As shown above, "gracelessness" has two meanings, one being secular, the other religious. Our state, I propose, is one of gracelessness in both senses.
According to the One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church, grace in its religious sense is of two different kinds. It's first a kind of favor or boon of the Almighty, encouraging us to seek and obtain what's needed to become Children of God; it's then what the soul has as a result. Note the favor--we're not worthy of being God's children to begin with, presumably because of Original Sin. So God in his goodness must provide the opportunity. If we accept the gift given, then we may enter heaven, though most of us must burn, though full of hope, in Purgatory before we have access to it. If we don't, then to Hell with us. We're irretrievably nasty. We are as is noted above, depraved, corrupt.
A person is graceless in the secular sense if lacking elegance. A graceless person is clumsy, has no sense of propriety, and is lacking in wit and socially awkward; in a word, is unattractive. An oaf.
That we're graceless in a secular sense is established by many things and in many ways. Most publically perhaps it's apparent from the popularity of the personage I'll call for purposes of this post "Agent Orange" (or should that be Aging Orange?). Now matched with a baby-faced clone or Mini-Me, he is to all appearances gracelessness incarnate. His demeanor and speech may also be described as ugly. His efforts at wit are mere insults; so for that matter are his efforts at argument. He's boastful and crude. His followers are equally crass when they're not simply moral cowards who lack the courage to defy him or denounce him publicly.
It's unsurprising that his followers treat education as something secondary, and seek to regulate it. It's also unsurprising that their attacks on the person who is now Agent Orange's opponent involve fearmongering related to education. Education may expose people to grace in the secular sense. If there is one thing they fear in particular, it's that their children may be different than they are. Because of the American fascination with sex, their primary concern is that their children will be different from them sexually, but they fear also that through education they'll become less ignorant of the world than they think they should be, and be exposed to people and ideas different from them as well.
That we're graceless in a more religious, less secular sense is apparent given the examples, or perhaps more properly the exemplars, of depravity and corruption littering our social culture. It's significant that the most prominent exemplars are Justices of our Supreme Court. One of them complains he's not being paid enough though the Court is in session for only nine months of a year, perhaps seeking to explain his propensity to accept handouts. But perhaps the most prominent of the examples of our depravity and corruption are, I think, the amounts being spent in connection with out elections. One can't help but wonder how such money should be spent. Imagine if it was devoted to remedying poverty or repairing infrastructure, instead of assuring the election of compliant and complicit servants, and those who promise to benefit those donating funds.
Of course that won't happen.
I won't dwell on whether were offered grace by God, though I think it clear that any God who is what we claim God should be would have tired by now of trying to encourage us to make our souls full of sanctifying grace as it's called, and that any God of the kind I would find worthy of reverence isn't one who would make our salvation dependent on whether we accept his favors rather than, for example, being virtuous in our lives.
But it seems clear enough to me that we live in a state of gracelessness here in our Great Republic (for now).
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