Jan 16, 2014
Democracy depends on sound moral judgment. Of course, that’s true for any political system: good laws are made by good people, by men and women with a well-formed moral sensibility: a sense of justice, and of obligation to fellow citizens.
The idea of democracy is that laws can be made by all of us, that the collective judgment of citizens is sufficient for a nation to rule itself rightly. The Founding Fathers of our country believed in that idea: they were dedicated to the notion that people could be smart enough, and virtuous enough, to govern themselves.
But the Founding Fathers understood that self-governance could only work when each citizen took seriously the obligation to form his conscience, to hold fast to the unchanging moral truths of natural law.
“Our Constitution was made only for a moral… people,” wrote John Adams, our second President, “it is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.”