are no menial jobs, only menial attitudes. – William J. Bennett

 

To be wronged is nothing unless you continue to remember it. – Confucius

 

I don’t think of all the misery but of the beauty that still remains. – Anne Frank

 

The greatest discovery of my generation is that a human being can alter his life by altering his attitudes. – William James

 

Could we change our attitude, we should not only see life differently, but life itself would come to be different. – Katherine Mansfield

 

Enjoy the little things, for one day you may look back and realize they were the big things. – Robert Brault

 

Whenever you fall, pick something up. – Oswald Avery

 

Success is due less to ability than to zeal. – Charles Buxton

 

We awaken in others the same attitude of mind we hold toward them. – Elbert Hubbard

 

We plant seeds that will flower as results in our lives, so best to remove the weeds of anger, avarice, envy and doubt… – Dorothy Day

 

I am an optimist.  It does not seem too much use being anything else. – Winston Churchill

 

[W]hat counts is not necessarily the size of the dog in the fight – it’s the size of the fight in the dog. – Dwight Eisenhower

 

I have learned to use the word impossible with the greatest caution. – Wernher von Braun

 

The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function.  One should, for example, be able to see that things are hopeless and yet be determined to make them otherwise. – F. Scott Fitzgerald

 

The human spirit is stronger than anything that can happen to it. – C.C. Scott

 

Too many people miss the silver lining because they’re expecting gold. – Maurice Setter

 

We cannot direct the wind but we can adjust the sails. – Author Unknown

 

The block of granite which was an obstacle in the pathway of the weak, became a stepping-stone in the pathway of the strong. – Thomas Carlyle

 

Misery is a communicable disease. – Martha Graham

 

The world is full of cactus, but we don’t have to sit on it. – Will Foley

 

If you have the will to win, you have achieved half your success; if you don’t, you have achieved half your failure. – David Ambrose

 

A happy person is not a person in a certain set of circumstances, but rather a person with a certain set of attitudes. – Hugh Downs

 

Very often a change of self is needed more than a change of scene. – Arthur Christopher Benson

 

Some people are always grumbling because roses have thorns; I am thankful that thorns have roses. – Alphonse Karr

 

If you call a thing bad you do little, if you call a thing good you do much. – Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

 

I never really look for anything.  What God throws my way comes.  I wake up in the morning and whichever way God turns my feet, I go. – Pearl Bailey

 

Men who never get carried away should be. – Malcolm Forbes

 

Become a possibilitarian.  No matter how dark things seem to be or actually are, raise your sights and see possibilities – always see them, for they’re always there. – Norman Vincent Peale

 

Surrounded by people who love life, you love it too; surrounded by people who don’t, you don’t. – Mignon McLaughlin

 

Physical strength is measured by what we can carry; spiritual by what we can bear. – Author Unknown

 

We all live under the same sky, but we don’t all have the same horizon. – Konrad Adenauer

 

We can destroy ourselves by cynicism and disillusion, just as effectively as by bombs. – Kenneth Clark

 

The impossible can always be broken down into possibilities. – Author Unknown

 

An adventure is only an inconvenience rightly considered.  An inconvenience is only an adventure wrongly considered. – G.K. Chesterton

 

Impossible is a word only to be found in the dictionary of fools. – Napoleon

 

Things turn out best for the people who make the best out of the way things turn out. – Art Linkletter

 

I have never met a man so ignorant that I couldn’t learn something from him. – Galileo Galilei

 

The man who has no inner life is a slave to his surroundings. – Henri Frédéric Amiel

 

Toughness is in the soul and spirit, not in muscles. – Alex Karras

 

People seem not to see that their opinion of the world is also a confession of character. – Ralph Waldo Emerson

 

I have found that if you love life, life will love you back. – Arthur Rubinstein

Posted in All News | 2 Comments »

Tri-Lateral Leadership Ledger – Character Based Leadership

Posted by Orrin Woodward on March 5, 2008

Leadership Revolution pictureI read an article by Mark McNeilly that captures the principle of character and how it flows into the long-term results of an organization.  Without character, all the flowery words and images will ultimately backfire against the leaders.  Hypocrisy is not a value system that followers will support.  The question is, “Are you who you say you are?”  If not, you will be found out.  If yes, people will buy into your vision because they have bought into you.  All true leaders should work on their personal character first, followed by relationships and task—rounding out the Tri-Lateral Leadership Ledger.  Chris Brady and my book – Launching a Leadership Revolution -covers the Tri-Lateral Leaderhip principles in depth.  Over 100,000 copies of the hard cover version of LLR have been sold and all of the royalties have gone to various charities.  The readers of this blog are making a huge difference and getting character based leadership into the hands of industry leaders.  Enjoy the article and decide to live a life that can be written in the clouds for all to see!  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

 

What do character and strategy have to do with one another? To successfully carry out a strategy that will bring long-term benefit to your company, one must have character.

 

Sun Tzu had this to say about character:

 

“And therefore the general who in advancing does not seek personal fame, and in withdrawing is not concerned with avoiding punishment, but whose only purpose is to protect the people and promote the best interests of his sovereign, is the precious jewel of the state…Few such are to be had.” Sun Tzu

 

To become such a leader, to put others before yourself, is not an easy task. It demands sacrifice. You must be willing to build your character and not just your image, to lead with actions and not just words, to share your employees trials, and not just their triumphs, and to motivate emotionally, not just materially.

 

Much has been written in the last few decades about management methods, devices and tricks one can learn to manipulate people to do what one wants. However, little has been said about what true leadership is really based on–character. To lead and command properly, a person must have certain character traits and virtues.

 

“By command I mean the generals’ qualities of wisdom, sincerity, humanity, courage, and strictness…If wise, a commander is able to recognize changing circumstances and to act expediently. If sincere, his men will have no doubt of the certainty of rewards and punishments. If humane, he loves mankind, sympathized with others, and appreciates their industry and toil. If courageous, he gains victory by seizing opportunity without hesitation. If strict, his troops are disciplined because they are in awe of him and are afraid of punishment.”

 

In business there are many unknowns. Therefore, wisdom is important for it allows a leader to clearly define the company’s strengths, weaknesses and opportunities and build a solid strategy. Courage is essential because, without it, a leader cannot take advantage of wisdom with bold action when the time requires it. Sincerity and humanity are crucial because, at the heart of it, leading a team, department, division, or company means accomplishing success through other human beings. Discipline is necessary, for it is required to ensure that strategy is executed successfully. All these traits are a manifestation of a strong, positive and well-developed character.

 

A study that looked at hundreds of North American companies concluded that “after 4 years, 15%-25% of the variation in profitability was due to the character of the chief executives.” So character is therefore critical in being successful in your business (and I might add, your personal life). As Sun Tzu said,

 

“Those who excel in war first cultivate their own humanity and justice and maintain their laws and institutions. By these means they make their governments invincible.”

