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A Free People's Suicide: Sustainable Freedom and the American Future

audiobook A Free People's Suicide: Sustainable Freedom and the American Future by Os Guinness in History

Description

The first book-length treatment of peace sentiment in Civil War Pennsylvania. It uses contemporary newspapers and pamphlets; legislative documents; prison records; manuscript collections; and provost marshal records to demonstrate that the copperhead movement was as active in Pennsylvania as in Ohio; Illinois; or New York.


#165524 in Books InterVarsity Press 2012-08-10Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 8.25 x .65 x 5.50l; .70 #File Name: 0830834656224 pagesA Free People s Suicide Sustainable Freedom and the American Future


Review
123 of 127 people found the following review helpful. "The problem is not wolves at the door but termites in the floor."By George P. WoodAt the close of the Constitutional Convention in 1787; a woman asked Benjamin Franklin; "Well; Doctor; what have we got--a Republic or a Monarchy?" To which Franklin replied: "A Republic; if you can keep it." That question and Franklin's reply cut to the heart of Os Guinness's new book; A Free People's Suicide.According to Guinness; any society that wishes to be free must accomplish three tasks: win its freedom; order is freedom; and sustain its freedom. Americans commemorate the winning of our freedom on July 4; 1776; even though peace with Britain was not formalized until 1783. We commemorate the ordering of our freedom with the adoption (1787) and ratification (1789) of the Constitution. But sustaining our freedom is an unfinished and ongoing task.Unfortunately; Guinness argues; "freedom has a chronic habit of undermining and destroying itself." He notes three instances:* "When freedom runs to excess and breeds permissiveness and license."* "When freedom so longs for its own security that its love of security undermines freedom."* "When freedom becomes so caught up in its own glory that it justifies anything and everything done in its name; even such things as torture that contradict freedom."He then notes that "the last decade has displayed clear examples of each of these corruptions writ large in American culture and in American foreign policy."Now; Guinness is a Brit; so it's easy--too easy--for freedom-loving patriots to dismiss his analysis as so much anti-American twaddle. But Guinness is an America-loving Brit. He doesn't critique America in order to defame it but to improve it. Indeed; he argues that the sustainability of our freedom depends on our ability to appropriate the wisdom of the Founders for the present day.A crucial component of that wisdom is what Guinness calls "the Golden Triangle of Freedom": "Freedom requires virtue; which in turn requires faith of some sort; which in turn requires freedom." The Constitution cannot secure American freedom in the absence of the character of its citizens. A government for free people requires self-government. But the source of self-government transcends the self and cannot be appropriated by means of coercion. Freedom requires virtue requires faith requires freedom. These qualities are symbiotic and mutually reinforcing.Like Abraham Lincoln; Guinness doubts that America can be conquered by external foes. In Lincoln's words; "As a nation of freemen; we must live through all time; or die by suicide." Rather; the real threat to the American experiment in ordered liberty is internal. In Guinness's pithy words; "The problem is not wolves at the door but termites in the floor." Sustainable freedom begins with renewal at the level of our nation's moral foundation.If I have any criticism of this otherwise excellent book; it is that Guinness; like the American Founders before him; is vague about the faith that virtue requires. Freedom requires virtue which requires faith of some sort. Those last three words should remind Christian readers--Guinness himself is an evangelical; and IVP Books is an evangelical publishing house--that Americans have always viewed religion in terms of social utility and been hesitant in the face of exclusive truth claims or spiritual practices. Christians in America; then; can contribute to the sustenance of their nation's freedom; but must beware lest their Kingdom agenda be sacrificed upon a national altar.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Would be a good group-read bookBy Educated ConsumerThis was an OK read; and it probably would be better if I had read it with a group. Too much to ponder on my own.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. A book for our times.By David A. GriffithThis book is an intelligent and readable argument based on the paradox that the greatest enemy of a free society is the unfettered exploitation of the freedoms that are available within the society. Guinness takes a difficult position well; arguing that the greater good in a free society is for the society to balance order with liberty.Generally; the book is a good read; well-written and challenging. (His observation regarding the similarities between Occupy Wall Street's critique of the one-percent and the TEA Party's critique of fiscal policy was definitely something that makes one consider the validity of his argument.)I feel I can recommend this book to almost any intelligent reader; from left to right.

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