“One Nation, Under
God”
By: David Barton
Despite America ’s
great diversity, nothing unifies Americans more than their support for public
acknowledgments of God. Consider:
1. 93% want “In God we Trust” to remain on coins and
currency
2. 90% support keeping “under God” in the Pledge
3. 84% support references to God in schools, government
buildings, and public settings
4. 82% support voluntary school prayer
5. 76% support Ten Commandments displays on public property
6. There are few other subjects on which over three-fourths
of Americans consistently agree; and while the Left complains that religious
expressions are divisive, the evidence proves otherwise; religious expressions
have unified Americans from the beginning.
In fact, at the first-ever meeting of Congress in 1774 when
it was suggested that Congress open with prayer, some delegates predicted that
the act would be divisive.
7. But John Adams reported exactly the opposite, noting that
“it has had an excellent effect upon everybody here.”
8. Several Supreme Court Justices still believe that such
acts are unifying, noting:
[T]he founders of our Republic knew…that nothing, absolutely
nothing, is so inclined to foster among religious believers of various faiths a
toleration – no, an affection – for one another than voluntarily joining in
prayer together to God Whom they all worship and seek.
9. Yet the public acknowledgement of God was more than just
a pleasant practice in early America ;
it actually formed the basis of our government philosophy – a philosophy set
forth in eighty-four simple words in the Declaration of Independence:
We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are
created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable
rights; that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness; that
to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men, deriving their
just powers from the consent of the governed. That whenever any form of
government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the people to
alter or to abolish it and to institute new government.
10. Thus, five immutable principles constitute the heart and
soul of American government:
1. Government acknowledges that there is a Creator
2. Government acknowledges that the Creator gives specific
inalienable rights to man
3. Government acknowledges that it exists to protect
God-given rights
4. Government acknowledges that below the level of God-given
rights, government powers are to be operated only with the permission of
citizens – i.e., with the “consent of the governed”
5. If government fails to meet the four standards above, the
people have an inalienable right to abolish that government and institute a new
one that does observe the four criteria above.
Significantly, without a public and official recognition of
God, there is no hope of limited government, for rights come only from God or
from man. If rights come from God, then we can require man to protect those
rights – as we did in the Declaration, Constitution, and Bill of Rights. But if
our rights come from man, then man is permitted to regulate or abolish those
rights, and government’s power over our lives therefore becomes absolute and
unlimited, as has been the growing trend since the 1990s.
The Founders understood that irrevocable limitations can be
placed on government only when God is recognized as the source of our rights;
they also understood that if we became complacent in our recognition of God as
the center of our lives and government, then we would lose our liberties. As
Thomas Jefferson warned:
[C]an the liberties of a nation be thought secure when we
have removed their only firm basis: a conviction in the minds of the people
that these liberties are of the gift of God? – that they are not to be violated
but with His wrath?
11. According to Jefferson , the only
“firm basis” of our national liberties is a “conviction in the minds of the
people” that our liberties are from God and that government cannot intrude into
those liberties without incurring God’s wrath.
President George Washington likewise admonished:
[I]t is the duty of all nations to acknowledge the
providence of Almighty God, to obey His will, to be grateful for His benefits,
and humbly to implore His protection and favor.
12. President John Adams similarly urged:
[T]he safety and prosperity of nations ultimately and
essentially depend on the protection and the blessing of Almighty God, and the
national acknowledgment of this truth is an indispensable duty which the people
owe to Him.
13. And Samuel Adams agreed, reminding Americans:
May every citizen . . . have a proper sense of the Deity
upon his mind and an impression of the declaration recorded in the Bible, “Him
that honoreth Me I will honor, but he that despiseth Me shall be lightly
esteemed” [I Samuel 2:30 ].
14. To restore honor and restore America ,
we first must restore God to His rightful place in our own lives and thinking.
We must then reintroduce those original principles back into the public arena,
thus restoring the foundation on which our Declaration and Constitution were
built and the only foundation which allows them to operate as intended.
It is time for us to re-embrace the truth of President
Reagan’s warning that:
If we ever forget that we’re one nation under God, then we
will be a nation gone under!
Ani Tzarich Lalechet Achshav
Shalom
No comments:
Post a Comment