Cicero1I was asked to expand upon reference I made in a recent talk about the trail of writings that lead to the founding documents of the United States.  To begin the discussion, I want to borrow an excellent graphic from W. Cleon Skousen, the founder of the National Center for Constitutional Studies (see A Miracle That Changed the World: The 5000 Year Leap). At the extreme left end of the scale is 100% Tyranny and what is called "Ruler's Law."  At the extreme right end of the scale is 100% Anarchy and is called "No Law."  According to Skousen, somewhere in the middle is the sweet spot and is called "People's Law." It is this People's Law that the founders of the United States enshrined in the constitution to defend the people from oppressive government while at the same time protecting them from each other.

Communism and fascism, although sometimes confused as being extremes from opposite ends (one at the extreme "left," the other at the extreme "right"), are actually different names for the same thing: tyranny.  They both involve police state control of people's lives.  Dictators, Marxists, redistributionists, and Islamic Theocracies all live at this extreme end of the spectrum.  Ultimately, the "Ruler's Law" extreme involves control of the people by force for the benefit of the state.

Anarchy and chaos live at the other extreme, where there is no law whatsoever.  While this may at first seem to be the purest form of freedom, it takes only a little consideration to see that when everyone is free to behave entirely as they like, nobody is free.  This is because everyone's freedoms infringe upon each other.

To officially establish a government in the middle of the two extremes, the founders of the United States drew upon the writings and philosophies of a great many minds.  Interestingly, given the very similar style of "classical education" most of the founders received (see American Creation, by Joseph J. Ellis) the founders had similar foundations in literature.  (It is a shame that this has virtually disappeared in our society today).  This produced a collective knowledge that allowed extremely well-informed debate, and ultimately resulted in the most incredible and unique creation of a government, by the people, forFoundingfathers the people, that the world had ever seen. 

The basis for "People's Law" can be traced back to the original Anglo Saxons which began occupying the island of England somewhere around 450 A.D., who in turn based many of their ideas upon ancient Israel (before the monarchy).  This concept became known later as "English Common Law:" called Common because it was assumed that it was commonly understood by all to be true, and commonly distributed to all. 

This concept of a law common to all came, in part, from the writings of the Roman lawyer and statesman, Cicero. According to Skousen, Cicero expounded upon " . . . the brilliant intelligence of a supreme Designer with an ongoing interest in both human and cosmic affiars.  Cicero's compelling honesty led him to conclude that once the reality of the Creator is clearly identified in the mind, the only intelligent approach to government, justice, and human relations is in terms of the laws which the Supreme Creator has already established.  The Creator's order of things is called Natural Law."  In the words of Cicero himself (Quoted in Ebenstein, Great Political Thinkers, p. 133),

"True Law is right reason in agreement with nature, it is of universal application, unchanging and everlasting; it summons to duty by its commands, and averts from wrongdoing by its prohibitions . . . . It is a sin to try to alter this law, nor is it allowable to repeal any part of it, and it is impossible to abolish it entirely.  We cannot be freed from its obligations by senate or people, and we need not look outside ourselves for an expounder or interpreter of it.  And there will not be different laws at Rome and at Athens, or different laws now and in the future, but one eternal and unchangeable law will be valid for all nations and all times, and there will be one master and ruler, that is God, over us all, for he is the author of this law, its promulgator, and its enforcing judge.  Whoever is disobedient is fleeing from himself and denying his human nature, and by reason of this very fact he will suffer the worst punishment."

Cicero concluded that man must rid himself of the depravity that came from relying upon himself, and should instead return to reliance upon "Natural Law."  In effect, Cicero predicated that all Law should be measured against God's Law. 

The founding fathers of the United States established their new government upon the foundation of Natural Law, summoning harmony with the law's of "Nature's God."  How sad that our citizenry have forgotten this great truth.

I will post further installments on this theme, exploring more of the writers and philosophies that fueled America's beginning. 

Posted in

11 responses to “Foundations of Freedom – Part 1”

  1. Rene Avatar
    Rene

    Chris,
    I really enjoyed the seminar you did in phoenix,AZ. Individuals do matter, that’s the bottom line.You are a real true leader and that inspires me to follow great leaders like yourself and orrin. 9 more days till st.louis. Can you feel the intensity!!!
    sincerely, Rene

    Like

  2. Rusty Robson Avatar
    Rusty Robson

    Thanks, looking forward to getting in deeper. I’de love to see some diagrams if that’s possible. So are these good sources:
    -Skousen, A Miracle That Changed the World: The 5000 Year Leap
    -Ebenstein, Great Political Thinkers
    -Joseph J. Ellis, American Creation?

    Like

  3. Larry Herring Avatar
    Larry Herring

    Chris,
    I love it when you post stories about history. That is one of the reasons LLR is such a great book.
    It teaches us so much and accentuates why we need to keep reading.
    Thanks, brother. Keep on sharing this great wisdom.
    Here’s a great Ronald Reagan quote about history.
    “History teaches that wars begin when governments believe the price of aggression is cheap.”
    -Ronald Reagan, Address to the Nation, Jan 16, 1984
    Sometimes I find it interesting that the people of this country simply gloss past the fact that the US has not had another terrorist attack since 2001 and never stop to think “Why?”.
    I would argue that it’s because we had the courage to raise the price on the terrorists.
    -Larry

