Board of Advisors Gala Dinner 2012

Former Deputy PM, John Anderson keynote address on 8 Sept 2012
Mr John Anderson

Mr John Anderson

To Paul, Chris, Bishop Porteous, friends one and all, thank you for the honour of having me as an Anglican here tonight. I’m here in the spirit of what Karl Polston, the recently departed American adviser to President Nixon who went to jail and became profoundly converted and spent the rest of his life in Christian ministry. He joined forces with some wonderful Catholic people in the spirit of what he called co-belligerency.

In the face of the incredible diversions and perversions of a ridiculously secular world that now seems to surround us. So, I would like to just say a few things about that tonight because as I was saying to Bishop Porteous as I thought about what I was going to say tonight and read some of the commentary that some of your leading people are responsible for, I realised that there is nothing really that I can impart to you in terms of insights, in terms of godly wisdom, and in terms of great learning that you don’t already have great access to already. I mean that very sincerely and I salute you for it. But I think that it’s fair to say that like you, I share a deep sense of concern about where our society is going, what it might all mean and how we might respond. So I would like to say a few things about that tonight from my perspective in the hope that it is valuable and in an attempt to give you a helicopter view of the world in which we live. Now, I count myself very fortunate to be an Australian, we enjoy a standard of living, freedoms, opportunity that most people through the ages can only dream of having.

And yet we are, are we not, part of a dominant culture of the West – Europe, America, Australia, NZ that has been on top for so long that we rather lazily and arrogantly assumed we would always be on top, haven’t we? That our societies would always be great places and would always be prosperous. Although we pride ourselves in our commitment to things like multiculturalism, putting aside racism and the divisions of the past, were pretty smug about thinking we’re pretty good and that it will go on forever in the way that it has. I don’t think we should assume any such thing anymore at all!

I don’t think we’ve got much of an idea about where we are, or who we are.

I heard a story about two Australian seamen with the Royal Australian Navy and they found themselves docking in Plymouth, United Kingdom. With two young ladies they wondered off to the pub, got themselves well and truly inebriated out on the street in closing time, and one of them looks to the other and says “We’re lost, we don’t know where we are. How are we going to get back to the ship?” The other bloke points to an Englishman walking across the street and says: “This guy might know where we are.” So, they pull up this English officer stamped with officialdom all over him and ask him for their whereabouts. “You know who I am!” And the Australian looks over to his friend and says: “Now, were in real trouble, we don’t know where we are and he doesn’t know who he is .” And I put it to you, that this is where our culture is at.

You would have heard about the “GFC” – the great financial crisis which goes under various titles in recent times. The blunt reality is that it now threatens the dominance of the West. It is unlikely that Europe will recover, it will certainly never be the major economic force it has been in the past, nor in my view, will it be a social force. And even America if they are not very careful, will soon have to face the reality that many of them are talking about right now that perhaps their best days are behind them. The figures are actually staggering. Just to give you a little bit of a feel though as to how serious it is. Many of you would have heard of the stories about Greece and the way in which they try to describe Greece’s problem is to talk about their debt to GDP ratio. GDP is the total value of all the goods and services produced in an economy in any given year. Greece’s debt has reached 160% of its annual GDP. This is regarded as a very serious problem. It is indeed. Japan’s is worse. Britain was worse after the Napoleonic wars. It is a truly crippling figure and it threatens their future. What you’re not being told is that in addition to that, there is a far worse learning crisis for Greece. They have made commitments to future generations – what we’re talking about here is monstrous inter-generational theft borne of the radical individualism – a nice word for unlimited selfishness of the “baby-boomers.” Staggering inter-generational theft against the next generation. They have racked up debts that are not funded, not budgeted for, with pensions and healthcare for the “baby-boomers” that they expect their children and their grand-children to pay of 875% of GDP!

The powerhouse of Europe is usually regarded as Germany. Germany only has a debt to GDP ratio of about 95%. But, their on-going unfunded liabilities for future generations to pay for are in the order of 400%. A young German man starting work at the age of 20, by the time he is 50 years of age, on current commitments will be paying 77% of his wages in taxes to pay for the retired parents and grand-parents based on the current level of legislated but unfunded commitments going forward.

America, the home of capitalism, the wealthiest society the world has ever seen has debts to GDP of around 100%; unfunded liabilities going forward of about 500%. 48% of Americans draw all or part of their income from a government cheque and in 2022, on current indications, the Federal budget will be completely swamped by interest on their debt and welfare payments leaving nothing for such important things for education, research, roads, defence, foreign affairs, foreign aid. These are staggering figures. Why do I mention them in the context of the things you at FLI are interested in? It is because these figures represent the most staggering inter-generational theft that you could think of. They are the product of “it’s all about me!” and the abandonment of prudence and of commitment to others.

