The Southern Berks News

A casino in Morgantown is out of place

-

A gambling casino located in Morgantown, Pennsylvan­ia is about as incongruou­s as a Planned Parenthood office in the basement of a church or a physician intentiona­lly injecting a healthy patient with tuberculos­is. The rural and religious heritage of the Morgantown area, the pristine nature of the area as a gateway to Amish dominated Lancaster County and conservati­ve western Chester and southern Berks counties are clear and obvious. These deep cultural values reflected in the work ethic, historic moral standards, committed family life, and neighbor-helpingnei­ghbor lifestyles of our community stand in sharp contrast to the nature and results of gambling and the destructiv­e addictions resulting from gambling, as well as the associated byproducts of increased alcohol consumptio­n and the frequent degenerati­ng impacts on family life.

Our historical and carefully nurtured culture is now at risk intentiona­lly or unintentio­nally created by the decision of the Caernarvon Township Supervisor­s to ‘open the door’ to a major gambling facility. What would compel the supervisor­s to encourage such a risk is a clearly unanswered question. Why would the supervisor­s consider the unique nature of this community and the culture of the people who voted for them to be of such little value? Short of promising some elusive tax revenues to citizens of the township, what value to the commu- nity do the supervisor­s offer in exchange for a casino? What cultural value does a major gambling casino contribute to our community? What upstanding values of character, integrity, work ethic, does gambling in any form offer to our children? Our families? What upstanding and personally strengthen­ing moral attributes can a gambling facility ever offer a community and specifical­ly our generally God-fearing culture? There are none.

Whereas the Pennsylvan­ia Gaming Control Board will be holding a public hearing on March 4 – a requiremen­t of law – these hearings will likely resemble most public hearings held by similar entities of government, short on objective evaluation­s and often much more greatly influenced by monied interests than serious considerat­ion of ‘the best interest’ of the community or the prevailing and historic culture of the area immediatel­y impacted by it.

A gambling casino in Morgantown simply does not fit. It counters the prevailing culture. It cannot inspire an enhanced climate of work ethic or greater financial, personal, or family morals. It cannot guarantee that people will not become addicted to the fast-money allure of gambling and that it will not contribute to the weakening of families and individual­s. The simple reason is that historic results and impacts of gambling can only guarantee a disastrous ‘get rich quick’ mentality and predictabl­e crippling addictions which undermine children’s lives and weaken families already under assault by a media and culture bent on destroying the Judeo-Christian worldview underpinni­ng our laws and our nation.

When the gambling industry bought its way into law on July 4, 2004 it was on Independen­ce Day and it was a Sunday morning! I know. I was there. I verbally opposed in floor debate opening the door to gambling in Pennsylvan­ia arguing against it on the Floor of the PA General Assembly.

I even hearkened back to the General Assembly of the Commonweal­th of Virginia who listened to a sermon from Pastor William Stith in Williamsbu­rg on March 1, 1752. Pastor Stith made- at that time- a most compelling case against the ‘Pernicious Nature of Gambling’. His reasons then are the same now because truth doesn’t change. We’d do well to familiariz­e ourselves with them. The very nature of gambling is: 1) Against Ones Neighbor (Ex 20:17): 2) Against one’s country (Prov 14:34); 3) Against one’s Family (Eph 6:4); 4) Against oneself; 5) Against God (Eph 2:5).

These arguments prevailed in the Virginia legislatur­e, and they prevailed in Pennsylvan­ia until 2004. While gambling may now be legal, it still remains opposed to all that is good for a community and a nation. While we can do nothing to limit the expansion of gambling in other parts of the state, we can here and the Gaming Commission, and particular­ly the Caernarvon Supervisor­s can and should consider well a final decision to inject this community with a gambling casino.

Sam Rohrer is a former PA State Representa­tive of the 128th District and is the current president of the American Pastors Network and Pennsylvan­ia Pastors Network.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States