So that we could better grasp His love for us and the cherished connection He desires to have with us, God established the father-child relationship theme beginning in Genesis and running throughout the Bible. When we understand this powerful spiritual metaphor, we understand the truth of God and the biblical worldview that naturally follows.

The Bible teaches that God is all-loving, all-powerful, all-knowing, merciful, just, and unchanging. God knows everything about us and loves us anyway. It is an awesome thought to contemplate. Our heavenly Father cares for us, cheers for us, and wants the best for us. The apostle Paul presents a beautiful description of God and the things of God as lovely, pure, true, gracious, just, excellent, and worthy of praise (Philippians 4:8).

This Father’s Day, I want you to consider the influence and blessing of our three fathers, beginning naturally with our heavenly Father. There are many ways we can imitate our heavenly father. We imitate God when we tell the truth, when we act in love, when we show grace, when we are faithful to our spouses, when we are wise stewards of our resources, when we are industrious, when we demonstrate faith, and so on. When we copy God’s ways, we reflect His character in our lives.

We imitate God when we are productive human beings, when we employ our natural gifts, and when we encourage others, especially our children, to do likewise. When God created you and me, He planted within us the instinct and drive to work, invent, produce, create, and own, because in doing so, we imitate Him, assign credit to Him, and further His creation. Paul said, “Be imitators of God, therefore, as dearly loved children” (Ephesians 5:1).

Next, consider the blessing of our nation’s Founding Fathers who were, of course, inspired by our heavenly Father. They understood the character of God and the nature of man. At great risk and with even greater faith, the Founders established the essential fundamentals of a highly successful nation. As a result of following their principles, rooted in biblical truth, America became the most prosperous and generous nation in all of human history. As we have drifted from the Founder’s game plan, we have, no doubt, left many unclaimed blessings on the table.

Our Founding Fathers believed that God made us with free will, with the insatiable appetite for freedom and with a distinct purpose to fulfill. Therefore, their goal was to create a government that was most in harmony with God’s creation, most in line with rewarding and enhancing the positive aspects of human nature that lead to productive behavior, true stewardship, and the highly sought after praise of, “Well Done My Good and Faithful Servant.”

There’s a reason why immigrants have streamed into America for over two hundred years: it’s the greatest land of opportunity ever created. No matter where you come from, this is where you have a legitimate shot at designing your life and making your dreams come true. In America, your life can become an example for others to follow or a warning for others to heed. And this brings us to our earthly father and the annual tradition of Father’s Day.

Through their words, actions and investment in us, our dads teach us about life, bolster our reservoir of wisdom and shape the legacy they will leave behind with the life we lead. Unlike our heavenly Father, none of our dads is the perfect example for us to follow. But, that’s what God is for, right? However, the older I have become the wiser my dad certainly appears to be. Getting back to the basic in my own life essentially means getting back to the advice my dad always gives me. If we are fortunate, our dads are mentors, role models and coaches all rolled into one. Fully engaged fathers can help their kids dream, risk, serve, grow, bounce back from adversity and reach their full potential. By believing in us, our dads can help us to see ourselves as big as God created us to be…and this can make all the difference in the world.

This Father’s Day, we might all do well to remember and learn from our three fathers.

The 19th century success pioneer, Orison Swett Marden wrote, “The sculptor will chip off all unnecessary material to set free the angel. Nature will chip and pound us remorsefully to bring out our possibilities. She will strip us of wealth, humble our pride, humiliate our ambition, let us down from the ladder of fame, will discipline us in a thousand ways, if she can develop a little character. Everything must give way to that. Wealth is nothing. Position is nothing. Fame is nothing. Character is everything.”

In America, we are all rich with choice. And our choices reveal who we really are. We have unprecedented freedom to make ourselves and our lives into something that excites and pleases us. If we can’t make it here, we can’t make it anywhere. As Americans, we can also earn inequality with fellow citizens as a natural result of deliberately developing our character. However, we are living in a time characterized by a surplus of information but an obvious deficit of wisdom. Consequently, many essential principles and assumed truths from generations past have been packed away and abandoned, not only on the national level but on the personal level as well.

If we do rejuvenate this great land, it will be principles, not programs that make it happen. We must return to the sound fundamentals of success both as individuals and as a nation. The founding fathers knew that for the American experiment to last, it would require the election of virtuous leaders and for this to be possible, those who elect our leaders must be virtuous as well. The former cannot work without the latter.

Character is everything! Equip yourself and your kids to better understand the cultural, political, and spiritual challenges currently facing our nation. www.stopthewaronsuccess.com

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Of all tyrannies, a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies.

