Friday, January 6, 2017

Every Good Man is Free

Parents, teach your children to be free. Don't sell them into slavery. Teach them how to resist the urge to buy things, so they will be free to pursue virtue rather than money. Philo, in a book titled "Every Good Man is Free," shows just how much freedom we gain once we free ourselves from self-indulgence. Corrupt rulers rule us by offering enticements to the lower parts of the soul. The higher parts of the soul always reserve themselves for service to noble ends. The more we keep the lower part of the soul in check, the less obligation we have to corrupt rulers. Freedom means freedom to disobey those we can see are unkind and unjust. Freedom means freedom to obey those we can see for ourselves are better, nobler and wiser.

Here are some passages from Philo:

Our desire for health leads us to commit ourselves to physicians, but we show no willingness to cast off the soul-sickness of our untrained grossness by resorting to wise men.

Bodies have men as their masters, souls their vices and passions.

God and no mortal is my Sovereign.

He who has God alone for his leader, he alone is free.

If one looks with a penetrating eye into the facts, he will clearly perceive that no two things are so closely akin as independence of action and freedom, because the bad man has a multitude of encumbrances, such as love of money or reputation and pleasure, while the good man has none at all. He stands defiant and triumphant.

The good man … has learnt to set at naught the injunctions laid upon him by those most lawless rulers of the soul, inspired as he is by his ardent yearning for the freedom whose peculiar heritage it is that it obeys no orders and works no will but its own.

Homer often calls kings “shepherds of the people,” but nature more accurately applies the title to the good, since kings are more often in the position of the sheep than of the shepherd. They are led by strong drink and good looks and by baked meats and savory dishes and the dainties produced by cooks and confectioners, to say nothing of their craving for silver and gold and grander ambitions.

Those in whom anger or desire or any other passion, or again any insidious vice holds sway, are entirely enslaved, while all whose life is regulated by law are free. And right reason is an infallible law engraved not by this mortal or that and, therefore, perishable as he, nor on parchment slabs, and, therefore, soulless as they, but by immortal nature on the immortal mind, never to perish.

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