Posted in All News | 2 Comments »

Steve Jobs – CEO Apple Computers/Pixar Animation

Posted by Orrin Woodward on March 4, 2008

I loved this Stanford commencement speech from Steve Jobs.  Success is success in any area that you pursue.  You will have dreams, struggles, victories, defeats (which winners turn into experiences), and increased wisdom to start it all over again.  Steve Jobs was adopted.  I can’t help but think of what the world would have lost had Jobs been aborted instead of adopted.  To us it is a societal issue, but to the babies it is a matter of life and death.  I think Steve Jobs would have fit right in at the leadership event in St. Louis.  Jobs is creative, humble, and constantly stretching his boundaries.  Enjoy the commencement speech and ask yourself: are you living your life to the fullest?  I encourage you to give this world the best you have and make a difference with the gifts God gave you.   Grab a notepad and take some notes on this speech.  Please share what you have learned with the rest of our readers!  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

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Polish Solidarity Movement – A Case Study in Resistance to Tyranny

Posted by Orrin Woodward on March 3, 2008

The Solidarity Movement was successful in forcing changes to the inept, inefficient and un-productive Polish Communist Party.  Tyranny comes in many sizes, shapes and forms, but displays several uncanny common characteristic wherever it is practiced.  Leadership in corporations and governments is not any different at its core principles.  Leadership in both fields is responsible to lead with character and produce long-term results.  When this doesn’t happen, there will be resistance and eventually the incompetent “leaders” will be ousted.  Here is a fantastic article on the Solidarity movement in blue with my analysis on Solidarity’s resistance and tyranny’s oppressive principles after each paragraph.  Enjoy the article and learn about the brave men and women from Poland who stood up for truth against their Communist Tyrants.  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

 

Established in September of 1980 at the Gdansk shipyards, Solidarity was an independent labor union instrumental in the eventual collapse of the Soviet Union, and the primary catalyst that would transform Poland from a repressive communist satellite to the EU member democracy it is today. The Solidarity movement received international attention, spreading anti-communist ideas and inspiring political action throughout the rest of the Communist Bloc, and its influence in the eventual fall of communism in Central and Eastern Europe cannot be understated or dismissed.

 

When people cannot communicate freely with those in power—they are forced to resists the dictatorial powers who will not listen to the needs of their constituents.  Leaders are responsible for results and if the titled leaders will not produce results, then others leaders with purpose  and results will replace them.

 

Solidarity’s cohesion and initial success, like that of other dissident movements, was not created overnight, or the result of any specific event or grievance. Rather, the emergence of Solidarity as a political force in Poland was spurred by governmental and economic difficulties that had continued to deepen over the course of an entire decade. Poland’s ‘shortage economy’ put stress on the lives of everyday people who were unable to purchase daily necessities, such as bread or toilet paper, and faced endless queues for which there was rarely a reward. In July of 1980, the Polish government – facing economic crisis – was again forced to raise the price of goods while curbing the growth of wages. This was essentially the “last straw” for much of Poland’s labor force, with strikes spreading almost at once across the country, in spite of the absence of any organized network.

 

When the people responsible for the management of a country or company cannot produce results—this leads to many grievances and events that place stress on the people following the inept “leaders.”   When in charge, take command or you will be held responsible.  There does not need to be an organized network, only a common complaint among all members like the inept Polish Communist Regime.  People unite around the incompetence of the current administration to drive change.

 

In Gdansk, at the then ‘Lenin Shipyards’, the shipyard workers were unified by the additional outrage of Anna Walentynowicz’s firing. The dismissal of Walentynowicz – a popular crane-operator and activist, combined with the previous firing of Lech Walesa – an outspoken electrician, galvanized the workers into taking action. A strike began on August 14th, led by Walesa, who gave voice to the workers’ demands for the legalization of independent labor unions, the raising of a monument to the 80 workers brutally murdered in a 1970 labor dispute in Gdansk, and the rehiring of both Walesa and Walentynowicz.

 

The first action of the oppressors is to fire or murder the leaders that are most vocal in their resistance to the incompetent management.  By firing the leaders of the resistance, tyrannical “leaders” expect the followers to passively surrender their ideals.  Anna Walentynowicz and Lech Walesa were both fired for addressing the lack of results of the Polish Communist Regime, but the Polish people did not surrender their ideals and convictions.

 

Despite nation-wide censorship and the severance of all phone connections between Gdansk and the rest of the country, several underground presses succeeded in covering the story and spreading the shipyard workers’ message throughout Poland and the Eastern Bloc. On August 16th, several other strike committees joined the Gdansk shipyard workers and the following day 21 demands of the unified strike committee were put forward. These demands went far beyond the scope of local concern, calling for the legal formation of independent trade unions, an end to media censorship, the right to strike, new rights for the Church, the freeing of political prisoners, and improvements in the national health system. The movement’s news-sheet, Solidarnosc, began being printed on the shipyard printing press at a run of 30,000 copies.

 

The second action of all dictatorial powers is to censor the free speech of the resistance to kill the truth about the inept management of the enterprise.  Tyranny’s biggest fear is that the truth about the administration’s incompetence and hypocrisy would be publically exposed. 

 

On August 18th, the Szczecin shipyard joined the Gdansk shipyard in protest, igniting a wave of strikes along the Polish coast. Within days, most of Poland was affected by factory shutdowns, with more and more unions forming and joining the Gdansk-based federation on a daily basis. With the situation in Gdansk gaining international support and media coverage, the Gdansk shipyard workers were able to hold out longer than many of their compatriots. Poland’s Soviet government capitulated, sending a Governmental Commission to Gdansk, which on September 3rd signed an agreement ratifying many of the workers’ demands. This agreement, known as the Gdansk Agreement, became recognized as the first step in dismantling Soviet power. Achieving the right to form labor unions independent of Communist Party control, and the right to strike, workers’ concerns would now receive representation; common people were now able to introduce democratic changes into the communist political structure.

 

Tyranny counts on the passive behavior of the masses and will not yield to gentle requests.  History teaches that a God-less power hungry elite must be met with an equal but opposite Godly force to cause tyranny to relent.   The Polish Communistic regime only capitulated because of international support, media coverage, and a unified Solidarity.

 

With an upsurge of momentum in the wake of their success, workers’ representatives – with Walesa on the pulpit – formed a national labor union on September 17th and Solidarity (‘Solidarnosc’ in Polish) was born. The first independent labor union in the Soviet Bloc, Solidarity’s existence was remarkable to people the world over who had previously thought such an organization could never exist under communism. In Poland, millions of people hopeful for change rallied around the union and in the 500 days following the Gdansk Agreement, 10 million people – students, workers, intellectuals – joined Solidarnosc or one of its sub organizations (Independent Student Union, Craftsmen’s Union, Farmer’s Union, etc.). A quarter of the country’s population bravely became members, including 80% of Poland’s workforce, marking the only time in human history that such a percentage of a country’s population voluntarily joined an organization. With the country behind them, Solidarity slowly transformed from a trade union to a full-on revolutionary movement, using strikes and other acts of protest to force change in government policies. The movement was careful, however, never to use violence, for fear of encouraging and validating harsh reprimands from the government.

 

Tyranny only recognizes a threat when the people stand so strongly with the resistance—they realize attacking the leadership is attacking everyone under their adminstration.  One, two, ten even a thousand dissidents can be thrown in jail, but not millions of the Polish workforce.  The Polish people called the bluff of the dictatorial threats and intimidation by standing together against the overt tyranny.  Over 80% of the Polish workforce bravely stood up to the Communist dictators by joining the Solidarity movement and this forced the Polish Communist to negotiate.

 

As quickly as December 1980, the Monument to Fallen Shipyard Workers was erected, and the following month Walesa and other Solidarity delegates met with Pope John Paul II in Rome. After 27 Solidarity members in Bydgoszcz were assaulted by the state police during a state-initiated National Council meeting on March 19th, news spread throughout the underground press and nation-wide strike was planned. This action, involving over half a million people, brought Poland to a standstill and was the largest strike in the history of the Eastern Bloc. The government was forced to promise an investigation into the Bydgoszcz beatings and allow the story to be released to the international press.

 

When tyranny realizes the leaders of the resistance will not back down—they will attack the next line of leaders, hoping to break the unity of the resistance.  27 Solidarity members were assaulted, but it only strengthened the will to resist.  Solidarity insisted the beatings be released to the media to the shame of the oppressors.  Every dictatorial mis-step by the oppressors must be met by united actions by the oppressed people.

