It is good sometimes to ask significant questions which point us to what we want to be and where we want to go as a country.  Once that vision and goal are established we can seek to move towards it.  But clarity of purpose is essential.  In the American civil rights struggle in the fifties, a popular song carried the words, “Keep your Eyes on the Prize.”

So let’s put a few questions to ourselves.  Firstly, what kind of country do we want?  What building blocks are needed?  I believe our answer would be that we want a country which is non-racial, democratic, with good justice systems in place, plus economic prosperity, national strength, unselfishness, and a concern for the poor and marginalised.  I believe that sort of vision is really worth striving for.

Then we ask what kind of people do we want to be?  I believe we want a country of good people.  That kind of answer might seem naïve or simplistic, but the fact is that goodness is a basic building block for any country.

Alexis de Toqueville, the nineteenth century French philosopher, was asked the question after visiting the United States, “Wherein lies the greatness of America?”  He replied, “I sought in the fertile fields and the boundless forests and in her rich mines and it was not there.  I sought for the greatness and genius of America in her Democratic Congress and her matchless constitution, and it was not there, not until I went into the churches of America and heard her pulpits aflame with righteousness did I understand the secret and the genius and the power.  America is great because America is good and if America ceases to be good, America will cease to be great.”  Whether America is still good and still great could be debated, but the principle is still valid, and the Bible affirms it.  Says Proverbs 13:24, “Righteousness exalts a nation.”  A righteous nation will go up and the corollary is also true that an unrighteous nation will go downhill.

The late Oginga Odinga, the Kenyan politician, said at the end of his life, “We wasted 30 years of independence.  We did everything, but we forgot virtue.”  For example, if South Africa was full of Thuli Madonsela’s we would be a great nation.  I believe that is self-evident.

Another key question.  What kind of Constitution and laws do we want?  I believe we want the Constitution and laws which acknowledge a transcendent accountability and basis.  One modern political thinker in the States has said, “Why have law and order deteriorated so rapidly in the United States?  Simply because for many years it has been commonly taught that life is a random, accidental phenomenon with no meaning except the purely materialistic one.  Laws are merely a matter of human expediency since humans are allegedly accidents, so are their laws.”

Theodore Roosevelt once said, “Power undirected by high purpose spells calamity.  And high purpose by itself is utterly useless if the power to put it into effect is lacking.”  The late and great Edgar Brooks, parliamentarian, academic and historian, observed even more pointedly, “Democracy

is not a heresy but democracy divorced from God, freedom and immortality, and from every moral imperative, is certainly a heresy, and certainly a dangerous one.”

Now we ask what type of government do we want?  For the State to function for the good of all, what type of government does God require?  In the light of what I said above, He first of all wants a government of righteous character and moral integrity.  A good government will also protect the underprivileged, the powerless and foreigners.  A godly government will also understand that it is not autonomous but is God’s servant for the good of all (Romans 13:3).  A good government will also recognise that the centre point of its conscience is the Church of Christ in the country.  A good government will likewise protect the impartiality of its courts and justice system and be committed to a free press and freedom of speech.  It will encourage those who are law abiding, punish wrong doers, and collect taxes for State administration.

We also need to ask what kind of morality we want.  A strong and good country will not embrace the postmodern notion of ethical and intellectual relativism.  Rather will it hold to the notion that some things are right, and some things are wrong and some things are true and some things are false.  Perhaps the final and very key question is this:  “What kind of families and parenting do we want?”  The family is the basic building block of any society.  If the family crumbles, the nation will crumble.  Young people need to be taught that sex is for marriage and marriage requires the lifelong commitment of the two partners.  Easy divorce should not be encouraged.  And children should be raised in the nurture and discipline of the Lord and with two loving and caring parents.

All of this adds up, I believe, to the national prize we covet.  And we must, “Keep our Eyes on the Prize!”

Article provided by AE Founder Michael Cassidy, for Gateway, May 2017.