We Did (n’t) Build It
“Amazing Grace.” That’s
what the Republican National Convention featured at 7:00 p.m., CST, on Tuesday
evening, just before and after speeches about people who built their own
businesses “on their own.” I am awestruck. Did I miss something? How is it that these generous pretty people
can see so clearly that they have “built it on their own” while welling up
tears when singing the tender Christian hymn?
I know, I know. The “we
didn’t build it” mantra is focused on “less government” and more local, small
business control. I understand. Small businesses need not to be overly
burdened with government restrictions.
There are issues that need to be addressed: support for small business
tax breaks, limitations on large corporate tax loopholes / welfare; revisions
of outdated health care and retirement programs; renewal of blighted
neighborhoods; restrictions on horribly inadequate gun control laws; support for
public education for all.
But fundamentally, at the root, we need a reality
check. We did not build it. None of us.
Whatever It is. We built it – we worked
long and hard, no doubt – with the strengths and talents and family structures
and support bases and tax system breaks and educational systems and
inheritances and cultures and grossly inordinate blessings and local electricity
and water infrastructures – to build it “ourselves.”
I am a successful, quite well off, relatively healthy, large
home-owning, health insured family man.
I have large debt, but large resources.
I can get to the doctor tomorrow, if need be. I can claim some superb tomatoes, zucchini,
and eggplant. I have an enviable family,
and a superb wife. I can boast as
(occasionally) being an outstanding teacher.
I can quote others who say I write well.
But I did not build it myself. I am who I am because of my grandfathers John
Franklin Ivy and John Patty, frontier farmers and preachers and judges. I am who I am because of a father, O.C., who
worked his b… off day and night drilling for Midland white collar oil. I am who I am because of a mother who modeled
working hard and never accepting second best.
I am who I am because of Mrs. Turner and Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Acreman and
a host of other public school teachers who a worked long and longer for
us. And I am who I am because of Les
Perrin and Dan Hardin and Leon Crouch and John Fortner and Doug Brown and Chris Morse and Dan McGee, and
any number of other professors whose lives and hearts changed me.
Without my family’s influence, I would not have worked so
hard. Without my schools’ teaching
(largely supported by every citizen’s taxes and every teacher’s learning), I
would not have learned. Without my
church’s support and admonition and encouragement, I would not have learned
faith. Without my student loans – only possible
because of U.S. support – I would not have gotten an education. Without my network of powerful and successful
people, I would not have a job. Without
my city’s taxed based services, I would not have a home, or water, or air
conditioning, or the power to write this missive. Without my friends, and mostly my wife, I
would not be aware of how much I – I – did not make it happen on my own. Without faith, I would not face the fact that
I did not build it. Any “it.”
“It” all depends on grace.
Pure and simple.
2 comments:
Yes, it is by amazing grace and thanks to others I can read, write, and work. Health is a gift, a stable family is a blessing, and many very hard working people can not buy a decent car.
As always, thank you Dr. Patty for offering me something to think about. Great reminder of why we are able to stand where we stand and do what we do. If only we could remember that not everyone had the same starting point...maybe then we could offer them the same grace we have been given.
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