 

After the Gdansk Agreement, Moscow stepped up pressure on its Polish government, which continued to lose its control over Polish society. The Soviets put General Wojciech Jaruzelski in the driver’s seat, expecting a crackdown on the Solidarity movement. On December 13th, 1981, Juruzelski delivered, declaring martial law and arresting some 5,000 Solidarity members in the middle of the night, Walesa and other Gdansk leaders among them. Censorship was expanded and police filled the streets. Hundreds of strikes taking place throughout the country were put down harshly by riot police, including several deaths during demonstrations in Gdansk and at the Wujek Coal Mine. By the end of 1981 strikes had ceased and Solidarity seemed crippled. In October of 1982, Solidarity was delegalized and banned. The Polish people were bowed, but not broken….

 

Tyranny will never willingly give up power and will attack on all fronts – in as many un-ethical ways it can think of to maintain power – regardless of their alleged principles.  In the Polish Communist Government’s case, the communist had always claimed they were for the common workers, but the behaviors proved they only cared for their special perks and power.  Ideology is thown out the moment their tyrannical power is threatened.

 

Upon the arrest of the Solidarity leadership, more underground structures began to form, including Solidarity Radio and over 500 underground publications. Solidarity managed to persevere throughout the mid-80s as an underground movement, garnering extensive international support which condemned Jaruzelski’s actions.

 

The more the resistance is attacked—the more it unites and goes underground.  The Solidarity movement created Solidarity radio and over 500 underground publications.  This ensured the truth about the un-Godly behavior of the oppressors would be made public.  The Solidarity radio and publications did not need to create lies about the oppressors as the truth is damning enough.

 

No other movement in the world was supported by such a wide gamut: Reagan, Thatcher, the Pope, Carrillo (head of communist Spain); NATO, Christians, Western communists, liberals, conservatives, and socialists – all voiced support for Solidarity’s cause. US President Ronald Reagan imposed sanctions on Poland, which would eventually force the government to soften its policies. The CIA and Catholic Church provided funds, equipment and training to the Solidarity underground. And the Polish people still supported what remained of the movement, demonstrating through masses held by priests such as Jerzy Popieluszko, who would himself later become a martyr of the cause.

 

Resistance to tyranny always brings other principle-centered Godly people to the freedom movement’s aid.  The French people helped the Colonials in the Revolutionary War.  The free-enterprise, freedom loving, people of the world helped the Solidarity movement against the power hungry, anti-freedom, intimidation filled Polish Communist Regime.  Tyrannical “leaders” must wake up and realize they will not be tolerated by freedom loving people of the world.

 

By November of 1982, Walesa was released from prison; however, less than a month later, the government carried out an attack upon the movement, arresting 10,000 activists. On July 22, 1983, martial law was lifted, yet many restrictions on civil liberties and political life remained, as well as food rationing which would continue until the late 80s. On October 5th, Lech Walesa was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, despite the Polish government’s attempts to defame him and their refusal to allow him to leave the country and accept the award.

 

Tyranny cannot survive unless Civil Liberties are revoked, violated and repressed.  Oppressors must defame the leaders of the resistance for fear that the people will learn the truth and refuse to follow the incompetent leaders.  Awards and recognitions given to the resistance leaders will be disparaged, minimized and excused away.  Tyranny can have only worship one god and that is Self.

 

When Mikhail Gorbachev assumed control over the Soviet Union in 1985, he was forced to initiate a series of reforms due to the worsening economic situation across the entire Eastern Bloc. These reforms included political and social reforms which led to a shift in policy in many Soviet satellites, including Poland, and led to the happy release of hundreds of political prisoners connected with Solidarity. However, Solidarity members continued to be the objects of persecution and discrimination.

 

The only reforms ever implemented in a tyrannical power-hungry regime are those that are forced upon the oppressors by a united resistance.  Gorbachev only relented to the political and social reforms from political expediency to maintain power.  As Lord Acton stated, “Power corrupts, absolute power corrupts absolutely.”

 

By 1988, Poland’s economic situation was worse than ever due to foreign sanctions and the government’s refusal to introduce more reforms. A new wave of strikes swept the country after food costs were increased by 40%. Finally on August 26, the government announced it was ready to negotiate with Solidarity and met with Walesa, who incredulously agreed to call an end to the strikes. In preparation for an official negotiating conference with the government, a hundred-member committee was formed within Solidarity, composed of many sections, each of which was responsible for presenting specific demands to the government at the forthcoming talks. This conference, which took place in Warsaw from February 6th to April 4th, 1989, came to be known as the ‘Polish Roundtable Talks.’ Though the members of Solidarity had no expectation of major changes, the Roundtable Talks would irreversibly alter the political landscape and Polish society.

 

Years of no results in leadership will produce wave after wave of resistance, until the necessary changes are implemented.  Incompetent management will ultimately fail, because it does not meet the needs of those it claims to serve.  The Polish Communist blamed Solidarity for their fall, but their demise resulted from their own incompetence and pride.

 

On April 17, 1989, Solidarity was again legalized and the party was allowed to field candidates in upcoming elections. With its members immediately jumping to 1.5 million after legalization, the party was restricted to fielding candidates for only 35% of the seats in the new Sejm. Despite aggression and propaganda from the ruling party, extremely limited resources and pre-election polls that promised a communist victory, Solidarity managed to push forward a campaign that surprised everyone, including themselves. The party won every contested seat in the Sejm and 99 of 100 Senatorial seats: the new ‘Contract Sejm’ as it was called would be dominated by Solidarity.

 

Even after concessions, the tyrannical power will still utilize un-ethical propaganda and aggression to fear the populace into following their demands.  Tyranny never learns the lesson that a free people with a choice will never cower to threats and intimidation.  Solidarity won 99 of 100 Senatorial seats in the Polish Communist Regimes first free elections.  Throughout history, tyranny is clueless on how much they are hated by the people—even those who claim to be on their side.  Passive-aggressive behavior is rampant throughout any tyrannical system.  To the tyrants face it is: oaths of allegiance – hypocritical lies to pacify.  Behind their backs it is: Don’t ask and don’t tell.  The tyrants are saluted to their face and laughed at behind their backs.  An un-ending store of resentments and blatant hypocrisy by the followers surrounding the dictator; giving the tyrant the constant affirmations needed to affirm the lies and the liars conscience.  The lie continues until the first free elections – where the people rise up in mass and boot the tyrant unceremoniously out of power.

 

As agreed beforehand, Wojciech Jaruzelski was elected president; however the communist candidate for prime minister now failed to rally enough support to form a government and the Sejm elected Solidarity representative Tadeusz Mazowiecki as Prime Minister of Poland. Mazowiecki became the first non-communist prime minister in Poland since 1945 and the first anywhere in Eastern Europe for 40 years. Under Mazowiecki a Solidarity-led government was formed, and only Jaruzelski remained of the old regime. Communism had collapsed in Poland and within months the famous Wall in Berlin would do the same.

 

The only way tyranny endures is through the intimidation and fear of the masses threatened with reprisals if they tell the truth.  Lech Walesa and other brave men and women had the courage to tell the truth.  The King has no clothes on period!  Through many personal attacks, imprisonments, and financial hardships—the leaders of Solidarity stood for truth, until the lies were fully exposed and the Polish Communist regime collapsed.  Shortly after, the whole Eastern Bloc of Communist Countries collapsed like dominoes under the weight of their own lies. 

 

The fall of communism in Poland thrust Solidarity into a role it was never prepared for, and in its life as a political party it saw much infighting and a decline in popularity. Walesa decided to resign from his Solidarity post and announced his intent to run for president in the upcoming elections. In December 1990, Lech Walesa was elected president of Poland and became the first Polish president ever elected by popular vote. The 1990 elections in Poland, which scored astonishing victories for anti-communist candidates, set-off a string of peaceful anti-communist revolutions throughout Central and Eastern Europe which led to the fall of communism is these regions. In the Baltic’s people were joining hands in solidarity, and the cry for freedom could be heard in the Estonian Singing Revolution and its Lithuanian and Latvian counterparts. The example of Solidarity had emboldened the oppressed peoples of the entire Eastern Bloc to stand together and demand their independence. By Christmas of 1991, the USSR had ceased to exist, and all the former communist territories across Eurasia became sovereign entities once again.