The robber baron’s cruelty may sometimes sleep, his cupidity may at some point be satiated; but those who torment us for our own good will torment us without end for they do so with the approval of their own conscience. C.S. Lewis

www.stopthewaronsuccess.com

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Cicero, the great Roman philosopher and a favorite of our founding fathers, put forth a stern warning when he said,

“A nation can survive its fools, and even the ambitious. But it cannot survive treason from within. An enemy at the gates is less formidable, for he is known and carries his banner openly. But the traitor moves amongst those with the gate freely, his sly whispers rustling through all the alleys, heard in the very halls of government itself. For the traitor appears not a traitor; he speaks in accents familiar to his victims, and he wears their face and their arguments, he appeals to the baseness that lies deep in the hearts of all men. He rots the soul of a nation, he works secretly and unknown in the night to undermine the pillars of the city, he infects the body politics so that it can no longer resist.”

www.thewaronsuccess.com

 

The Smallest Minority on Earth!

The socialist believes the state is supreme and the individual is subordinate or secondary to priorities of the government. This is a shame because American virtues begin with the individual. This perverse outlook causes all sorts of friction and hostility because a nation is really nothing but millions of individuals seeking to express their uniqueness.

Nonetheless, this is the classic statist and by extension, socialist tenet. The truth, however, is that God made each of us a unique, one of a kind work of art and we are enormously valuable in His eyes. To God, each one of us is an unrepeatable miracle.

As parents, we can identify with this assessment based on experience with our own kids. Each and every one of our own children is priceless and irreplaceable. We’d never think of sacrificing the dreams and ambitions of even one child for the greater good of the family unit. Ayn Rand aptly noted that, “The smallest minority on earth is the individual. Those who deny individual rights cannot claim to be defenders of minorities.

Psychiatrist and Holocaust survivor, Viktor Frankl recognized the sanctity of every individual life when he wrote, “Everyone has his own specific vocation or mission in life; everyone must carry out a concrete assignment that demands fulfillment. Therein he cannot be replaced, nor can his life be repeated, thus, everyone’s task is unique as his specific opportunity to implement it.

One of the main reasons we have been as richly blessed as a nation is that our system of liberties, rooted in free-will, has allowed individuals to flourish, to come alive as artists and athletes, as entrepreneurs and entertainers, as school teachers and firefighters, as corporate tycoons and political leaders. This is a good thing. God made us, not as a group, but as purpose-filled, individual souls, as one of a kind and distinct.

Let’s keep it this way.

Let’s stop the war on success.

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Dear Emma and Katherine:

As we discuss during our ride to school most mornings, I am deeply concerned at the current direction of our nation. I am convinced that continuing our present path will lead to certain financial ruin for this country. The continually increasing intrusion of government into our daily lives, the vilification of successful (and happy) individuals and the erosion of personal responsibility will lead us to further devalue personal success and effort and excellence.

However, I want to share with you my hope for you and indeed for our nation. As we have also discussed exhaustively, your grandfather began life on a rural farm that was can only be described as primitive. In fact, I can recall in one my earliest memories my father and uncles installing running water (read: a bathroom) in my grandparents farm house. The family raised most of their food, made most of their clothes and had only a radio to keep up with events outside their “small world”. I can also remember their first TV with 2 channels!

They were a fiercely independent family and valued this independence more than I can describe. They lived simply. And at the risk of using an overused cliché, the children truly walked many miles to school each day, regardless of the weather. They returned home to help with the innumerable chores and work required of farm life.

What is instructive is that each of the children grew up to find success as entrepreneurs and professionals. While only one graduated from college (law degree from Northwestern University), the others together started several businesses and found their definition of success in a hardscrabble rural economy. My father started with surplus WWII equipment and little capital and built one of the most admirable companies in the area. He was known to everyone as hardworking, diligent, independent and industrious. (So industrious that my father and uncle built, from scratch, the first school bus in our poor county.)

With no help (and little intrusion) from the government he created an enterprise providing employment to many people whose only job options can described as dismal. The opportunity to work for his company was valued and viewed as a step to a better life in a tough place. He created for his employees both a positive environment and a path leading to a better life.

I am certain that the only place this story can be told is in America. There is no system other than free enterprise where someone of little resources can, through persistence and freedom, create a better life for their family, employees and for themselves. The system that led this nation to become the world’s strongest, most influential and dominant economy in only 130 years makes the story of my father and his family possible. This country’s success story is made up of my family’s journey experienced by countless others in a different time and place.

So while I am discouraged by the national mood at the moment, I know that this too shall pass. I firmly believe that our country will again discover the miracle of small, independent business. If I did not have faith in the underlying principles that have guided this country I would not work and sacrifice as I do. And, I know that with the same hard work and long-term perspective, you too will find happiness, success and significance. You too will have an opportunity to create a better environment and opportunity for yourself and others. You too will be able to enjoy the satisfaction of creating something of significance that makes this country a better place and furthers its potential.

Love,
Dad

DEAR MR. PRESIDENT

DEAR MR. PRESIDENT,

I HAVE THE HIGH HONOR AND DISTINCT PRIVILEGE of writing to you on behalf of millions of leading entrepreneurs, small business owners, salespeople, and executives whose creativity, work ethic, and personal responsibility make up the backbone of the American economic engine and therefore keep the American Dream alive.