    Like

  4. Ian from Texas Avatar

    Chris Brady,
    These 2 articles are so far beyond my grasp that I will simply add the list of book titles to an ever growing list. I have at least 20 years of job optional reading enjoyment in my list already!
    I have a request, if I may be so bold.
    You have previously mentioned working on a book for leaders stuck under managers. I can relate to that situation as I am sure many other fellow bloggers can as well.
    I was wondering if you can remember way back to the not so good old days when you had a job. The time when you were building on a new opportunity but still had to go to work, for someone else, at a job.
    How did you maintain a positive attitude? How did you manage to not let the negative environment and attitudes of you co-workers get to you. I am desperately trying to hang in there and keep a smile on my face. I have also heard many times that when you hang out with old associates, you begin to notice how negative people are. My job and the people there are starting to become a negative tractor beam. I try to use this as positive motivation but I am struggling with it.
    I would really appreciate your input and experience.
    Especially with all the free time you have between writing best selling books, and articles on this blog that have left me humbled.
    How does your brain not explode?
    Any help would be really appreciated. As always, any input from the 6 other bloggers would be great, too. 🙂
    Ian from Texas

    Like

  5. Michael Avatar
    Michael

    Chris I knew Cleon when he started the NCCS here in Utah and I have both those books you mentioned they are fabulous (sp) reads. Cleon was a great man,
    BTW did you know when he signed books or gave autographs he could sign his name without lifting his pen?

    Like

  6. DaveC Avatar
    DaveC

    Chris,
    How do you do it? One day Rusty Robson asks for this article and the next day here it is. Thanks for giving us this great information.
    Ian,
    I can’t speak to your situation, but in a recent comment on Orrin’s blog, I alluded to the fact that I once had a much better paying job than I now have but in a very negative environment. I left the negative environment and now work in a much better place, in a church and Christian school, in fact. I can’t tell you what you should do, but for myself, even though things are not perfect where I work now and I have to struggle much more financially than I used to, I am in a much more positive atmosphere now than I was in seven years ago.
    DaveC

    Like

  7. Rick Avatar

    Chris wrote: “Interestingly, given the very similar style of “classical education” …the founders had similar foundations in literature.”
    There was also a shared code of conduct i.e. mutual respect and a shared understanding of ethical processes for coming to agreement on what was best for society in general. They also had time for contemplation and for debate in the absence of a biased media that kept them responding in small sound bytes – positioning themselves for the next election. It produced a quality of thinking that is difficult to achieve in today’s society. (Sounds like a media war issue.)

    Like

  8. Rick Avatar

    Ian,
    Viktor Frankl, survivor of a Nazi concentration camp noticed a difference between those who survived and those who did not.
    He said, “Everything can be taken from a man or a woman but one thing: the last of human freedoms to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.”
    Frankl concluded from his experience (concentration camp) that a prisoner’s psychological reactions are not solely the result of the conditions of his life, but also from the freedom of choice he always has even in severe suffering. The inner hold a prisoner has on his spiritual self relies on having a faith in the future, and that once a prisoner loses that faith, he is doomed. From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Man's_Search_for_Meaning

    Like

  9. André DeGrâce Avatar
    André DeGrâce

    Chris,
    It’s funny how being around Team has gotten me closer to the way I felt of things when I was younger.
    I remember, at school, always standing up for what felt like the good things… the greater good, etc. I really had a sense of honour and pride(yes, not honor, I’m canadian) for many professions like police officers, soldiers, etc. I suppose this is to be expected as a young boy, but why did it slowly disapear? What happened?
    I do not want to sound to critical of my college years, I would’nt trade them and I did learn alot, but I do believe this is where I can find root of this loss.
    While undergoing my studies in political science I learned of different political views; namely the ideals of socialism and communism. Of course, I had a very vague notion of them when I was young. I knew communists as the bad guys (believe me, Canada vs. USSR hockey games were more than two countries facing off!).
    Of course, our side won in 1989. As I’m writting this it is crystal clear why the free market system has won over a redistributionist system. During studies I had difficulties debating both systems because I believed in our free-er society but thought that we were losing the human element that socialism supposedly championed.
    Boy, am I glad i got over that! With Team and it’s training system I find both of these. It is free enterprise at its purest form and I quickly learned that success comes by lifting people over you, not by climbing on their backs. In reality, it was this loss of people helping people that I saw in our corporate world that made me think twice about our great political view. In other words, lack of ethics.
    With Team, morality, honour, character and integrity come back into play. It is because of these absolutes that I am proud to say that I believe again in what comes natural y in any human being. Everybody wants to be recognized for their great accomplishments. With Team these accomplishments come by helping others doing the same.
    It’s great being a boy again!
    Thanks,
    André

    Like

  10. John Westover Avatar

    Cleon Skousen founded “The National Center For Constitutional Studies”(NCCS). The book “The 5000 Year Leap” is the text used in a Constitutional Study Course taught at the Heritage Academy in Mesa, Arizona by Earl Taylor who is the President of NCCS. Every High School student should have the opportunity to take this course. It is available on DVD at “nccs.net” at a very reasonable Cost.

    Like

  11. Lee Crites Avatar

    I love Skousen! His insights are unbelievable! I especially like his three-part series about Biblical history (of which he was a noted authority): “The First 2000 Years,” “The Third Thousand Years,” and “The Fourth Thousand Years.”
    They are a “must read” for anyone who really wants to understand the Old Testament from the context of it’s authors (those who wrote the texts, that is) and the people it was written for.
    He also wrote a two-part series called “Days of the Living Christ” that is almost without peer, in my (not so) humble opinion. These open up the New Testament in a profound way!
    I could go on about his writings — he has a set that covers American History, and . . . well, the list goes on and on.
    Thanks for mentioning him. He is one of my intellectual and Spiritual mentors, even though I have never personally spoken to him.
    Lee

    Like

Leave a reply to Rene Cancel reply