 

When brave people stand, it grows the spines of all oppressed people around the world to speak the truth against the oppressors, who feed them only lies.  Tyranny cannot stand against the light of reason and truth.  Tyranny is an outmoded form of leadership that will not survive in today and tomorrow’s information age.

 

Today Solidarity’s role in Polish politics is limited and the organization has again reverted back toward the role of a more traditional trade union with a membership that currently exceeds 1.1 million. Summer 2005 marked the 25th anniversary of the historic Solidarity movement, remembering the hardships of its humble beginnings and celebrating the changes those hardships inspired across the continent.

 

The thing we most learn from history is that we do not learn from history. – George Bernard Shaw

 

Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it. – George Santayana

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Noel Tichy – Leaders Developing Leaders

Posted by Orrin Woodward on March 3, 2008

Here is a superb interview with Noel Tichy from Computerworld in 2006.  I believe Dr. Tichy captures the essence of the Team difference in this interview.  The leaders on the Team have developed a Teachable Point of View (TPOV) and recognize that true leadership is developing other leaders.  This is one of the main reasons why I believe we will go to millions of people—the leaders recognize their calling is to build others as well as themselves.  I love the quote by Dr. Tichy, “The job of a leader is to win today while making the organization better for tomorrow.”  Are you developing as a leader?  As a leader, are you developing other leaders?  The Team is Launching a Leadership Revolution and it starts with you!  How many parallels do you see between what Professor Tichy teaches and what the Team teaches?  God Bless, Orrin WoodwardNoel Tichy Quote picture

 

A lot of leadership advice is too high-minded to be readily applied. But not the advice of Noel Tichy, former head of General Electric Co.’s famed leadership development center, Crotonville, as well as a professor of organization and management at the University of Michigan. Tichy has also written many leadership books, including Cycle of Leadership and The Leadership Engine. Tichy’s focus is on what leaders can do to ensure that they develop other leaders while still yielding a business return. Computerworld contributing writer Mary Brandel asked Tichy to pass along some wisdom to today’s IT leaders.

 

What is the best thing a leader can do?

 

Be a teacher and develop other leaders while the organization keeps winning. The worst people in the world to do this are consultants, professionals and training staff. It is up to the leaders of an organization to be the teachers. Only small minorities of leaders do this, but the ones who do are role models. And they don’t teach Harvard Business School cases; they get their leaders to work on real projects as part of their development. This is what former CEO Jack Welch and now Jeff Immelt at GE do. GE has sent teams to Southeast Asia to look for acquisitions and to Korea to assess the GE strategy. Roger Enrico, former CEO at PepsiCo, sponsored over 200 growth projects at Pepsi that resulted in over $2 billion in new revenue growth.

 

What is the worst thing a leader can do?

 

Not develop other leaders. We have a terrible track record in the U.S. on this front. At the CEO level, it means not having a successor, thus indicating a broken leadership pipeline. Think of the examples: John Akers gets fired at IBM, and they have to go outside the organization to get Gerstner. Merck had to go outside and get Ray Gilmartin, who failed. HP went outside twice: Fiorina, who failed, and then Hurd came in from NCR. The job of a leader is to win today while making the organization better for tomorrow.

 

What is the most important lesson you’ve learned as a leader of leaders?

 Noel Tichy picture

I learned the most from Jack Welch at GE. In the mid-1980s, I left the University of Michigan for two years to transform the GE Leadership Development Center — then a 30-year-old corporate university — into an action learning platform for change. Then, because the center only dealt with about 5,000 of GE’s 320,000 employees per year, we needed ways of getting everyone engaged, so Welch and a team of us launched Work-Out, a program in which line executives ran their own workshops on leading change. We also developed a program that prepared the top 10,000 GE leaders to teach and lead change. The point is that organizations need multiple mechanisms of leading and teaching that along the way must yield growth and/or productivity improvements.

  

What is the most important thing you try to teach leaders?

 

I try to teach them to articulate what I call their “teachable point of view.” That is, what are their strategic ideas for their organization? What values do they expect members of the organization to exhibit? What is their emotional energy, in terms of energizing thousands of people around their ideas and values? And what is their edge — how do they plan to make the tough yes/no calls on business and people issues? In addition, I help them design and prepare them to teach multiday workshops with their own people.

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A Christian Manifesto – Francis Schaeffer

Posted by Orrin Woodward on March 2, 2008

For our Sunday edition of the Leadership blog, I would like to share the late Francis Schaeffer – one of my all-time favorite authors.  Whether a person is a Christian or not—the thinking of Francis Schaeffer in the areas of history, art, philosophy and theology—is second to none.  This address was delivered by Dr. Schaeffer in 1982 at the Coral Ridge Presbyterian Church, Fort Lauderdale, Florida. It is based on one of his books, called the Christian Manifesto.  Being a Christian was more than just having a title to Dr. Schaffer and he has inspired many others to live out the truth of the Christian life.  The Christian Manifesto is an appeal for Christians everywhere to be the salt and light in their communities.  Take your time and think deeply on what Dr. Schaeffer is saying.  A rejection of God creates many other unforeseen catastrophic consequences in a society.  I believe strongly the Team will play a major part in bringing absolute values back to society.   When a community honors God—God honors the community.  God will raise up a group of leaders!  Why not us, why not now?  God Bless, Orrin Woodward

 

Crime Abortion Illegitimacy Rate pictureChristians, in the last 80 years or so, have only been seeing things as bits and pieces which have gradually begun to trouble them and others, instead of understanding that they are the natural outcome of a change from a Christian World View to a Humanistic one; things such as over-permissiveness, pornography, the problem of the public schools, the breakdown of the family, abortion, infanticide (the killing of newborn babies), increased emphasis upon the euthanasia of the old and many, many other things.

 

All of these things and many more are only the results. We may be troubled with the individual thing, but in reality we are missing the whole thing if we do not see each of these things and many more as only symptoms of the deeper problem. And that is the change in our society, a change in our country, a change in the Western world from a Judeo-Christian consensus to a Humanistic one. That is, instead of the final reality that exists being the infinite creator God; instead of that which is the basis of all reality being such a creator God, now largely, all else is seen as only material or energy which has existed forever in some form, shaped into its present complex form only by pure chance.

 

I want to say to you, those of you who are Christians or even if you are not a Christian and you are troubled about the direction that our society is going in, that we must not concentrate merely on the bits and pieces. But we must understand that all of these dilemmas come on the basis of moving from the Judeo-Christian world view — that the final reality is an infinite creator God — over into this other reality which is that the final reality is only energy or material in some mixture or form which has existed forever and which has taken its present shape by pure chance.

 

The word Humanism should be carefully defined. We should not just use it as a flag, or what younger people might call a “buzz” word. We must understand what we are talking about when we use the word Humanism. Humanism means that the man is the measure of all things. Man is the measure of all things. If this other final reality of material or energy shaped by pure chance is the final reality, it gives no meaning to life. It gives no value system. It gives no basis for law, and therefore, in this case, man must be the measure of all things. So, Humanism properly defined, in contrast, let us say, to the humanities or humanitarianism, (which is something entirely different and which Christians should be in favor of) being the measure of all things, comes naturally, mathematically, inevitably, certainly. If indeed the final reality is silent about these values, then man must generate them from himself.

 

So, Humanism is the absolute certain result, if we choose this other final reality and say that is what it is. You must realize that when we speak of man being the measure of all things under the Humanist label, the first thing is that man has only knowledge from himself. That he, being finite, limited, very faulty in his observation of many things, yet nevertheless, has no possible source of knowledge except what man, beginning from himself, can find out from his own observation. Specifically, in this view, there is no place for any knowledge from God.

