There can be no “good government” apart from self-governance.
The Texas Minute

Good morning,

I bet King Saul didn’t imagine his reign would end with him and his sons hanging from the walls of Beit She’an. Those walls still stand, while his rise to power serves as a reminder of what happens when we think we know better than God.

Here is today's Texas Minute.

 

– Michael Quinn Sullivan 

Friday, October 11, 2019
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  • End your week right by learning about Tim Harry, an Odessa native who takes seriously the call for citizens to hold their government accountable. Check out Matt Stringer’s profile of this cheerful warrior who has a knack for “stirring up trouble” in his hometown.
        
  • “We have to get the swamp out of our local political offices before we can have a hope of getting it out at the state and federal level.” – Tim Harry
        
  • It seems the Republican officials most angry about grassroots’ criticism of Texas’ purple 2019 legislative session are sitting silently by as their fellow GOP elected officials join the Democrats in attacking President Trump. Why are those public admonitions about “party unity” only aimed at citizen-activists?
         
  • Conservative State Sen. Pat Fallon (R-Prosper) has told the Wichita Falls Times Record News he won’t be challenging U.S. Sen. John Cornyn in the 2020 GOP primary. Just last month Fallon had announced exploratory efforts to do so at a meeting of the True Texas Project.
         
  • Critical election integrity legislation passed by the Texas Senate was killed in the Texas House by Fort Worth Republican Stephanie Klick. In a new commentary, Direct Action Texas’ Daniel Greer writes “actual advocates for election integrity supported SB 9 in both chambers with or without a paper ballot provision” – but Klick and her defenders are using the allowance for paper ballots in the legislation as the reason they killed the measure.
         
  • Two great conservative movement events are coming up...
    👉 Texas Home School Coalition Gala in The Woodlands this Saturday, Oct. 12.
    👉 Texas Right to Life’s North Texas Celebration of Life on Oct. 26, featuring State Rep. Jonathan Stickland, “the only Pro-Life Hero in the Texas House.”
           
  • Please join me in wishing a very happy birthday to our Metroplex Bureau Chief, Erin Anderson! And tomorrow happens to be the birthday of the previously mentioned Empower Texans alumni, Daniel Greer. 
 
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Friday Reflection

Governments are instituted among men, the Declaration of Independence correctly notes in order to secure our inalienable rights. Too often, of course, men (and women) end up creating (or tolerating) a government destructive to those purposes.

It shouldn’t surprise us God had some very strong recommendations for His people about how to correctly institute government. For starters, He gave them what we would recognize as a highly decentralized system – no king or other “leader.” The people were to be self-governing under the framework of laws He provided them as their eternal King. Disputes were handled communally, by judges who everyone recognized as wise and impartial.

To say this made Israel unique would be a vast understatement. Every other nation-state was led by a king – often one with delusions of divinity and a dictatorial bent. 

They were a self-governing people for 400 years before the Israelites looked around and saw they were different. So they demanded of their most popular judge and prophet the appointment of a king; they rejected God. They knew a king would tax them, send their boys into unnecessary wars and their daughters into servitude. But they wanted a king anyway.

And so they got Saul, perhaps the most tragically self-destructive man in the Old Testament. He was sure he was God’s gift to Israel, and he delivered as king exactly as advertised: taxes, wars, and a shift of culture followed quickly. Whatever good intentions Saul might have had were overwhelmed by the corrupting nature of power. It’s not so much that he was a bad king, it is that Saul was a king competing against God.

Yet Saul wasn’t killed in a palace coup; he was the victim of his own wars. He either committed suicide to avoid capture by Israel’s enemies (1 Samuel 31), or he was slain by an opportunistic foreigner (2 Samuel 1). However he met his fate, the bodies of King Saul and his sons were retrieved by the Philistines and hung from the walls of Beit She’an in shame.

Saul no doubt envisioned himself a wise and benevolent man who possessed the wisdom to lead Israel despite God’s warnings. Saul certainly never imagined his own corpse ignobly strung up like the hide of an animal. The walls of Beit She’an still stand, while Saul’s memory lasts only as a cautionary tale.

We reject the gift of self-governance at our own peril, and the peril of those we would puff up as monarchs. Good intentions – theirs or ours – are no match for God’s provisions. There can be no “good government” apart from self-governance.

 

Number of the Day

143

Number of days until the 2020 primary elections.

[Source: Calendar]

 

Quote-Unquote

“There are men in all ages who mean to govern well, but they mean to govern. They promise to be good masters, but they mean to be masters.”

– Daniel Webster​

 

Your Lawmakers

U.S. Senator
John Cornyn - R
(202) 224-2934
    
U.S. Senator
Ted Cruz - R
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Greg Abbott - R
(512) 463-2000
     
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Dan Patrick - R
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Michael Quinn Sullivan
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Texas Scorecard & Texans for Fiscal Responsibility 
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PO Box 49730 | Austin, TX 78765
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The Texas Minute is a quick look at the news and info of the day that we find interesting, and hope you do as well. It is produced on week days and distributed at 6 a.m. (though I'll probably take the occasional break for holidays and whatnot).

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