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October 25, 2001
Finding the
Mark With Religion
Memories
of Our Founder's Faith
by Steve Montgomery & Steven
Farrell
In 1970, as a seventh-grade student, I remember
the thrilling inspiration I felt as I studied the
lives and words of the founding fathers. There was
Sam Adams and the Boston Tea Party, Thomas
Jefferson and the Declaration of Independence, John
Adams and the Fair Trial, George Washington and
Valley Forge, Paul Revere and his famous Midnight
Ride, and most distinct in my memory, Patrick
Henry´s immortal oration "Give Me Liberty or
Give Me Death!"
At that impressionable age, I perceived little
difference between Henry´s message and spirit
than what I had felt when I heard the great stories
of the Bible. The founders seemed to me, as
prophets, dedicated to the "holy cause of liberty."
Heaven-sent men, called to inspire a generation to
strip themselves of the sin of fear and allay
themselves -- even unto death -- to duty, honor,
and country. Freedom was, to them, a "celestial
article," which "Heaven" had "highly rated."
Thus when Henry asked, "Is life so dear and
peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of
chains and slavery?" his answer, "Forbid It!
Almighty God!" was an appeal to the innate, and an
exclamation point upon the sentiment already
burning bright in so many American hearts; a call
to have faith complement itself with manly
works.
And you could do that, in Henry´s day, for
religion was in so many ways the heartbeat of early
American civilization. Thus, Henry´s speech
was typical for both the era, and himself, in that
his prose "rustled with the leaves of the New
Testament," accompanied by strong appeals to
reason. Yet it was unique in the terrible majesty
of its delivery and its bold entreaty to place all
upon the altar in the cause of freedom.
And besides, why should they fear? Granted, the
colonists had been told that they were weak and
"unable to cope with so formidable an adversary."
Granted, the British Navy, the world´s most
powerful, had already "forged" their "chains"
[and] their "clanking could be heard."
Yet Henry, like Elijah surrounded by the
numberless hosts of Syria, inspired his countrymen
to cross the bridge of faith and open their eyes.
We are "invincible [against] any force
which our enemy can send against us," for we are
"three million strong...armed in the holy cause of
liberty." "Look, and see what I see! We shall not
fight our battles alone. There is a just God who
presides over the destinies of nations; and
[He] will raise up friends to fight our
battles for us." And by no small miracle,
Henry´s words were fulfilled!
Yet, what of the majority of us today, would we
join hands with Henry and our forefathers in a
solemn Amen? Would such faith-bound eloquence,
which comprehends agency as a necessary fundamental
above life, and which eyes death flying in the face
of tyranny as a moral victory of the spirit over
the flesh, provoke in our hearts renewed faith and
determination to stand by the principles of
liberty?
Let us remember, as did our forefathers, that
God does not construct or alter truth by opinion
poll, congressional act, Supreme Court ruling, or
executive decree. Nor do technological leaps,
geopolitical alterations, and the downward spiral
of moral trends supersede fundamental values, human
nature and the settled lessons of history.
Like our forefathers, there should be some
beliefs which should never be compromised, and at
the center of these should stand affixed "Faith in
God." For from that fountain flows inalienable
rights, equality before the law, representative
government, the rejection of kings, and the
conviction that "righteousness exalteth a nation."
Washington identified "Religion and Morality" as
the "surest" and most "indispensable supports...of
public prosperity." And they are.
This being so, our faith needs to be rekindled.
It is in the promotion of this rekindling, that we
dedicate "Finding the Mark With Religion," Volume
II of God and the Gavel.
It is our hope that this series of articles,
along with its predecessor, and those which will
follow, might help us remember the Divine Source of
our liberty; remember the faith and sacrifice of
our forefathers; remember or rediscover the fixed
truths, principles, and settled lessons of history,
upon which the founders built and guaranteed our
freedoms; and then reaffirm in our hearts the
validity of those truths, principles, and
lessons.
More especially, that it might lead us to act
upon that same solid foundation of principle and
faith, with vigor and fearlessness, working to
restore that which has been lost, and to preserve
that which we still enjoy, so that, in so doing, we
will send to God, Our Fathers, and Our Posterity, a
true token of our Thanksgiving, and bid open the
door to a future day of miraculous deliverance from
any and all enemies which do now or may yet
threaten our liberty and our peace.
Contact Steve & Steve at Stiffrightjab@aol.com
Feel free to respond to this article in
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