 

But it is not only that man must start from himself in the area of knowledge and learning, but any value system must come arbitrarily from man himself by arbitrary choice. More frightening still, in our country, at our own moment of history, is the fact that any basis of law then becomes arbitrary — merely certain people making decisions as to what is for the good of society at the given moment.

 

Now this is the real reason for the breakdown in morals in our country. It’s the real reason for the breakdown in values in our country, and it is the reason that our Supreme Court now functions so thoroughly upon the fact of arbitrary law. They have no basis for law that is fixed, therefore, like the young person who decides to live hedonistically upon their own chosen arbitrary values, society is now doing the same thing legally. Certain few people come together and decide what they arbitrarily believe is for the good of society at the given moment, and that becomes law.

 

The world view that the final reality is only material or energy shaped by pure chance, inevitably, (that’s the next word I would bring to you ) mathematically — with mathematical certainty — brings forth all these other results which are in our country and in our society which have led to the breakdown in the country — in society — and which are its present sorrows. So, if you hold this other world view, you must realize that it is inevitable that we will come to the very sorrows of relativity and all these other things that are so represented in our country at this moment of history.

 

It should be noticed that this new dominant world view is a view which is exactly opposite from that of the founding fathers of this country. Now, not all the founding fathers were individually, personally, Christians. That certainly is true. But, nevertheless, they founded the country on the base that there is a God who is the Creator (now I come to the next central phrase) who gave the inalienable rights.

 

We must understand something very thoroughly. If society — if the state gives the rights, it can take them away — they’re not inalienable. If the states give the rights, they can change them and manipulate them. But this was not the view of the founding fathers of this country. They believed, although not all of them were individual Christians, that there was a Creator and that this Creator gave the inalienable rights — this upon which our country was founded and which has given us the freedoms which we still have — even the freedoms which are being used now to destroy the freedoms.

 

The reason that these freedoms were there is because they believed there was somebody who gave the inalienable rights. But if we have the view that the final reality is material or energy which has existed forever in some form, we must understand that this view never, never, never would have given the rights which we now know and which, unhappily, I say to you (those of you who are Christians) that too often you take all too much for granted. You forget that the freedoms which we have in northern Europe after the Reformation (and the United States is an extension of that, as would be Australia or Canada, New Zealand, etc.) are absolutely unique in the world.

 

Occasionally, some of you who have gone to universities have been taught that these freedoms are rooted in the Greek city-states. That is not the truth. All you have to do is read Plato’s Republic and you understand that the Greek city-states never had any concept of the freedoms that we have. Go back into history. The freedoms which we have (the form / freedom balance of government) are unique in history and they are also unique in the world at this day.

 

A fairly recent poll of the 150 some countries that now constitute the world shows that only 25 of these countries have any freedoms at all. What we have, and take so poorly for granted, is unique. It was brought forth by a specific world view and that specific world view was the Judeo-Christian world view especially as it was refined in the Reformation, putting the authority indeed at a central point — not in the Church and the state and the Word of God, but rather the Word of God alone. All the benefits which we know — I would repeat — which we have taken so easily and so much for granted, are unique. They have been grounded on the certain world view that there was a Creator there to give inalienable rights. And this other view over here, which has become increasingly dominant, of the material-energy final world view (shaped by pure chance) never would have, could not, has, no basis of values, in order to give such a balance of freedom that we have known so easily and which we unhappily, if we are not careful, take so for granted.

 

We are now losing those freedoms and we can expect to continue to lose them if this other world-view continues to take increased force and power in our county. We can be sure of this. I would say it again — inevitably, mathematically, all of these things will come forth. There is no possible way to heal the relativistic thinking of our own day, if indeed all there is is a universe out there that is silent about any values. None, whatsoever! It is not possible. It is a loss of values and it is a loss of freedom which we may be sure will continually grow.

 

A good illustration is in the public schools. This view is taught in our public schools exclusively — by law. There is no other view that can be taught. I’ll mention it a bit later, but by law there is no other view that can be taught. By law, in the public schools, the United States of America in 1982, legally there is only one view of reality that can be taught. I’ll mention it a bit later, but there is only one view of reality that can be taught, and that is that the final reality is only material or energy shaped by pure chance.

 

It is the same with the television programs. Public television gives us many things that many of us like culturally, but is also completely committed to a propaganda position that the last reality is only material / energy shaped by pure chance. Clark’s Civilization, Brunowski, The Ascent of Man, Carl Sagan’s Cosmos — they all say it. There is only one final view of reality that’s possible and that is that the final reality is material or energy shaped by pure chance.

 

It is about us on every side, and especially the government and the courts have become the vehicle to force this anti-God view on the total population. It’s exactly where we are.

 

The abortion ruling is a very clear one. The abortion ruling, of course, is also a natural result of this other world view because with this other world view, human life — your individual life — has no intrinsic value. You are a wart upon the face of an absolutely impersonal universe. Your aspirations have no fulfillment in the “what-isness” of what is. Your aspirations damn you. Many of the young people who come to us understand this very well because their aspirations as Humanists have no fulfillment, if indeed the final reality is only material or energy shaped by pure chance.

 

The universe cannot fulfill anything that you say when you say, “It is beautiful”; “I love”; “It is right”; “It is wrong.” These words are meaningless words against the backdrop of this other world view. So what we find is that the abortion case should not have been a surprise, because it boiled up out of, quite naturally, (I would use the word again) mathematically, this other world view. In this case, human life has no distinct value whatsoever, and we find this Supreme Court in one ruling overthrew the abortion laws of all 50 states, and they made this form of killing human life (because that’s what it is) the law. The law declared that this form of killing human life was to be accepted, and for many people, because they had no set ethic, when the Supreme Court said that it was legal, in the intervening years, it has become ethical.

 

The courts of this country have forced this view and its results on the total population. What we find is that as the courts have done this, without any longer that which the founding fathers comprehended of law (A man like Blackstone, with his Commentaries, understood, and the other lawgivers in this country in the beginning): That there is a law of God which gives foundation. It becomes quite natural then, that they would also cut themselves loose from a strict constructionism concerning the Constitution.

 

Everything is relative. So as you cut yourself loose from the Law of God, in any concept whatsoever, you also soon are cutting yourself loose from a strict constructionism and each ruling is to be seen as an arbitrary choice by a group of people as to what they may honestly think is for the sociological good of the community, of the country, for the given moment.

 

Now, along with that is the fact that the courts are increasingly making law and thus we find that the legislatures’ powers are increasingly diminished in relationship to the power of the courts. Now the pro-abortion people have been very wise about this in the last, say, 10 years, and Christians very silly. I wonder sometimes where we’ve been because the pro-abortion people have used the courts for their end rather than the legislatures — because the courts are not subject to the people’s thinking, nor their will, either by election or by a re-election. Consequently, the courts have been the vehicle used to bring this whole view and to force it on our total population. It has not been largely the legislatures. It has been rather, the courts.

 

The result is a relativistic value system. A lack of a final meaning to life — that’s first. Why does human life have any value at all, if that is all that reality is? Not only are you going to die individually, but the whole human race is going to die, someday. It may not take the falling of the atom bombs, but someday the world will grow too hot, too cold. That’s what we are told on this other final reality, and someday all you people not only will be individually dead, but the whole conscious life on this world will be dead, and nobody will see the birds fly. And there’s no meaning to life.

 

As you know, I don’t speak academically, shut off in some scholastic cubicle, as it were. I have lots of young people and older ones come to us from the ends of the earth. And as they come to us, they have gone to the end of this logically and they are not living in a romantic setting. They realize what the situation is. They can’t find any meaning to life. It’s the meaning to the black poetry. It’s the meaning of the black plays. It’s the meaning of all this. It’s the meaning of the words “punk rock.” And I must say that on the basis of what they are being taught in school, that the final reality is only this material thing, they are not wrong. They’re right! On this other basis there is no meaning to life and not only is there no meaning to life, but there is no value system that is fixed, and we find that the law is based then only on a relativistic basis and that law becomes purely arbitrary.

