This is going to come as a huge shock to you all, but I've actually been wrong before.  Moreover, I've actually assented to a wrong idea knowing full well that I was assenting to an idea that was purely untenable.
One of the most egregious examples of this came a couple of years ago when I wrongly, and knowingly, assented to the idea, expressed by someone I'll not name here, that "people are essentially good."  I knew there was a huge problem with this idea, and I recognized it right away.  Yet, to my great regret now, I joined in to this chorus feigning a true belief in the concept.
I'd like to clear the record on this, as well as to finally put my conscience at ease in this matter.  I do not believe that people are essentially good, but rather that they are essentially bad.  People need a reason to be good, as I've said so many times since, thus contradicting myself.  I believe that the best reason to be good is contained in the Bible.  And the Bible explicitly states that man is not good, no not one.
I agree with Auster on this question of being good.  I can't truly be good outside the good influence of my religion.  And to that person (you know who you are) to which I falsely and knowingly mis-stated my actual position (for which I have no good explanation), I offer my most sincere apologies, and beg forgiveness.
-DW
Sunday, August 26, 2007
Righting a Wrong
Posted by
Terry Morris
at
9:45 AM
 
Labels: Bible, Christianity, Conservatism, Traditionalism, Worldview
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