These individuals have become highly paid because they are highly productive. For some reason, however, you do not refer to these Americans as “working people”—you typically call them “the rich.” But with all due respect Mr. President, they work indeed, often putting in sixty, seventy, and even eighty hour weeks in order to satisfy their customers and expand their businesses.

These are the most successful Americans who create vast numbers of jobs. And yet, contrary to your campaign promises of “hope” for all Americans, you have singled them out for condemnation and expropriation. You say we need to spread their wealth around in the interests of fairness. You vow to make them pay higher taxes, even though they already pay far more than anyone else. You bury their businesses in a morass of red-tape and useless regulation. You attempt to make the government—instead of their customers—the arbiter of their success.

Mr. President, I am writing to ask that you STOP THE WAR ON SUCCESS!

I have been working with entrepreneurs and small business owners and their families for nearly twenty years. The picture you paint of the free market, the business world, and successful business owners is totally foreign to me. You speak of successful Americans as if they’re all corrupt corporate CEOs. Do you not understand that many of the very people you denounce are small businessmen and businesswomen who earned their own wealth?

You speak of a rich man as selfish, but do you see the jobs he has created? You speak of him as having more than he needs, but did you see how little he had when he accepted the risk of starting his own business? You speak of luck, but did you see the years of misfortune that preceded his success? You speak of him as “privileged,” but have you heard that fewer than 20 percent of rich Americans inherited their wealth?

I have seen firsthand that these individuals have unbelievable work ethics and the highest integrity. Imaginative and innovative, they create jobs out of thin air. They treat their employees like family. They are compassionate and giving and donate a greater percentage of their income to churches and charities than public records reveal most of our elected officials do, including you and your vice president. Many have failed repeatedly, and yet they get back up and take another shot at excellence.

Mr. President, I do not know what it’s like to be a community organizer. I have no firsthand experience so I will keep my mouth shut and my pen silent on such matters. It is impossible to expect you, as president, to remain equally quiet about business matters. But perhaps your utter lack of experience in this realm should be cause for some humility. You have not taken the risks of starting and growing your own business or participating in the free marketplace at all. You do not understand what business really is; it is certainly not what you present it to be.

One can fairly ask why your commitment to spreading the wealth around only applies to business—and not to politics. For example, ­shouldn’t it apply to your position of President of the United States? By achieving this position, you have attained disproportionate status and power in your field. In politics, you are the “super-rich.” So ­shouldn’t you spread your political wealth around to those who have not been as fortunate as you? ­Doesn’t your enthusiasm for “redistributive justice” mean some of your enormous power should be taken from you and given to others who have less power?

This, no doubt, will sound ludicrous to you, as you worked hard for many years to get where you are today. Why should you have to give away the fruits of your own success? In your mind, it is only the entrepreneur whose success should be expropriated and spread around. The politically powerful, like yourself, are mysteriously exempt from the demands of equality.
Finally Mr. President, consider the message you are sending to America’s young people. I truly believe our greatest generations are still to come, but it will never happen if our children believe the messages transmitted by your rhetoric and policies: that no one can succeed on their own, that business is fundamentally dishonorable and dishonest, that only the government can save us from the depredations of businessmen and businesswomen, and that anyone who is financially successful is a societal parasite.

The entrepreneurial class you demonize is largely responsible for America’s high standard of living and its unprecedented pace of technological innovation. Think about the consequences of your relentless attack on these people and everything they represent—success, prosperity, upward mobility, and self-sufficiency. Whether through your rhetoric of class warfare or through your policies of expropriation and redistribution, you are undermining this vital group of Americans. America may indeed become more equal without these entrepreneurs, but it will be the equality of poverty and mediocrity, of underachievement and apathy.

And now I ask you, Mr. President: where’s the hope in that?

Time is running out.

Now that we have clearly spotted trouble ahead, we must fight back against the architects of the War on Success who aim to “remake” our country into their own image, into something our Founding Fathers never envisioned.

We must seize the opportunity to fight the forces that have undermined our nation’s foundation and threatened its economic, cultural, and moral health.

We can no longer deny the destructive growth of government in this country. Our national character is at risk of being lost forever or diluted beyond recognition.

As prudent, patriotic, and grateful citizens, we must not vote “present” at this critical juncture in our nation’s history. Now is the time to mobilize.

Please join me in the fight to STOP THE WAR ON SUCCESS!
www.thewaronsuccess.com

Cicero, the great Roman philosopher and a favorite of our founding fathers, put forth a stern warning when he said,
“A nation can survive its fools, and even the ambitious. But it cannot survive treason from within. An enemy at the gates is less formidable, for he is known and carries his banner openly. But the traitor moves amongst those with the gate freely, his sly whispers rustling through all the alleys, heard in the very halls of government itself. For the traitor appears not a traitor; he speaks in accents familiar to his victims, and he wears their face and their arguments, he appeals to the baseness that lies deep in the hearts of all men. He rots the soul of a nation, he works secretly and unknown in the night to undermine the pillars of the city, he infects the body politics so that it can no longer resist.”