Tgace
Grandmaster
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I was reading an article at...http://www.heritage.org/Research/PoliticalPhilosophy/HL755.cfm when I came across this...
Who do you think are "Heros" ? Many seem to "worship" martial arts figures. Are they heros or are they "small circle celebrities"? What, as a nation should we hold up for emulation. In this day and age of "moral relativism" where some want to believe that there is no right and wrong, good and evil, only subjective comparisons....can there be heros?
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"Character is not formed primarily by academic instruction in the moral virtues. It's the product of imitation: When we see real heroes in action, they "stretch our hearts and stir our minds in an effort to mimic their lives."
19 Into their example we pour our deepest hopes and aspirations. In short, heroes help little boys and little girls become the men and women they long to be.
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[font=Verdana,Arial,Helvetica]There's a thirst for heroes in any culture. But a society that worships celebrities, that allows the ends to justify the means, or that feeds itself on resentment and rage, will produce the wrong kinds of heroes--and citizens with the wrong kind of character. In America, you get a Bill Clinton or an O.J. Simpson. In the Middle East it's Osama bin Laden or Yasser Arafat. They are celebrated, they are Great Names, but none are great men.
America, by the grace of God, can still produce great men and great women. We've been reminded of that since September 11. Ask a young boy today what he wants to be when he grows up, and he'll likely tell you he wants to be a fireman. What does he mean? What does his heart want?
Well, listen to what the New York City firefighters said in the days after that day of evil. We heard this remark, in one form or another, repeatedly constantly: "When people run out of burning buildings, we run inside them. That's what we do."
That's what heroes do--not celebrities.
Heroes live with moral courage.They find the strength to do the right thing in the face of great temptation and danger. They spend their lives--maybe risk their lives--helping people who can't help themselves. That's what the human heart longs for. Even a little boy or a little girl can understand something about sacrifice and goodness.
But if we want citizens like this in large numbers, we need to teach our children who and what is worthy of our praise. We need to fill their minds with memories of the good, the noble, the heroic. Many, maybe most, of world's greatest heroes were men and women of faith. Their trust in a loving and just God gave them the moral courage to move mountains--from a Dietrich Bonhoeffer in Nazi Germany to a Todd Beamer on United Flight 93. We must give the next generation a better set of heroes than the last.
Listen to Dostoevsky in the Brothers Karamazov:
People talk to you a great deal about your education, but some good, sacred memory, preserved from childhood, is perhaps the best education. If a man carries many such memories with him into life, he is safe to the end of his day."
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