A couple of years ago, Queen Elizabeth II payed a visit to the London School of Economics asking a bunch of learned economists: “Did not anyone see this coming?” The reality is that people did see this coming but they were not listened to. I wonder whether any of you sometimes feel a little like that? I can think of two when I was at University that come to mind:

  • Russian immigrant to America, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, who was a man who said that he discovered personal freedom – Christian faith,actually, in a gulag archipelago, in a salt mine. In the most appalling of circumstances, he found freedom when he realised that the dividing line between good and evil lay not between black and white, man and woman; Catholic or Baptist; captor and captive – but somewhere across every human heart. He went to America and said [paraphrasing]: “You are in danger in the West of bringing on yourself voluntarily the sort of oppression and loss of freedom and destruction of soul that the Russians actually have enforced on them by their government!” He was ridiculed.
  • Malcolm Muggeridge, a BBC journalist who spent a lot of time in Russia who was a very tough and insightful person. While visiting America he attended a lecture on the Frenchman Blaise Pascal, who was a very gifted intellectual Catholic thinker. A lecture series was struck up in the United States in honour of Blaise Pascal. In 1977, Malcolm Muggeridge warned in very crisp language in a series of lectures, titled: “The End of Christendom but not the end of Christianity” and he said: “we are it seems determined to eat ourselves out from within.” He referred to the rising indebtedness; the loss of beliefs that drove the loss of values that drove the loss of behaviour and ethics that had made the West great. He talked about family disintegration and the winning out of moral relativism whereby those who shout loudest are deemed to adopt a position that becomes truth rather than truth being seen as a function of the facts, research and evidence.

There were warnings everywhere!

More recently, we have had brilliant secular writers like Daniel Altman, an American Harvard graduate who wrote an article last July 2011 called “The United States of Narcissism. In this article, he said that America now looks like the State of Narcissism and it’s costing us big time in economic debt. He’s joined the dots and made the linkage between the economic decay and the underlying collapse of values that is driven. Narcissus was the young man in the Greek legend who stopped to take a drink of water, looked at his own reflection in the pool of water and fell hopelessly in love with that person – himself! To the exclusion of others. This is a Greek tragedy. Loss in self-absorption, self-obsession, selfishness…there is another word for it; called s-i-n. He loses his life. It all falls to custard. Altman’s theory is that since the 1960’s, in the name of self-discovery, free-love, “if it feels good” – we become totally obsessed with self. This coupled with endless cheap credit, has enabled us to satiate our desires, to go for pleasure, not understanding that it often sacrifices happiness, and to pursue our own interests regardless of the impact on others, having as, Peter Hitchins (brother of famous atheist Christopher Hitchins), put it: decided to mock and ridicule God out of the public square; we destroy His voice, destroy His authority and then move on to destroy the institutions He has given us for the good ordering of our society. Marriage is perhaps at the top of that list.

Many Western intellectuals at the time of 9/11, people like Christopher and Richard Dawkins say that religion is a problem but very quickly realised that when you say religion is a problem, it’s a bit dangerous to attack other religions like Muslim, so we’ll just go for Christianity. So Mr Dawkins wants to burn down what little is left of the house of Western civilisation based on the Christianity that we have left. He has no alternative shelter for us to go to at all. He admits that! He says that he does not know where Europe will go post Christianity (as much as he wants to get rid of it). He says that the rapid decline of Christianity is happening so quickly that it is frightening in the UK because they have not yet developed an alternative! Well, guess what Richard…your atheist mates have been trying to come up with one for years and they still haven’t come up with one. Have a look at Communism. That was a great success wasn’t it? Have a look at Fascism. They were European attempts to do it better without God.

Peter Hitchins lived in atheist Russia and wrote the book: “The Rage against God: How Atheism led me to Faith”. He makes the point that having ridiculed God out of the public square, obliterated Him, we then decide to trash the great institutions like marriage and very perceptively he says that for the wealthy and the elite to lead these charges is not so bad. If you’re wealthy enough to do it, you throw your wife away for a trophy wife, or buy a new yacht or Bentley. But when you get down to the ordinary people, for example in the little village like the one I used to represent with 12 children and had between them 3 mothers and 5 father’s – none of them cohabitating, that’s pretty devastating. They will be looking to their country to support them. They are not looking to see what they can give back to their country.

Daniel Altman sees the problem of selfishness destroying the West, recognises that this is a cultural problem, not so much of government regulation or the failure of economics, or that the Communists/Fascists have won, or the Japanese won. We have done this to ourselves. He hopes that tomorrow’s families can do a better job of raising their children but he comes from America where 40% of the children don’t have a father or a mother and where 70% of the black children don’t have a father present. How then are the families going to do it?