 

And this is brought to bear, specifically, and perhaps most clearly, in the public schools (I’ll come to that now) in this country. In the courts of this country, they are saying that it’s absolutely illegal, from the lowest grades up through university, for the public schools of this country to teach any other world view except this world view of final material or energy. Now this is done, no matter what the parents may wish. This is done regardless of what those who pay the taxes for their schools may wish. I’m giving you an illustration, as well as making a point. The way the courts force their view, and this false view of reality on the total population, no matter what the total population wants.

 

We find that in the January 18 — just recently — Time magazine, there was an article that said there was a poll that pointed out that about 76% of the people in this country thought it would be a good idea to have both creation and evolution taught in the public schools. I don’t know if the poll was accurate, but assuming that the poll was accurate, what does it mean? It means that your public schools are told by the courts that they cannot teach this, even though 76% of the people in the United States want it taught. I’ll give you a word. It’s TYRANNY. There is no other word that fits at such a point.

 

And at the same time we find the medical profession has radically changed. Dr. Koop, in our seminars for Whatever Happened to the Human Race, often said that (speaking for himself), “When I graduated from medical school, the idea was ‘how can I save this life?’ But for a great number of the medical students now, it’s not, ‘How can I save this life?’, but ‘Should I save this life?'”

 

Believe me, it’s everywhere. It isn’t just abortion. It’s infanticide. It’s allowing the babies to starve to death after they are born—if they do not come up to some doctor’s concept of a quality of life worth living. I’ll just say in passing — and never forget it – it takes about 15 days, often, for these babies to starve to death. And I’d say something else that we haven’t stressed enough. In abortion itself, there is no abortion method that is not painful to the child — just as painful that month before birth as the baby you see a month after birth in one of these cribs down here that I passed — just as painful.

 

So what we find then, is that the medical profession has largely changed — not all doctors. I’m sure there are doctors here in the audience who feel very, very differently, who feel indeed that human life is important and you wouldn’t take it, easily, wantonly. But, in general, we must say (and all you have to do is look at the TV programs), all you have to do is hear about the increased talk about allowing the Mongoloid child — the child with Down’s Syndrome — to starve to death if it’s born this way. Increasingly, we find on every side the medical profession has changed its views. The view now is, “Is this life worth saving?”

 

I look at you… You’re an older congregation than I am usually used to speaking to. You’d better think, because — this — means — you! It does not stop with abortion and infanticide. It stops at the question, “What about the old person? Is he worth hanging on to?” Should we, as they are doing in England in this awful organization, EXIT, teach older people to commit suicide? Should we help them get rid of them because they are an economic burden, a nuisance? I want to tell you, once you begin chipping away the medical profession… The intrinsic value of the human life is founded upon the Judeo-Christian concept that man is unique because he is made in the image of God, and not because he is well, strong, a consumer, a sex object or any other thing. That is where whatever compassion this country has is, and certainly it is far from perfect and has never been perfect. Nor out of the Reformation has there been a Golden Age, but whatever compassion there has ever been, it is rooted in the fact that our culture knows that man is unique, is made in the image of God. Take it away, and I just say gently, the stopper is out of the bathtub for all human life.

 

The January 11 Newsweek has an article about the baby in the womb. The first 5 or 6 pages are marvelous. If you haven’t seen it, you should see if you can get that issue. It’s January 11 and about the first 5 or 6 pages show conclusively what every biologist has known all along, and that is that human life begins at conception. There is no other time for human life to begin, except at conception. Monkey life begins at conception. Donkey life begins at conception. And human life begins at conception. Biologically, there is no discussion — never should have been — from a scientific viewpoint. I am not speaking of religion now. And this 5 or 6 pages very carefully goes into the fact that human life begins at conception. But you flip the page and there is this big black headline, “But is it a person?” And I’ll read the last sentence, “The problem is not determining when actual human life begins, but when the value of that life begins to out weigh other considerations, such as the health or even the happiness of the mother.”

 

We are not just talking about the health of the mother (it’s a propaganda line), or even the happiness of the mother. Listen! Spell that out! It means that the mother, for her own hedonistic happiness — selfish happiness — can take human life by her choice, by law. Do you understand what I have said? By law, on the basis of her individual choice of what makes her happy. She can take what has been declared to be, in the first five pages [of the article], without any question, human life. In other words, they acknowledge that human life is there, but it is an open question as to whether it is not right to kill that human life if it makes the mother happy.

 

And basically that is no different than Stalin, Mao, or Hitler, killing who they killed for what they conceived to be the good of society. There is absolutely no line between the two statements — no absolute line, whatsoever. One follows along: Once that it is acknowledged that it is human life that is involved (and as I said, this issue of Newsweek shows conclusively that it is) the acceptance of death of human life in babies born or unborn, opens the door to the arbitrary taking of any human life. From then on, it’s purely arbitrary.

 

It was this view that opened the door to all that followed in Germany prior to Hitler. It’s an interesting fact here that the only Supreme Court in the Western World that has ruled against easy abortion is the West German Court. The reason they did it is because they knew, and it’s clear history, that this view of human life in the medical profession and the legal profession combined, before Hitler came on the scene, is what opened the way for everything that happened in Hitler’s Germany. And so, the German Supreme Court has voted against easy abortion because they know — they know very well where it leads.

 

I want to say something tonight. Not many of you are black in this audience. I can’t tell if you are Puerto Rican. But if I were in the minority group in this country, tonight, I would be afraid. I’ve had big gorgeous blacks stand up in our seminars and ask, “Sir, do you think there is a racial twist to all this?” And I have to say, “Right on! You’ve hit it right on the head!” Once this door is opened, there is something to be afraid of. Christians should be deeply concerned, and I cannot understand why the liberal lawyer of the Civil Liberties Union is not scared to death by this open door towards human life. Everyone ought to be frightened who knows anything about history — anything about the history of law, anything about the history of medicine. This is a terrifying door that is open.

 

Abortion itself would be worth spending much of our lifetimes to fight against, because it is the killing of human life, but it’s only a symptom of the total. What we are facing is Humanism: Man, the measure of all things — viewing final reality being only material or energy shaped by chance — therefore, human life having no intrinsic value — therefore, the keeping of any individual life or any groups of human life, being purely an arbitrary choice by society at the given moment.

 

The flood doors are wide open. I fear both they, and too often the Christians, do not have just relativistic values (because, unhappily, Christians can live with relativistic values) but, I fear, that often such people as the liberal lawyers of the Civil Liberties Union and Christians, are just plain stupid in regard to the lessons of history. Nobody who knows his history could fail to be shaken at the corner we have turned in our culture. Remember why: because of the shift in the concept of the basic reality!

 

Now, we cannot be at all surprised when the liberal theologians support these things, because liberal theology is only Humanism using theological terms, and that’s all it ever was, all the way back into Germany right after the Enlightenment. So when they come down on the side of easy abortion and infanticide, as some of these liberal denominations as well as theologians are doing, we shouldn’t be surprised. It follows as night after day.

 

I have a question to ask you, and that is: Where have the Bible-believing Christians been in the last 40 years? All of this that I am talking about has only come in the last 80 years (I’m 70… I just had my birthday, so just 10 years older than I am). None of this was true in the United States. None of it! And the climax has all come within the last 40 years, which falls within the intelligent scope of many of you sitting in this room. Where have the Bible-believing Christians been? We shouldn’t be surprised the liberal theologians have been no help — but where have we been as we have changed to this other consensus and all the horrors and stupidity of the present moment has come down on out culture? We must recognize that this country is close to being lost. Not, first of all , because of the Humanist conspiracy — I believe that there are those who conspire, but that is not the reason this country is almost lost. This country is almost lost because the Bible-believing Christians, in the last 40 years, who have said that they know that the final reality is this infinite-personal God who is the Creator and all the rest, have done nothing about it as the consensus has changed. There has been a vast silence!

