7/1/2015 - Jerry Newcombe
In 1819, Jefferson spoke out against judicial
activism, saying: "The Constitution is a mere thing of wax in the hands of
the judiciary, which they may twist and shape into any form they please."
Recently we have seen judicial activism on
steroids at the Supreme Court. That is especially true in their hubris-laden
decision to set aside “the laws of nature and of nature’s God” and say that
same-sex marriage is now the law of the land in all 50 states. Period.
We-a-slim-majority-of-the-Court have spoken. And
there it is. To me the big issue boils down to authority. By what authority did
a majority do this?
As Chief Justice Roberts himself said, you can
celebrate this decision if you want to, but the bottom line is it had nothing
to do with the Constitution.
If the Constitution means whatever the justices
want it to say, then the nation is like a great ship set adrift without a
rudder---or worse, with a rudder forcing us to go on its inexorable way toward
a great waterfall.
Those who applaud such in imposition of power
may not be so enthusiastic if another arbitrary authority arises which doesn’t
share their values. ISIS marked the Supreme Court’s decision over the weekend
by throwing off alleged homosexuals off tall buildings in Syria, as crowds
below cheered on. I’m sure those poor victims received no due process.
The United States of America has been a great
and noble experiment. How can sinful man govern sinful man in a way that allows
freedom---including for those who don’t share the same values? Power had to be
balanced and parceled out, lest we have a monarchy or an oligarchy, a rule by
the few.
This was the genius of the American system. It
gave us great freedoms. But now, we’re in a scenario essentially of “might
makes right.”
Justice Samuel Alito dissented in this case, noting:
“The system of federalism established by our Constitution provides a way for
people with different beliefs to live together in a single nation….By imposing
its own views on the entire country, the majority [of this Court] facilitates
the marginalization of the many Americans who have traditional ideas.”
He added, “If a bare majority of Justices can
invent a new right and impose that right on the rest of the country, the only
real limit on what future majorities will be able to do is their own sense of
what those with political power and cultural influence are willing to tolerate.
Even enthusiastic supporters of same-sex marriage should worry about the scope
of the power that today’s majority claims.”
Scalia noted in his dissent, “Today’s decree
says that my Ruler, and the Ruler of 320 million Americans coast-to-coast, is a
majority of the nine lawyers on the Supreme Court.”
In short, what matters now is who’s got the
power---in this case one man, Justice Anthony Kennedy. In a different context,
satirist Tom Lehrer sang: “Might makes right, until they see the light…” That
is such a dangerous place to be, for the annals of history are filled with the
bloody trail of abuses of power, even among so-called enlightened people.
One of the greatest books summarizing the
history of the 20th century---the bloodiest century on record
because of the anti-God views of so many leaders, i.e., Stalin, Hitler, Mao,
Pol Pot, etc.---is Modern Times by the excellent British historian
Paul Johnson.
He noted that at the end of the 19th century,
many intellectuals were claiming that God was dead. This created an incredible
vacuum.
Johnson writes, “The history of modern times is
in great part the history of how that vacuum had been filled….In place of
religious belief, there would be secular ideology…above all, the Will to Power
would produce a new kind of messiah, uninhibited by any religious sanctions
whatever…The end of the old order, with an unguided world adrift in a
relativistic universe, was a summons to such gangster-statesmen to emerge.”
Anthony Kennedy’s decision on Friday, written in
the voice of a philosopher-king, rather than a judge, divorced marriage from
the norms of history, world civilization, and God.
Justice Clarence Thomas wrote in his dissenting
opinion, "Aside from undermining the political processes that protect our
liberty, the majority's decision threatens the religious liberty our Nation has
long sought to protect." Thus, they have turned the Constitution on its
head, granting a right not found there that will trump rights explicitly
spelled out there.
In 1821, Jefferson warned, “The germ of
dissolution of our federal government is in . . . the federal judiciary.”
I can only take comfort in the fact, as Alveda
King reminds us, that God will have the final word, Said the Apostle Paul, “Let
God be true and every man a liar.”
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