My VIP for this week is Robert P. George, McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence and director of the James Madison Program in American Ideals and Institutions at Princeton University. Last year, George declared June to be “Fidelity Month” and dedicated the month to “the importance of fidelity to God, our spouses and families, and our country and communities.” Admitting that he was not vested with any power to do so, Lee reported that thousands of people joined him.
In 2024, George again declared June to be “Fidelity Month” and claims that “tens of thousands, perhaps hundreds of thousands, are participating.
Since
June is also known as “PRIDE Month,” George has exhibited an extraordinary amount
of courage to celebrate God, family, and country. His reason for doing so is
that there are “deep divisions and polarization” in our country because
Americans are losing the core American values upon which the United States of
America was founded. In his article published in the Deseret News, George
wrote the following:
In 1798, the vice president of our young
nation – a man named John Adams – penned a letter to officers of the
Massachusetts Militia in which he wrote that “(w)e have no Government armed
with Power capable of contending with human Passions unbridled by morality and
Religion.”
“Our Constitution was made for a moral and
religious people,” Adams declared. “It is wholly inadequate to the government
of any other.”
Adam’s conception of constitutional
republican government necessarily sustained by widespread respect for religion
and universal moral norms is a principle upon which the United States was
founded – and is one in which I firmly believe. But more than 225 years later,
Adams’ vision for our country’s moral foundation seems to be slipping away.
A recent Pew Research Center survey found
that 80% of Americans believe that religion’s role in public life is shrinking,
and a widely circulated Wall Street Journal poll last year uncovered
startling decreases in our fellow citizens’ beliefs in the importance of such values
patriotism, religious faith, having children, community involvement and hard
work. Of the values and priorities the Journal surveyed, only one – money – was
cited as “very important” by a higher percentage of respondents than when the
poll was first conducted in 1998.
These precipitous declines in the core values
that have united us as Americans – values we ought to cherish – threaten to
further entrench the already deep divisions and polarization that have befallen
our country….
We Americans are people of many races,
ethnicities, traditions of religious faith and cultural heritages. Despite our
differences – some profound, others less so – we have historically found
fellowship with each other in our shared commitments not only to our nation’s
constitutional principles, but also in our shared fidelity to God. After all,
our official national motto is “In God We Trust.” …
We Americans have also historically been
united by our shared commitments to the importance of faithful marriages,
family life and our dedication to our children and their futures – as well as
our patriotism, our love of neighbor and our belief in the importance of
faithful marriages, family life and our dedication to our children and their
futures – as well as our patriotism, our love of neighbor and our belief in the
importance of serving our communities.
When we celebrate June as Fidelity Month,
we recommit ourselves to the importance of all of these virtuous things. By
acting in service of God, family, country and community, we honor the highest
and best of values – those things that are not merely means to other ends, but
are good in themselves.
This is not so when we act in service of
money or material enrichment, or on behalf of other things that are, or can be
legitimate means to other ends, but are not intrinsically valuable, that is,
good in themselves.
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