 

Christians of this country have simply been silent. Much of the Evangelical leadership has not raised a voice. As a matter of fact, it was almost like sticking pins into the Evangelical constituency in most places to get them interested in the issue of human life while Dr. Koop and Franky and I worked on Whatever Happened to the Human Race, a vast, vast silence.

 

I wonder what God has to say to us? All these freedoms we have. All the secondary blessings we’ve had out of the preaching of the Gospel and we have let it slip through our fingers in the lifetime of most of you here. Not a hundred years ago — it has been in our lifetime in the last 40 years that these things have happened.

 

It’s not only the Christian leaders. Where have the Christian lawyers been? Why haven’t they been challenging this change in the view of what the First Amendment means, which I’ll deal with in a second. Where have the Christian doctors been — speaking out against the rise of the abortion clinics and all the other things? Where have the Christian businessmen been — to put their lives and their work on the line concerning these things which they would say as Christians are central to them? Where have the Christian educators been — as we have lost our educational system? Where have we been? Where have each of you been? What’s happened in the last 40 years?

 

This country was founded on a Christian base with all its freedom for everybody. Let me stress that. This country was founded on a Christian base with all its freedom for everybody, not just Christians, but all its freedom for everyone. And now, this is being largely lost. We live not ten years from now, but tonight, in a Humanistic culture and we are rapidly moving at express train speed into a totally Humanistic culture. We’re close to it. We are in a Humanistic culture, as I point out in the public schools and these other things, but we are moving toward a TOTALLY Humanistic culture and moving very quickly.

 

I would repeat at this place about our public schools because it’s worth saying. Most people don’t realize something. Communism, you know, is not basically an economic theory. It’s materialistic communism, which means that at the very heart of the Marx, Engels, Lenin kind of communism (because you have to put all three together to really understand) is the materialistic concept of the final reality. That is the base for all that occurs in the communist countries.

 

I am wearing a Solidarity pin — in case you wonder what this is on my lapel. We had two young men from L’Abri take in an 8 ton truck of food into Poland — very bad weather — they almost were killed on the roads. They got in just three days before the crackdown. We, of L’Abri, have taken care of small numbers of each successive wave of Europeans who have been persecuted in the communist nations, the Hungarians, Czechoslovakians, now the Poles. A dear wonderful Christian schoolteacher that we love very much (she’s a wonderful, wonderful Christian young woman, brilliant as brilliant, and she studied at L’Abri for a long time and she was one of the contact points for the destination of the food) — thought that the crackdown might come. So she sent me out this Solidarity pin. This wasn’t made in Newark! This came from Poland. I have a hope. I hope I can wear it until I can hand it back to her and she can wear it again in Poland. That’s my hope! But all the oppression you have ever heard of in Mao’s China, Stalin’s day, Poland, Czechoslovakia — any place that you can name it — Afghanistan — all the oppression is the automatic, the mechanical certainty, that comes from having this other world view of the final reality only being material or energy shaped by pure chance. That’s where it comes from.

 

And what about our schools? I think I should stress again! By law, you are no more allowed to teach religious values and religious views in our public schools than you are in the schools of Russia tonight. We don’t teach Marxism over here in most of our schools, but as far as all religious teaching (except the religion of Humanism, which is a different kind of a thing) it is just as banned by law from our schools, and our schools are just as secular as the schools in Soviet Russia — just exactly! Not ten years from now. Tonight!

 

Congress opens with prayer. Why? Because Congress always is opened with prayer. Back there, the founding fathers didn’t consider the 13 provincial congresses that sent representatives to form our country in Philadelphia really open until there was prayer. The Congress in Washington, where Edith and I have just been, speaking to various men in political areas and circles — that Congress is not open until there is prayer. It’s illegal, in many places, for youngsters to merely meet and pray on the geographical location of the public schools. I would repeat, we are not only immoral, we’re stupid. I mean that. I don’t know which is the worst: being immoral or stupid on such an issue. We are not only immoral, we are stupid for the place we have allowed ourselves to come to without noticing.

 

I would now repeat again the word I used before. There is no other word we can use for our present situation that I have just been describing, except the word TYRANNY! TYRANNY! That’s what we face! We face a world view which never would have given us our freedoms. It has been forced upon us by the courts and the government — the men holding this other world view, whether we want it or not, even though it’s destroying the very freedoms which give the freedoms for the excesses and for the things which are wrong.

 

We, who are Christians, and others who love liberty, should be acting in our day as the founding fathers acted in their day. Those who founded this country believed that they were facing tyranny. All you have to do is read their writings. That’s why the war was fought. That’s why this country was founded. They believed that God never, never, never wanted people to be under tyrannical governments. They did it not as a pragmatic or economic thing, though that was involved too, I guess, but for principle. They were against tyranny, and if the founding fathers stood against tyranny, we ought to recognize, in this year 1982, if they were back here and one of them was standing right here, he would say the same thing — what you are facing is tyranny. The very kind of tyranny we fought, he would say, in order that we might escape.

 

And we face a very hidden censorship. Every once in a while, as soon as we begin to talk about the need of re-entering Christian values into the discussion, someone shouts “Khomeni.” Someone says that what you are after is theocracy. Absolutely not! We must make absolutely plain, we are not in favor of theocracy, in name or in fact. But, having said that, nevertheless, we must realize that we already face a hidden censorship — a hidden censorship in which it is impossible to get the other world view presented in something like public television. It’s absolutely impossible.

 

I could give you a couple of examples. I’ll give you one because it’s so close to me. And that is, that after we made Whatever Happened to the Human Race, Franky made an 80 minute cutting for TV of the first 3 episodes (and people who know television say that it’s one of the best television films they have ever seen technically, so that’s not a problem). Their representative presented it to a director of public television, and as soon as she heard (It happened to be a woman. I’m sure that’s incidental.) that it was against abortion, she said, “We can’t show that. We only shoe things that give both sides.” And, at exactly the same time, they were showing that abominable Hard Choices, which is just straight propaganda for abortion. As I point out, the study guide that went with it (as I quote it in Christian Manifesto [the book] with a long quote) was even worse. It was saying that the only possible view of reality was this material thing — this material reality. They spelled it out in that study guide more clearly than I have tonight as to what the issue is. They said, “that’s it!” What do you call that? That’s hidden censorship.

 

Dr. Koop, one of the great surgeons of the world, when he was nominated as Surgeon General, much of the press (printed) great swelling things against him — a lot of them not true, a lot of them twisted. Certainly though, lots of space was made for trying to not get his nomination accepted. When it was accepted though, I looked like mad in some of the papers, and in most of them what I found was about one inch on the third page that said that Dr. Koop had been accepted. What do you call that? Just one thing: hidden censorship.

 

You must realize that this other view is totally intolerant. It is totally intolerant. I do not think we are going to get another opportunity if we do not take it now in this country. I would repeat, we are a long way down the road. I do not think we are going to get another opportunity. If the Christians, specifically, but others also, who love liberty, do not do something about it now, I don’t believe your grandchildren are going to get a chance. In the present so-called conservative swing in the last election, we have an opportunity, but we must remember this, and I would really brand this into your thinking: A conservative Humanism is no better than a liberal Humanism. It’s the Humanism that is wrong, not merely the coloration. And therefore, at the present moment, what we must insist on, to people in our government who represent us, is that we do not just end with words. We must see, at the present opportunity, if it continues, a real change. We mustn’t allow it to just drift off into mere words.

