"Falsehood is cowardice, the truth courage"
About this Quote
Ballou’s line turns a moral rule into a test of nerve. “Falsehood is cowardice” doesn’t just condemn lying as wrong; it frames it as retreat. A lie, in this view, is less a clever tactic than a flinch - an attempt to dodge the social cost of being seen clearly, judged accurately, held to what you’ve done. The sting is psychological: if you lie, it’s not because you’re strategic, but because you’re afraid.
Then he tightens the screw: “the truth courage.” Truth-telling becomes a kind of public bravery, not a private virtue. That’s shrewd clerical rhetoric. Ballou, a major early American Universalist preacher, worked in a culture where churches competed for authority and where moral seriousness was a form of social currency. By defining truth as courage, he sanctifies a posture his tradition needed: open declaration against entrenched doctrines, communal suspicion, and the reputational risks of dissent.
The subtext is pastoral and political at once. Pastoral, because he’s describing the daily mechanics of conscience: dishonesty thrives when people fear punishment, conflict, or shame. Political, because institutions often run on managed falsehoods - polite evasions, doctrinal hedges, “necessary” fictions. Ballou refuses to grant those lies dignity. He casts them as evidence of weakness, and he hands ordinary believers a heroic identity: you don’t need power to be righteous; you need backbone.
It’s also a warning to religious leaders. Preachers can launder fear into “prudence” with alarming ease. Ballou calls that bluff.
Then he tightens the screw: “the truth courage.” Truth-telling becomes a kind of public bravery, not a private virtue. That’s shrewd clerical rhetoric. Ballou, a major early American Universalist preacher, worked in a culture where churches competed for authority and where moral seriousness was a form of social currency. By defining truth as courage, he sanctifies a posture his tradition needed: open declaration against entrenched doctrines, communal suspicion, and the reputational risks of dissent.
The subtext is pastoral and political at once. Pastoral, because he’s describing the daily mechanics of conscience: dishonesty thrives when people fear punishment, conflict, or shame. Political, because institutions often run on managed falsehoods - polite evasions, doctrinal hedges, “necessary” fictions. Ballou refuses to grant those lies dignity. He casts them as evidence of weakness, and he hands ordinary believers a heroic identity: you don’t need power to be righteous; you need backbone.
It’s also a warning to religious leaders. Preachers can launder fear into “prudence” with alarming ease. Ballou calls that bluff.
Quote Details
| Topic | Honesty & Integrity |
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