"Thy word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my path."ť Psalm 119:105
Generation Joshua 2006 book club
posted Wednesday, February 1, 2006 :: 7:47 AM
The Generation Joshua book club is getting ready to ramp up again for 2006. This is an
excellent way for rhetoric stage students to read great books, discuss
them with other students and with an adult “master” (as teachers used
to be called, back when they really were masters of the subject matter
they taught), and write a paper on the book under study.
The books for this spring include:
1776 by David McCullough The American Cause by Russell Kirk Men In Black: How the Supreme Court Is Destroying America by Mark R. Levin More Than A Carpenter by Josh McDowell How Should We Then Live?: The Rise and Decline of Western Thought and Culture by Francis Schaeffer The West’s Last Chance: Will We Win the Clash of Civilizations? by Tony Blankley
For more information and to sign up, visit the Generation Joshua homepage.
I discovered Cato Unbound today (hat tip: Pajamas Media). It seems it is to be a cross between 1) an online magazine, a la National Review Online, with invited leading thinkers writing on the big topics of the day, and 2) resulting commentary, a la Wall Street Journal Editorials,
addressing the ideas and issues raised in the essays, and 3) blog, with
comments and letters from readers, and posts from all over the
blogosphere about the debate, featured as well.
This month’s big question was, If three amendments could be added to the Constitution, what would they be? It was answered
by Nobel laureate and Cato Institute distinguished senior fellow James
M. Buchanan. The replies from other leading thinkers to his essay have
already begun coming in. Don’t you love the new media!
If
Cato Unbound turns out as advertised, this resource could be a valuable
teaching tool for rhetoric stage students, analyzing the essays,
researching, and writing their own replies; and also logic-checking and
rebutting, if necessary, the related reader responses and blog posts.
Michael Medved asks if
$40,000 a year is a good value for parents to pay to elite colleges, given that
parents think that money is being used to provide their children a top-flight
education and opportunity in life. Unfortunately, the professors have no such
illusions — they are in the business of indoctrination:
“On my radio show,
[Professor] Savage said that conservative homes keep kids away from liberal
ideas, but once they encounter enlightened thinking they instantly see its
superiority.”
“Enlightened” is code
for secularist and humanist, and comes from the “Age of Enlightenment,”
following on the heels of the Renaissance and Reformation in France, in which
the French men of letters, such as Voltaire, opposed the Church and faith as
primitive, and advocated secularism and “reason;” i.e. the wisdom of man.
Options: parents can
send children to an elite conservative college, such as Hillsdale or Grove
City, or have them do apprenticeships to prepare for careers. But liberal ideas
are flush in our society, and our children will meet them sooner or later.
Better to prepare them in the rhetoric stage with their origin, history, and
answer (apologia) found in the word of God.
Found on the inside cover of a Bible that was given to a soldier during the Great War (WWI) with a special message from the president, Woodrow Wilson:
“The
Bible is the word of life. I beg that you will read it and find this
out for yourselves,--read, not little snatches here and there, but long
passages that will really be the road to the heart of it. You will find
it full of real men and women, not only but also of the things you have
wondered about and been troubled about all your life, as men have been
always; and the more you read the more it will become plain to you what
things are worth while and what are not, what makes men
happy,--loyalty, right dealing, speaking the truth, readiness to give
everything for what they think their duty, and, most of all, the wish
that they may have the approval of the Christ, who gave everything for
them,--and the things that are guaranteed to make men
unhappy,--selfishness, cowardice, greed, and everything that is low and
mean.
“When you have read the
Bible you will know that it is the Word of God, because you will have
found it the key to your own heart, your own happiness, and your own
duty.”
Woodrow Wilson
No
one thought this encouragement the equivalent of state establishment of
religion then. Has the definition of state establishment changed? If
not, then what has? Good discussion question for rhetoric stage
students.
In what has to be the Dred Scott or Roe v. Wade decision of
the 21st century (yes, the Supreme Court does make terrible mistakes at
times with far-reaching consequences) last week the Supreme Court ruled that cities may seize property
from one private owner in order to transfer it to another private
owner, completely mangling the historic and traditional definition of
public use of private land. Michelle Malkin has the blogosphere’s
reaction here and here.
This colossal error in judgment turns the clock all the way back to the year 1215,
when private property rights first took a step out from under absolute
rule of a monarch. Homeowners can’t take much comfort from the United
States Conference of Mayors, who immediately issued a statement praising the Supreme Court’s decision. In an effort to curb the effects of this judicial fiat, the Virginia Legislature is seeking to provide constitutional protections
for private homeowners. (And you thought the U.S. Constitution already
did that.) Let’s petition all of our state legislatures to follow suit.
But are homes the only private property at risk? A case in California a
few years back suggests not.
Now
would be a good time to educate our rhetoric stage students why private
property ownership is such a cornerstone of free Western society. God
established the principle of private property by commanding, Thou shalt not steal, nor covet anything that is thy neighbor’s. (In a rare piece of irony, the Supreme Court has also just ruled that the Ten Commandments may not be displayed in courthouses.) Frederick Bastiat’s The Primacy of Property is a good place to start, followed by the Foundation for Economic Education’s The Property Rights Origins of Privacy Rights.
Another excellent research topic would center on the Constitution’s
checks and balances on the judicial branch – is that branch the only
branch without any? Although it seems that the judiciary is the new
absolute tyrant, Mark R. Levin argues in Men in Black that this condition is a far cry from the founders’ intent. *** Update: On the lighter side (if there is one) Scrappleface reports Court allows Ten Commandments on seized land. Well, we have to laugh about something. *** Update again: see Our rights proceed from Leninists
on the similarity between Justice Steven’s majority opinion and Lenin’s
1917 argument for government confiscation of the landed estates.
“Last fall semester, I didn’t teach
for the first time in 37 years. No, I haven’t retired. It was my
semester-off reward for two terms as department chairman at George
Mason University. A break is well deserved after a chairmanship — a job
not unlike that of herding cats. During fall semesters, I typically
teach our first-year Ph.D. microeconomics theory course. Out of a love
for teaching, I’ve decided to not completely take off but deliver a few
lectures on basic economic principles to my readership. We’ll name the
series ‘Economics for the Citizen.’”
Lucky us, Walter Williams just completed the tenth and final essay in his Economics for the Citizen series. I have linked to the first essay, the links for essays 2 through 10 are found in the right sidebar of the first essay.
Rhetoric stage students
study economics in their second year of applied history studies. Add
these essays following Economics in One Lesson, for those following the
CCH curriculum. (We are redoing applied history at CCH; active link
coming soon!)
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I am researching the holy days which were instituted by God as a celebration of the Messiah, instead of celebrating the holy days which were instituted by man to honor nature in place of nature's God.
:: Israel's Feast - Wooten
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