 

Now I want to say something with great force, right here. What I have been talking about, whether you know it or not, is true spirituality. This is true spirituality. Spirituality, after you are a Christian and have accepted Christ as your Savior, means that Christ is the Lord of ALL your life — not just your religious life, and if you make a dichotomy in these things, you are denying your Lord His proper place. I don’t care how many butterflies you have in your stomach, you are poor spiritually. True spirituality means that the Lord Jesus Christ is the Lord of all of life, and except for the things that He has specifically told us in the Bible are sinful and we’ve set them aside — all of life is spiritual and all of life is equally spiritual. That includes (as our forefathers did) standing for these things of freedom and standing for these things of human life and all these other matters that are so crucial, if indeed, this living God does exist as we know that He does exist.

 

We have forgotten our heritage. A lot of the evangelical complex like to talk about the old revivals and they tell us we ought to have another revival. We need another revival — you and I need revival. We need another revival in our hearts. But they have forgotten something. Most of the Christians have forgotten and most of the pastors have forgotten something. That is the factor that every single revival that has ever been a real revival, whether it was the great awakening before the American Revolution; whether it was the great revivals of Scandinavia; whether it was Wesley and Whitefield; wherever you have found a great revival, it’s always had three parts. First, it has called for the individual to accept Christ as Savior, and thankfully, in all of these that I have named, thousands have been saved. Then, it has called upon the Christians to bow their hearts to God and really let the Holy Spirit have His place in fullness in their life. But there has always been, in every revival, a third element. It has always brought SOCIAL CHANGE!

 

Cambridge historians who aren’t Christians would tell you that if it wasn’t for the Wesley revival and the social change that Wesley’s revival had brought, England would have had its own form of the French Revolution. It was Wesley saying people must be treated correctly and dealing down into the social needs of the day that made it possible for England to have its bloodless revolution in contrast to France’s bloody revolution.

 

The Wall Street Journal, not too long ago, and I quote it again in A Christian Manifesto, pointed out that it was the Great Awakening, that great revival prior to the founding of the United States, that opened the way and prepared for the founding of the United States. Every one of the great revivals had tremendous social implications. What I am saying is, that I am afraid that we have forgotten our heritage, and we must go on even when the cost is high.

 

I think the Church has failed to meet its obligation in these last 40 years for two specific reasons. The first is this false, truncated view of spirituality that doesn’t see true spirituality touching all of life. The other thing is that too many Christians, whether they are doctors, lawyers, pastors, evangelists — whatever they are — too many of them are afraid to really speak out because they did not want to rock the boat for their own project. I am convinced that these two reasons, both of which are a tragedy and really horrible for the Christian, are an explanation of why we have walked the road we have walked in the last 40 years.

 

We must understand, it’s going to cost you to take a stand on these things. There are doctors who are going to get kicked out of hospitals because they refuse to perform abortions; there are nurses that see a little sign on a crib that says, “Do not feed,” and they feed and they are fired. There’s a cost, but I’d ask you, what is loyalty to Christ worth to you? How much do you believe this is true? Why are you a Christian? Are you a Christian for some lesser reason, or are you a Christian because you know that this is the truth of reality? And then, how much do you love the Lord Jesus Christ? How much are you willing to pay the price for loyalty to the Lord Jesus?

 

We must absolutely set out to smash the lie of the new and novel concept of the separation of religion from the state which most people now hold and which Christians have just bought a bill of goods. This is new and this is novel. It has no relationship to the meaning of the First Amendment. The First Amendment was that the state would never interfere with religion. THAT’S ALL THE MEANING THERE WAS TO THE FIRST AMENDMENT. Just read Madison and the Spectator Papers if you don’t think so. That’s all it was!

 

Now we have turned it over and we have put it on its head and what we must do is absolutely insist that we return to what the First Amendment meant in the first place — not that religion can’t have an influence into society and into the state — not that. But we must insist that there’s a freedom that the First Amendment really gave. Now with this we must emphasize, and I said it, but let me say it again, we do not want a theocracy! I personally am opposed to a theocracy. On this side of the New Testament I do not believe there is a place for a theocracy ’till Jesus the King comes back. But that’s a very different thing while saying clearly we are not in favor of a theocracy in name or in fact, from where we are now, where all religious influence is shut out of the processes of the state and the public schools. We are only asking for one thing. We are asking for the freedom that the First Amendment guaranteed. That’s what we should be standing for. All we ask for is what the founding fathers of this country stood and fought and died for, and at the same time, very crucial in all this is standing absolutely for a high view of human life against the snowballing low view of human life of which I have been talking. This thing has been presented under the hypocritical name of choice. What does choice equal? Choice, as I have already shown, means the right to kill for your own selfish desires. To kill human life! That’s what the choice is that we’re being presented with on this other basis.

 

Now, I come toward the close, and that is that we must recognize something from the Scriptures, and that’s why I had that Scripture read that I had read tonight. When the government negates the law of God, it abrogates its authority. God has given certain offices to restrain chaos in this fallen world, but it does not mean that these offices are autonomous, and when a government commands that which is contrary to the Law of God, it abrogates its authority.

 

Throughout the whole history of the Christian Church, (and again I wish people knew their history. In A Christian Manifesto I stress what happened in the Reformation in reference to all this) at a certain point, it is not only the privilege but it is the duty of the Christian to disobey the government. Now that’s what the founding fathers did when they founded this country. That’s what the early Church did. That’s what Peter said. You heard it from the Scripture: “Should we obey man?… rather than God?” That’s what the early Christians did.

 

Occasionally — no, often, people say to me, “But the early Church didn’t practice civil disobedience.” Didn’t they? You don’t know your history again. When those Christians that we all talk about so much allowed themselves to be thrown into the arena, when they did that, from their view it was a religious thing. They would not worship anything except the living God. But you must recognize from the side of the Roman state, there was nothing religious about it at all — it was purely civil. The Roman Empire had disintegrated until the only unity it had was its worship of Caesar. You could be an atheist; you could worship the Zoroastrian religion… You could do anything. They didn’t care. It was a civil matter, and when those Christians stood up there and refused to worship Caesar, from the side of the state, they were rebels. They were in civil disobedience and they were thrown to the beasts. They were involved in civil disobedience, as much as your brothers and sisters in the Soviet Union are. When the Soviet Union says that, by law, they cannot tell their children, even in their home about Jesus Christ, they must disobey and they get sent off to the mental ward or to Siberia. It’s exactly the same kind of civil disobedience that’s represented in a very real way by the thing I am wearing on my lapel tonight.

Every appropriate legal and political governmental means must be used. “The final bottom line”– I have invented this term in A Christian Manifesto. I hope the Christians across this country and across the world will really understand what the Bible truly teaches: The final bottom line! The early Christians, every one of the reformers (and again, I’ll say in A Christian Manifesto I go through country after country and show that there was not a single place with the possible exception of England, where the Reformation was successful, where there wasn’t civil disobedience and disobedience to the state), the people of the Reformation, the founding fathers of this country, faced and acted in the realization that if there is no place for disobeying the government, that government has been put in the place of the living God. In such a case, the government has been made a false god. If there is no place for disobeying a human government, what government has been made GOD.

 

Caesar, under some name, thinking of the early Church, has been put upon the final throne. The Bible’s answer is NO! Caesar is not to be put in the place of God and we as Christians, in the name of the Lordship of Christ, and all of life, must so think and act on the appropriate level. It should always be on the appropriate level. We have lots of room to move yet with our court cases, with the people we elect — all the things that we can do in this country. If, unhappily, we come to that place, the appropriate level must also include a disobedience to the state.

 

If you are not doing that, you haven’t thought it through. Jesus is not really on the throne. God is not central. You have made a false god central. Christ must be the final Lord and not society and not Caesar.

 

May I repeat the final sentence again? CHRIST MUST BE THE FINAL LORD AND NOT CAESAR AND NOT SOCIETY.

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