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Topic: Virtue, Matches 25 quotes.
Freedom certainly cannot exist under a system where the citizens are stripped of individuality and pressed into the classless society by a despotic state, where men and women are compelled to exist as faceless worker bees. That is slavery!
Neither can freedom long survive in a society where the rights of the individual are fanatically promoted regardless of what happens to society itself. The rights of the individual, the ideal, the virtue, when pressed to the extreme, like other virtues, will presently become a vice. Without some balance, activists, lawyers, legislators, judges, and courts who think they are protecting individual freedom are in fact fabricating a new and subtle and sinister kind of dictatorship.
Source: Elder Boyd K. Packer Address given 25 June 1989 at the Freedom Festival at Provo, UT.
Topics: Freedom, Loss of; Virtue
There must be enough of us who have faith enough and who are moral enough to desire that which is right. Virtues, like love and liberty and patriotism, do not exist in general, they exist in particular. If morality exists at all, it exists in the individual heart and mind of the ordinary citizen. Such virtues cannot be isolated in any other place; not in the rocks or in the water, not in trees or air, not in animals or birds. If it exists at all, it exists in the human heart. Morality flourishes when the rank and file are free. It flourishes where a conscience is clear, where men have faith in God and are obedient to the restraints He has set upon human conduct.
Source: Elder Boyd K. Packer Address given 25 June 1989 at the Freedom Festival at Provo, UT.
Topics: Morality; Virtue
Believe it or not, at one time the very notion of government had less to do with politics than with virtue. According to James Madison, often referred to as the father of the Constitution: We have staked the whole future of American civilization not upon the power of the government far from it. We have staked the future of all of our political institutions upon the capacity of each and all of us to govern ourselves according to the Ten Commandments of God. (Russ Walton, Biblical Principles of Importance to Godly Christians [New Hampshire: Plymouth Foundation, 1984], p. 361.)
George Washington agreed with his colleague James Madison. Said Washington: Reason and experience both forbid us to expect that national morality can prevail in exclusion of religious principle (James D. Richardson, A Compilation of the Messages and Papers of the Presidents, 1789-1897, published by authority of Congress, 1899, vol. 1, p. 220).
Nearly a hundred years later, Abraham Lincoln responded to a question about which side God was on during the Civil War with his profound insight: I am not at all concerned about that, for I know that the Lord is always on the side of the right. But it is my constant anxiety and prayer that I and this nation should be on the Lords side. (Abraham Lincolns Stories and Speeches, J. B. McClure, ed. [Chicago: Rhodes and McClure Publishing Co., 1896], pp. 185-86.)
Madison, Washington, and Lincoln all understood that democracy cannot possibly flourish in a moral vacuum, and that organized religion plays an important role in preserving and maintaining public morality. Indeed, John Adams, another of Americas founding fathers, insisted: We have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and religion (John Adams, The Works of John Adams, Second President of the United States, Charles E Adams, ed., 1854).
Source: Elder M. Russell Ballard Address given 5 July 1992 at the Freedom Festival at Provo, UT.
Topics: Government, Purpose; Morality; Virtue
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
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
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
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
The foundation of a noble character is integrity. By this virtue the strength of a nation, as of an individual, may be judged. No nation will become great whose trusted officers will pass legislation for personal gain, who will take advantage of public office for personal preferment, or to gratify vain ambition or who will, through forgery, chicanery, and fraud, rob the government, or be false in office to a public trust.
Honesty, sincerity of purpose, must be the dominant traits of character in leaders of a nation that would be truly great.
I hope, said George Washington, that I may ever have virtue and firmness enough to maintain what I consider to be the most enviable of all titlesthe character of an honest man.
It was Washingtons character more than his brilliancy of intellect that made him the choice of all as their natural leader when the thirteen original colonies decided to sever their connection with the mother country. As one in eulogy to the father of our country truly said: When he appeared among the eloquent orators, the ingenious thinkers the vehement patriots of the Revolution, his modesty and temperate profession could not conceal his superiority; he at once, by the very nature of his character, was felt to be their leader.
Let us in The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, as citizens of this beloved land, use our influence to see that men and women of upright character, of unimpeachable honor, are elected to office; that our homes are kept unpolluted and unbroken by infidelity; that children therein will be trained to keep the commandments of the Lord, to be honest, true, chaste benevolent, and virtuous, and to do good to all men. (See Thirteenth Article of Faith.)
Source: President David O. McKay General Conference, April 1964
Topics: Citizenship; Virtue
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