New Church Life Sept/Oct 2013 | Page 90

new church life: september / october 2013 After the American and French Revolutions, British statesman Edmund Burke, who supported the cause of freedom, said: “The effect of liberty is that men may do whatever they please. We should wait to see what it pleases them to do before we risk congratulations.” It is doubtful if Burke, the American founding fathers, or any of the great leaders of the past, would be in a congratulatory mood when they survey the state of the world and how far both leaders and citizens have strayed from bedrock religious principles. But Burke had it right. With our natural freedom – and especially with our spiritual freedom – we always are free to make choices. Those choices define us. And those choices have consequences – for good or evil. As we despair over the state of the world, our country and our culture, we are comforted by the knowledge that the Lord’s providence is in every facet of our lives, leading to good. So we may feel confident that the Lord’s laws of permission and Divine providence are very much at play on world and national stages as well. As with our own lives, we cannot stand with our hands hanging at our sides, feeling powerless or without hope in the course of our countries. We are to be engaged in the process, following the Lord and keeping Him always with us. The American Declaration of Independence concludes with the famous pledge of the signers: “With a firm reliance on the protection of Divine providence, we mutually pledge to each other our lives, our fortunes and our sacred honor.” They knew what they were building, and that with God’s help this bold experiment in government by “we the people” would not fail. Early in his commentary, Mr. Jungé says to all of us – no matter our nationality: “If our efforts are inspired by God and guided by His laws, then undaunted, we can go forward with a firm reliance on the protection of Divine providence.” (BMH) ‘a watch without a mainspring’ Henry Ford was a practical, down-to-earth sort of fellow, who from early childhood had a passion for machines and mechanisms of all kinds. As a boy he taught himself to take a watch apart and put it back together again. He was not given to lyrical expressions, but when he reminisced about the death of his mother, who died when he was just 12 years old, he said something quite poetic to explain how he felt about her loss. Drawing upon his childhood experience tinkering with watches, he said: “The house was like a watch without a mainspring.” I read that recently and thought what a powerful image it is. It could be 524