The Creed Of A Liberal

July 1993

There is a creed which the untired and undaunted liberals of all time have lived by.

It is this:

We believe in man--
in his slow ascendant progress,
in the autonomy of his spirit
and the primacy of his claims over the claims of all forms of human organization.

We believe in freedom--
the fullest measure of freedom compatible with the fullest measure of responsibility.

We believe in authority--
but only in authority sanctioned by reason and consent.

We believe that the only tools of social progress
are education, experimentation, and cooperation.

We believe that to be well governed is not as important as to be self-governed, that values bestowed are not as valuable as values achieved.

Hence, we reject all manner of millenniums proffered to us at the spear-point of dictatorship.

We believe that all truth is made manifest through the contact and clash of diverse opinions and that the very motive power of progress is the free exchange of ideas and the exercised privilege of non-conformity.

We believe in tolerance but not in indifference,
in enthusiasm but not in fanaticism,
in convictions, but not in obsessions,
in independence but not in isolation,
in conflict but not in hate.

--Richard Henry, DD
Adapted from Rabbi Abba H. Silver