This is about a profound breakdown of the beliefs that drove the values that drove the behaviour that drove the efforts of the West. Should we give up and despair? No! For Christ’s sake, we cannot. For our brothers and sisters, we cannot.

I love history. Think back to the time Australia was settled in 1788. The American secular historian, Adam Hochschild notes that at that time, ¾ of the world’s population lived as slaves if you count the caste system in India. Slaves were not seen as humans. They were goods and chattels as proven when they were finally freed. Massive compensation was paid not to the slaves but to those people who lost their goods and chattels in 1833 in England. England was the superpower and dominant culture of the day. It was an unbelievably immoral, nasty, unpleasant and cruel place. It wasn’t just because they kept slaves. The Royal family apart from the King who was an honourable man, behaved disgracefully as did the aristocrats. They set the worst possible examples of debauchery, perversion, prolificacy. A quarter of the unmarried women in London were prostitutes and there were live sex shows on every other street corner. It was a truly appalling society.

What happened? A group of unbelievably faithful people who ultimately became known as the Clapham sect resolved to make England a different place, headed up by William Wilberforce who became converted to the Christian faith despite his rich merchant background. He had everything to lose, he became a social pariah, lost all his money, teamed up with Quakers and all people of Christian belief. They met, studied and researched together. Got their facts, mounted the arguments, they built relationships, worked with their members of Parliament and they never gave up. Their efforts went on and on. They were defeated in Parliament so many times but gradually, they built a consensus across the land with the help of the internet of the day – the Quakers who owned and operated the printing presses. They could get word across Britain in a staggering day and a half which in those days was extraordinary. They never gave up. It would be remiss of me not to mention that they first saw to it that they knew and understood the Holy Scripture. They prayed and worked together. They did not attack so much as work with people to get them to understand the legitimacy of their perspective and the great truths they were seeking to unfold.

When Wilberforce got up in Parliament to condemn slavery, he did not attack the slave owners in parliament. He talked about how we (himself included) in society have been party to this great wrong. This was very humble and avoided pride and self-righteousness. Their work resulted in the freeing of the slaves. Now, we know that there are still slaves today, an estimated 40 million people but that is not ¾ of the world’s population – nothing like it. Today, historians would tell you that we have a thing called social conscience because of their works. They were active on many fronts; cleaning up corruption in English politics, reforming the way people behaved, schools and much more.

It is a remarkable story of the transforming of a society through the transformation of individuals working together and we should draw great heart from it.

I’m not saying that we can assume that is going to happen again. I am saying that we need to work for it for Christ’s sake and this is the charge before us. I believe in this very deeply on a whole range of fronts. If there is one thing I have learnt in politics is that you cannot change a man or woman’s heart. This is the work of the Holy Spirit. If you read the bible, and what it tells us we ought to be, you recognise that none of us are capable of loving God with all our minds, heart and soul. The mind is one to focus on.We are called to engage our mind. None of us are capable of loving our neighbour in this way. It is only in Christ that we can find the freedom and the empowerment to do so. It is important to believe this. We should never give up because God has not given up on us. He hasn’t given up on me which is amazing and he hasn’t given up on you, which is marginally less amazing and we shouldn’t give up on our neighbours either.

Now many out there would say that my words are arrogant. They say this, I think because they fail to understand and comprehend that in the end we will all be called to account. Amazingly, a great majority of Australians still believe in God , despite the onslaught of the atheists and the new atheism,. Amazingly, 43% still believe in a Resurrected Christ. Detailed research reveals that at heart, deep down, we still know that we will be called to account. So, it’s not our pride, it’s rather our humble love for others that seizes to seek, to persuade, at every opportunity and in every way that there is a better way, a right way. There is truth and that the elephant in the room, if I may conclude with this note, is indeed Jesus Christ. You see, I was once a politician and I recognise politicians and what they do. There was one called Pontius Pilate and he wasn’t a very good one. He knew what was right but wasn’t able to act on it. He had an innocent Man standing before him and he made the wrong choice. He gave away to populism didn’t he? But when he asked that person, why He came, Christ said: “I came to testify to the truth.” He said earlier in the gospel of John as it is recorded, that He Himself is the Way, the Truth and the Life. Truth is a person. We live in an age which says you can’t know truth just like Pilate because his response was: “Truth. What is truth?” You can almost hear him spitting it out like a good secular Aussie. He was a politician. I recognise him.

We need to make certain that we really do believe that we’re acting in truth and I encourage you to do that. Thank you very much for having me tonight. I wish you well. Thank you for the privilege of being with you all for a few short hours this evening.

Contact Us

We're not around right now. But you can send us an email and we'll get back to you, asap.

Not readable? Change text. captcha txt
0

Start typing and press Enter to search