Once Upon a Sunday Morning

There was a time when Iowa homes woke to quiet moral lessons instead of cable news outrage. In those early hours, sunlight spilled across the kitchen floor, the smell of coffee filled the house, and the gentle voices of Davey and Goliath rose from the living room television.

That little clay boy and his talking dog didn’t shout, threaten, or divide. They guided children toward empathy, honesty, and humility – the bedrock virtues of both Christianity and community. Every story ended with a simple reflection: a reminder to choose kindness, to tell the truth, to forgive.

In a state built by farmers, teachers, and other good moral people, those lessons felt like common sense. Iowa wasn’t just “nice”; it was decent.

But somewhere between then and now, something went wrong.

The Fall of Moral Clarity

Many of the children who once learned compassion from clay figures now find themselves defending cruelty as policy, and dishonesty as politics. They were raised to believe in loving their neighbors – but today, they are told their neighbors are the enemy.

How did this happen?

It didn’t occur overnight. It began with the replacement of horizontal morality – caring for others – with vertical morality – obeying authority. Iowa’s churches, once grounded in community and shared purpose, became battlegrounds for political control.

“Faith” slowly transformed from love into loyalty. And loyalty – to a man, a party, a flag – began to outweigh love for one another.

The result? A generation seduced into thinking that being “right” is more important than doing right.

From Parable to Power

Davey and Goliath taught that moral strength meant helping the weak. The new creed says that moral strength means defeating them.

In the old Iowa, morality was measured by compassion – by what you gave.

In today’s Iowa, morality is often measured by conquest – by what you take.

That shift didn’t happen because people became evil. It happened because they were told that goodness itself was weakness – that empathy was naïveté, and that God’s favor rested only on the powerful.

It is the same inversion at the heart of Christian Nationalism and the Golden Triad – the belief that obedience to earthly authority is the highest virtue, and that dominance is divine.

But no matter how loudly these voices shout, they cannot erase the quiet moral rhythm that once defined us. The glow of that old television – the Claymation lessons of honesty and heart – still flicker deep in Iowa’s conscience.

The Moral Still Stands

The moral of the story has never changed:

  • Be kind.
  • Be honest.
  • Care for one another.

We have simply stopped listening.

Yet, redemption is always possible. The same state that once taught America how to feed itself can teach America again – how to heal itself.

Iowa doesn’t need to rediscover faith. It needs to rediscover goodness.

Closing Reflection

“Faith without works is dead.” — James 2:26

Once, our works reflected our faith – in each other. Perhaps it’s time to remember that the moral of the story wasn’t written by clay figures, but by conscience.

Vertical and Horizontal Morality
Watching Davey and Goliath 350p

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