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Topic: Morality, Matches 55 quotes.
Earlier, in his first inaugural, Washington said: There exists in the economy and course of nature an indissoluble union between virtue and happiness . . . we ought to be no less persuaded that the propitious smiles of Heaven can never be expected on a nation that disregards the eternal rules of order and right which Heaven itself has ordained.
Significantly, the Senate replied to Washingtons Inaugural, saying: We feel, sir, the force and acknowledge the justness of the observation that the foundations of our national policy should be lain in private morality. If individuals be not influenced by moral principles, it is in vain to look for public virtue. (Thomas G. West, The Rule of Law in the Federalist, in Saving the Revolution: The Federalist Papers and the American Founding, ed. Charles R. Kesler [New York: The Free Press, 1987], 166-67.)
Source: Neal A. Maxwell Address given 4 July 1993 at the Freedom Festival at Provo, UT.
Topics: Morality; Virtue
There is a widespread feeling that the honored values of this nation are eroding and must be re-enthroned. When someone in good conscience tries to say this, invariably someone else raises the voice, Whose values? My answer to that is, everybodys values: time-honored values such as absolute honesty, complete integrity, decency and civility, marriage, independence, industry, thrift, self-reliance, respect for law and order, and hard work. These are human values.
I do not wish to be a voice of doom. I wish to be a voice of confidence and hope in our country. The United States, with all of its challenges and problems, is still the greatest haven of opportunity in the world. Our government has never been more greatly challenged to defend its borders from people from other countries who wish to live here and enjoy the freedoms and opportunities this country affords. The desirability of this country will persist so long as its citizenry are a God-fearing people with the integrity to obey the law of the land. This includes the laws we do not like as well as the laws we do like.
There are natural safeguards in a God-fearing people that promote respect for law and order, decency, and public civility. That restraining influence is the belief that the citizenry will be accountable to their Creator for their conduct under a high moral law. This respect for and adherence to moral law transcends the constraints of the civil and criminal codes. In a people who are not God-fearing, however, these characteristics are notably absent.
Will public civility be lost under the guise of claiming under Constitutional safeguards the rights to freedom of speech? Will tolerance of other faiths and beliefs continue to be diminished by claiming rights under the establishment and free exercise clauses of the Constitution?
Source: James E. Faust Address given 2 July 1995 at the Freedom Festival at Provo, UT.
Topics: Morality
As piety, religion and morality have a happy influence on the minds of men, in their public as well as private transactions, you will not think it unseasonable . . . to bring to your remembrance the great importance of encouraging our university, town schools, and other seminaries of education, that our children and youth while they are engaged in the pursuit of useful science, may have their minds impressed with a strong sense of the duties they owe to their God, their instructions, and each other, so that when they arrive to a state of manhood, and take a part in any public transactions, their hearts having been deeply impressed in the course of their education with the moral feelingssuch feelings may continue and have their due weight through the whole of their future lives.
Source: Samuel Adams
Topics: Morality; Virtue
Still, the great question remained: were these American people in this new American nation really capable of fulfilling their personal, ethical, private as well as public responsibilities, especially as they believed them to be God-given responsibilities?
Through their knowledge of history, their commitment to the moral values and traditions in which they believed, and through their own experience, the American founding fathers knew that a morally corrupt people could never enjoy the luxury of freedom. Their teacher, the great English philosopher, Edmund Burke, had said it best:
Men are qualified for civil liberty in exact proportion to their disposition to put moral chains on their own appetites [May I repeat that: Men are qualified for civil liberty in exact proportion to their disposition to put moral chains on their own appetites.] . . . Society cannot exist unless a controlling power upon the will and appetite be placed somewhere, and the less of it there is within, the more there must be without. It is ordained in the eternal constitution of things, that men of intemperate minds cannot be free. Their passions forge their fetters.16
16. Edmund Burke, The Works of Edmund Burke, vol. 4 (Waltham, Mass.: Little, Brown, 1866), pp. 51-52.
Source: Elder Jeffrey R. Holland Address given 30 June 1996 at the Freedom Festival at Provo, UT.
