The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

William Barr is right about religion

- Jay Ambrose is an oped columnist for Tribune News vitcoe. Readers may email him akatonj ayc@laroilt.cyo. m.

Attorney General William Barr recently gave a speech on religious freedom at the University of Notre Dame law school, saying that mainstream faiths were being attacked by secularist­s, mass media, academia, movies, TV and the like, that our traditiona­l moral system was being degraded and that the selfdiscip­line of the past was fleeing.

In no time at all, he was proven correct. He was attacked in news stories not just by atheists and knownothin­g politician­s, but by fellow Catholics of liberal persuasion and even a theologica­l professor who said he was threatenin­g separation of church and state. Christians should not carry their faith with them while exercising public duties, he was told. They might then disregard the rule of law and threaten the rights of nonbelieve­rs.

Barr dispelled that stereotype by saying he does not want government insisting on any faith. He wants religious freedom. He wants limited government that becomes more possible as we get the kind of moral discipline and virtue that JudeoChris­tian principles instill. When people behave decently, they can be counted on to govern themselves. They do not need a cop on every corner or bureaucrat­ic enthusiasm for rules that enclose our lives instead of opening them. This country of ours has 170,000 pages of federal regulation­s, a nanny state that will get you if you don’t watch out.

But, oh dear, some say, Christians of the Barr kind will heed moral notions that transform our democracy into a theocracy. I wonder if these mastermind­s among us know what Christian morals actually are, if they understand, for instance, what Paul said when he talked about love and described its elements: patience, kindness, humility, calmness, delight in truth, perseveran­ce in helping others, hope and letting one’s life revolve around something bigger than self.

Now let’s turn to secular morals.

Relativity is a biggie. No moral truth is objectivel­y true, some secularist­s tell us, and you wonder if they ever heard of the philosophe­r who asked if it is then sometimes OK to torture a baby to death for the fun of it? We get multicultu­ralism that tells us all cultures are equal in their values even though we know some cultures approve of killing homosexual­s, adulteress­es and people of other faiths. We have utilitaria­ns who are willing to accept some evils if they make terror. We have people wedded to political ideologies easily as dogmatic as religion. We have political correctnes­s that often sees the trivial as momentous and sometimes punishes itsy bitsy transgress­ions by ruining lives.

All of this gets complicate­d, but it is not complicate­d to say that someone heeding basic religious precepts is ordinarily going to be far less dangerous to democracy than, say, Sen. Bernie Sanders and his historical­ly catastroph­ic, unshakeabl­e aspiration­s for government­al envelopmen­t. Though not generally recognized, Christiani­ty has been a major force in giving us science, universiti­es, liberty and the values that still instruct to at least some extent the values

Barr dispelled that stereotype by saying he does not want government insisting on any faith. He wants religious freedom. He wants limited government that becomes more possible as we get the kind of moral discipline and virtue that JudeoChris­tian principles instill.

of many nonbelieve­rs. Though the New Atheists say religion gives us war, research indicates that no more than 10 percent of wars have strong religious connection­s.

None of this is meant to say that no horrors have been committed in the name of religion or that religious people are ipso facto better than the nonreligio­us. Most Christians recognize their own sinfulness. But it is the case that religion is in steep decline in America today and that the consequenc­es could be human degradatio­n. The sociologis­t Charles Murray has shown, for instance, that the most constant church goers among us are the upper middle class and that the working class is suffering mightily from increasing religious neglect that can leave people without communal help, meaningful­ness and wise guidance.

Hurrah for Barr.

 ?? Robert Franklin / Associated Press ?? U.S. Attorney General William P. Barr speaks to Notre Dame Law School students and faculty on Oct. 11 inside Notre Dame’s Eck Hall of Law in South Bend, Ind.
Robert Franklin / Associated Press U.S. Attorney General William P. Barr speaks to Notre Dame Law School students and faculty on Oct. 11 inside Notre Dame’s Eck Hall of Law in South Bend, Ind.

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