“So there was great joy in Jerusalem: for since the time of Solomon the son of David king of Israel [there was] not the like in Jerusalem.” (2Ch 30:26 AV)
A little background first. Since the time of David and Solomon, Judah has had ups and downs concerning the kings who led them. Some did that which was right in the eyes of the LORD. Some did not. Those who did never completely undid the sins of their predecessors. There may have been compliance for most things, but not all things. As a result, the ministry of the Temple went neglected. The Passover, Israel’s most sacred of all feast days, went unobserved. When Hezekiah took the throne, he managed the most thorough revival to ever hit Judah. He cleaned everything out, repaired the temple, sanctified the priests, and reestablished the Passover. The above verse was the reaction of the people of Israel upon their first Passover celebration in many decades. All the people rejoiced. It was a unified and nation celebration marked by great joy and appreciation. The question might arise as to the possibility for our nation. Is it possible? The key factor that Israel possessed was a unified cultural definition. They may not have agreed on every point, but they agreed that Israel was a nation called out by God to live according to His laws and that any culture that would harm their national definition would not be accepted. Cultural unity made this national celebration possible.
What we are seeing is a struggle for definition. We are approaching our 250th anniversary. Our nation, much to the chagrin of the secularists, did begin as a concept honoring Judeo-Christian ideals. We did not begin as a theocrasy, as Israel did. Rather, the common principles of the right to life, liberty, and property (it was changed to ‘happiness’) found in Jewish and Christian doctrines were the foundation of our national definition. Our founding fathers understood that to ensure all three, moral laws had to be the structure upon which our nation was to be built. In no fashion did they ever have in mind the modern-day idea of freedom. Today’s definition of freedom is hedonism. This will not work. One person's pursuit of unfettered or unprincipled freedom is an infringement on another’s right to liberty. Our nation is tearing itself apart because we cannot agree upon a common culture. There is the Judeo-Christian culture that is still prevalent. But equally strong is the anti-Judeo-Christian culture that opposes everything. What they do not realize is that once they perceive the Judeo-Christian culture is no longer relevant, or that it is destroyed, they will turn on each other. The unity they now share in trying to defeat God will become dis-unified in the end.
I appreciate all that our nation is doing to try to get back to our nation’s founding, but it cannot be legislated from the halls of an assembly or from the edicts of people in robes. Laws and court decisions are a good place to start. But they are not the answer. Israel rejoiced because they had a law which was the definition of who they were and needed to be. Their definition was unified because of a strong faith in their divinely appointed purpose. The United States has much in common with God’s people. We had a common calling that reached around the globe. That common calling was based on Biblical principles and was generally beneficial to all of mankind. Those who wished to exist in opposition to it did not feel particularly advantaged. But all who chose to live in accord with God’s perfect law had a generally improved nation. Israel rejoiced because they had a common culture. As we celebrate 250 years as a nation, let us seek to solve this disunity. Let us agree we are a divinely established nation for the benefit of individual liberty and the right of conscience. Until we agree on a common culture, rejoice as one nation will be a challenge at best.