The liberty principle for this
Freedom Friday concerns the environment of dishonesty and distrust that
pervades our society. Everyone, it seems, throws up facades that hide the real
person, event, or purpose. We have to search behind the fake fronts to discover
the truth. The Potemkin effect has taken over our nation.
The Potemkin effect got its name
from a story about a man named Grigory Potemkin who lived in the late 18th
century and was governor of a certain area in Russia. Catherine the Great
announced that she would tour the southern part of her empire with some foreign
dignitaries. the As the royal visitors floated down the Dnieper River they saw
thriving villages along the banks of the river filled with happy and
hardworking people. The problem, it seems, is that all the villages were fake.
Potemkin was so intent on impressing the royal visitors that he assembled
facades of shops and cottages out of pasteboard and placed happy-looking
peasants in the fields. Once the royal party was out of side, the fake village
was taken down and rushed to the next place downstream. Even though this story
may not be true, the term “Potemkin village” is part of the vocabulary of the
world. It refers to any attempt made by anyone who is trying to make other
people believe that something or someone is better than they really are.
Monica Showalter posted an article
about Joe Biden and his attempt to project himself as an average American while
being treated as a star. She calls him “Potemkin Joe” and claims that he is far
from being an “everyman” candidate.
But the idea that this guy is an “everyman”
candidate is pretty well blown apart by this kind of rock-star treatment, which
is delivered only to the elites of the elites. Socialist Bernie has his private
jet and three homes. Amtrak Joe has his contracted gourmet cuisine and vice
presidential name plate on his dressing room door. All others take the campaign
bus.
Biden is most likely not the only
person on the campaign trail that puts up a false front.
Senator Kamala Harris (D-California) is running for President of the United States on the fake idea that she is one
with the black descendants of slaves. Her own father called her out on her
claim saying that he is Jamaican and descended from slave owners.
There is not much that we can do
about other people who build their Potemkin villages except beware and search
for the truth. We can, however, be genuine ourselves. Then-President Dieter F. Uchtdorf gave some counsel about being true in a Potemkin world. He said that
there is nothing wrong with trying to look as good as we can – shine our shoes,
paint our homes, hide the dirty dishes when unexpected company comes. He said
that it is when “this desire to impress shifts from being useful to deceitful”
that we should be concerned.
The Savior had a good description
for such people, those who tried to appear righteous when they were just
looking for praise, influence and wealth. He called them “whited sepulchers” –
they were beautiful on the outside but full of uncleanness within. President
Uchtdorf’s counsel is as follows.
Whether your testimony is thriving and
healthy or your activity in the Church more closely resembles a Potemkin
village, the good news is that you can build on whatever strength you have.
Here in the Church of Jesus Christ you can mature spiritually and draw closer
to the Savior by applying gospel
principles day by day.
With patience and persistence, even the
smallest act of discipleship or the tiniest ember of belief can become a
blazing bonfire of a consecrated life. In fact, that’s how most bonfires begin –
as a simple spark.
So if you feel small and weak, please
simply come unto Christ, who makes weak things strong. The weakest among us,
through God’s grace, can become spiritually strong, because God “is no respecter
of persons.” He is our “faithful God, which keepeth covenant and mercy with
them that love him and keep his commandments.”
So, instead of putting up a false
front or becoming “whited sepulchers,” let us attack the real problems. We each
have strengths and talents. We all have something to offer. We are all
individuals, but we all have value to society and to Heavenly Father.
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