Monday, February 12, 2018

The Bible & the Founding

The Founders faced immense opportunity. They had been British colonists since the 1600s. They were well aware of the potential of the American continent.  They had spent over 100 years developing it and they wanted to keep it.

They found themselves being abused by their British monarchy and parliament. It wasn’t just taxes, it was actual physical abuse that threatened their families.

The British government treasury was unable to keep up with the expenses of maintaining the British colonial empire. They were acting tyrannically after having acted supportively.

Thomas Paine 1707-1839 arrived from England in 1774. He wrote “Common Sense” and distributed it to the British colonists in 1776 and made the case for independence. Paine was quoted as saying: “ My mind is my church”.


Their lack of empathy and increase in brutality was met with protests. Their lack of response to these protests led to the Declaration of Independence in 1776, proclaimed by a large group of formidable colonial leaders.

Their hubris resulted in the defeat of General Cornwallis at Yorktown in 1781 by a rag-tag continental army with help from the French Navy and the loss of the American colonies forever. This unlikely victory inspired the Founders to deliver a government that set a new standard. They insisted that the People were the owners and would elect their representatives.

The colonists had migrated to America for opportunity and religious freedom and the Founders were determined to continue to allow religious freedom guarantees in their founding documents.

The Founders were unique in their agreement that church dogma was unimportant, but that view made them the perfect group to fashion a government that allowed all beliefs to exist and remain unmolested. They all believed in providence. There were convinced that a republic would be the model that would work best if God ordained it.

Benjamin Franklin's Faith Baylor University History Professor Thomas Kidd talked about Ben Franklin’s faith. He was one of the speakers at a symposium hosted by the Museum of the Bible in Washington, DC which explored the Bible and its influence on the Founding of America.


The Bible and the Founding of the American Constitutional Republic American University public affairs professor Daniel Dreisbach talked about the Bible and the founding of the American constitutional republic.

https://www.c-span.org/video/?440587-6/bible-founding-american-constitutional-republic

The Bible and the Founding of America Roundtable Historians discussed the Bible and its influence on the founding of America at a symposium hosted by the Museum of the Bible in Washington, DC. Q&A

https://www.c-span.org/video/?440587-4/bible-fouding-america-roundtable


Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader

No comments: