From my article "How to build a Northwest conservatism" at Crosscut
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Thursday, February 12, 2009
Abe Lincoln and the Boy Scouts
Two anniversaries fall this week. February 12 is the 200th anniversary of Abraham Lincoln’s birth. February 10 was the 99th anniversary of the Boy Scouts of America. As it turns out, the two observances are closely related.
Lord Robert Baden Powell, founder of the Boy Scouts, explained the purpose of his movement. “Everything on two legs that calls itself a boy has God in him, although he may … be the most arrant little thief, liar, and filth-monger unhung. Our job is to give him a chance.” On another occasion, Baden Powell replied to a communist critic of Scouting, “Our aim is to help the poorer boy, independent of all political questions, to get his fair chance of happiness and success in life.”
Of course, Baden Powell was deflecting criticism when he said that the Boy Scouts’ “aim” is “independent of all political questions.” The irony of the quote is that the “aim” he identified with the Boy Scouts—the aim toward a “fair chance,” is the single most important political question of all.
An equal chance: that’s what makes Lincoln and the Boy Scouts so very alike. Both championed the God-given right of all human beings to govern themselves. Both affirmed the dignity of a person regardless of background, skin color, or class.
If each human being has the equal right to govern himself, it is no less true that he must learn the art of self-government.
We must rise to self-government. This is best accomplished in strong communities of families, schools, churches, and businesses where we may learn to be “trustworthy, loyal, helpful, friendly, courteous, kind, obedient, cheerful, thrifty, brave, clean, and reverent.”
That, of course, is where the Boy Scouts come in. The art of self-government is nowhere better expressed than in the Boy Scout Oath: “On my honor, I will do my best to do my duty to God and my country, and to obey the Scout Law, to help other people at all times, to keep myself physically strong, mentally awake, and morally straight.”
I have a feeling that if Abraham Lincoln had lived when the Boy Scouts of
“Perhaps there is no better example of chivalry than the life and experience of Abraham Lincoln, the greatest of all our American men,” says the original Boy Scout Handbook of 1911. “Every boy ought to read the story of his life and come to understand and appreciate what it means ...
So should we.