Topics: America, Heritage; Morality
Among the most important terms used in this new language of the Republic were moral sense and virtue. Thomas Jefferson, for example, believed that if moral sense and personal virtue had not been God-given within the human being, then the building of any republicespecially the one we enjoy todaywould simply have been impossible.
According to Jefferson, passions and appetites are parts of human nature, but so are reason and moral sense.17 It would have been inconsistent [by God] in [the very act of] creation, he insisted, to have found man for [life in a] social state, and not to have provided virtue and wisdom enough to manage the concerns of [that] society.18 I believe that it is instinct[ive], and innate, that the moral sense is as much a part of our [personal] constitution as that of feeling, seeing, or hearing. A wise Creator must have seen [this as] necessary in [a being] destined to live [together] in society.19
17. C. E Adams, Writings of John Adams, vol. 6, p. 115.
18. Lester J. Cappon, ed., The Adams-Jefferson Letters (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1959), p. 388.
19. Ibid., p. 492.
Source: Elder Jeffrey R. Holland Address given 30 June 1996 at the Freedom Festival at Provo, UT.
Topics: Morality; Virtue
Clearly the key to true liberty lay in the human heart, and today that means our heartsyours and mine and our children and our childrens childrenas well as those of Pilgrims, Puritans, and the original founding fathers.
As Alexander Hamilton said so beautifully: The sacred rights of mankind are not to be rummaged for among old parchments and musty records. They are written as with a sunbeam in the whole volume of human nature, by the hand of Divinity itself, [upon the soul of man.] . . . The Supreme Being gave existence to man, together with the means of preserving and beautifying that existence. He endowed him with rational faculties, by which he could discern and pursue such things as were consistent with his duty and interest, and invested him with an inviolable right to personal liberty and personal safety.29
So America was founded on principles of personal virtue and private morality that would give meaning and vitality to those more technical political principles of constitutional government with its executive, legislative, and judicial branches of activity. Undergirding all of this was the commitment of the individual citizen as well as that of the elected official. From such a personal devotion would come the determination to live together in peace and liberty and safety and freedom. These are blessings we want for ourselves, our children, our neighborhoods, and our world. They are very much the blessings for which this nation was settled and for which that initial War of Independence was fought.
29. Alexander Hamilton, The Farmer Refuted, (February, 1775); John C. Hamilton, ed., The Works of Alexander Hamilton, vol. 2 (New York: Charles S. Francis, 1851), p. 80.
Source: Elder Jeffrey R. Holland Address given 30 June 1996 at the Freedom Festival at Provo, UT.
Topics: America, Heritage; Morality
In the sincere observances of the principles of true religion and virtue, we recognize the base, the only sure foundation of enlightened society and well-established government.
Source: Brigham Young JD 2:178.
Topics: Morality; Virtue
How can a republican government stand? There is only one way for it to stand. It can endure; but how? It can endure, as the government of heaven endures, upon the eternal rock of truth and virtue; and that is the only basis upon which any government can endure.
Source: Brigham Young JD 9:4.
Topics: Government, Forms of; Morality; Virtue
Washington said that morality and religion were the firmest props of government. I say moralityprivate moralityis indispensable to a good society rounded on happy homes in nations of freedom. One of the disappointments that has come to me in the observation of our political life is that all too frequently our citizens are prone to tolerate private immorality in public office, and that by comity neither side will accuse the other. I do not make this indictment general, but I firmly believe that there are a sufficient number of cases of hypocritical living in public affairs, and a sufficient number of instances of infidelity in the homes of the land, exposed and unexposed, as to have furnished an example for youth which has not been encouraging. The need of the hour is for good example and good teaching, and teaching is very difficult without the fortification of example.
Source: President Stephen L. Richards General Conference, April 1957
Topics: Morality
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