NP Asscroft Speaks

s~Z keith at pfmentum.com
Tue Jan 30 14:39:44 CST 2001


Here is the text of John Ashcroft's much-maligned speech at Bob Jones
University...

I want to thank each one of you for investing yourselves in the
mission of Christ, of redemption and forgiveness, and for preparing
yourselves in the way that you have.

A slogan of the American Revolution, which was so distressing to the
emissaries of the king that it was found in correspondence sent back
to England, was the line, "We have no king but Jesus."

Tax collectors came asking for that which belonged to the king, and
colonists frequently said, "We have no king but Jesus." It found its
way into the fundamental documents of this great country.

You could quote the Declaration (of Independence) with me: "We hold
these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal and
endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights."

Unique among the nations, America recognized the source of our
character as being godly and eternal, not being civic and temporal.
And because we have understood that our source is eternal, America has
been different.

We have no king but Jesus. My mind, thinking about that once, raced
back a couple of thousand years when Pilate stepped before the people
in Jerusalem and said, "Who would you have that I release unto you,
Barabbas or Jesus, which is called the Christ." And when they said,
"Barabbas," he said, "What about Jesus, the king of the Jews?"
The outcry was, "We have no king but Caesar."

There's a difference between a culture that has no king but Caesar, no
standard but the civil authority, and a culture that has no king but
Jesus, no standard but the eternal authority.

When you have no king but Caesar, you release Barabbas, criminality,
destruction, thievery, the lowest and the least. When you have no king
but Jesus, you release the eternal, you release the highest and the
best, you release virtue, you release potential.
It is not accidental that America has been the home of the brave and
the land of the free, the place where mankind has had the greatest of
all opportunities to approach the potential that God has placed within
us. It has been because we knew that we were endowed, not by the king,
but by the creator, with certain inalienable rights.

If America is to be great in the future, it will be if we understand
that our source is not civic and temporal, but our source is godly and
eternal, endowed by the creator with rights of life, liberty and the
pursuit of happiness.

I thank God for this institution and for you who recognize and commit
yourselves to the proposition that we were so created and that to live
with respect to the creator who promised us the greatest potential as
a nation and as individuals. For such, we must reacquaint ourselves
daily with his call upon our lives.

Thank you, God bless you and thank you for honoring me. God bless you,
everyone.








More information about the Pynchon-l mailing list