99 lines
5.3 KiB
Plaintext
99 lines
5.3 KiB
Plaintext
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QUESTION #5
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WEREN'T WE FOUNDED BY DEISTS
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UNRULY ADVENTURERS AND RELIGIOUS CASTAWAYS?
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This stereotype presented in TV docu-dramas and history classrooms
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throughout the nation is one of the greatest defamations of
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national character ever perpetrated upon a people.
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The influence of Deism in America was minimal until the nineteenth
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century when it made inroads through the Unitarian Church and the
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atheistic philosophy of the French Revolution. During our Founding
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period, however, it had little influence. According to history Perry
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Miller, Deism was strictly "an exotic plant" imported from europe which
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did not flourish here. This distinguished historian also makes the point
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that the colonial clergy presented to the people a religious rationale
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for the American Revolution which united them behind its goals. Deism
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was incapable of producing such a phenomenon. it professed a belief in
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one God but denied the divine origin of Scriptures. Its weak philosophy
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of a non-active, spectator God who left all the affairs of the world to
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human whim was no match for the powerful Biblical faith of the majority
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of our people in the Founding Father generation. Even Jefferson and
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Franklin, the two men most often quoted as being Deists, give little
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credence to the view in there writings. Undoubtedly, both of these men
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did imbibe a mixture of European religious heresy, but the predominant
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influence upon their world continued to be Christian.
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Franklin's Plea for Public Prayer
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In the summer of 1787 a feeling of desperation and deadlock had
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descended upon the Consitutional Convention. Men from various states
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were planning to leave and it would be years before they could gather
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again for another try at bringing the loosely-knit confederation colonies
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together to form a republic.
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On June 28, 1787, as the Convention was ready to adjourn in dissension,
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a wise old man addressed its President, George Washington, with quiet
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simplicity:
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"How has it happened, Sir, that we have not hitherto once thought of
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humbly appealing to the Father of lights to illuminate our
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understandings? in the beginning of the contest with Great Britain,
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when we were sensible to danger, we had daily prayers in this room
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for Divine protection. Our prayers, Sir, were heard and they were
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graciously answered...I have lived, Sir, a long time and the longer
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I live, the more convincing proofs I see of this truth--that God
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governs in the affairs of men.-And if a sparrow cannot fall to the
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ground without His notice, is it probable that an empire can rise
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without His aid? We have been assured, Sir, in the sacred writings
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that'except the Lord build the house, they labor in vain that build
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it.'....I firmly believe this..."
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Benjamin Franklin's words were heeded and the Convention went on to
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complete its task. Although Franklin is often classified as a Deist, it
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is clear from the above statements that he had been deeply influenced by
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the Christian world-view and such great Christian ministers as George
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Whitefield.
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It could be well argued that many Christians today have acted more like
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Deists than the few accused of this heresy in our founding, because
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today we often give lip service to the Lord Jesus Christ over all
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things, but then act as though He were an absentee, distant monarch just
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biding His time to claim His throne!
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Don't Believe What You See?
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Regarding the charge that wild adventurers and womanizers roamed the
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land in early America, there is little need for refutation. On the
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frontier, starting in the times of the Puritans, some scouts and
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settlers did precede the church and families, and there were some
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atrocities perpetrated upon the Indians and some rowdy settlements. But
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as soon as settlements were established and churches were formed, the
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immoral and rowdy were made subject to the rule of the law. The
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Christian women of the community, especially, demanded it. Our TV
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generation has absorbed too much western cowboy-fever, most of it
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fictitious distortions of true life in early America. The US News and
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World Report (May 21, 1979)reports that the American people receive most
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of their knowledge of history from watching TV docu-dramas. And most of
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these docu-dramas bear little resemblance to the true story of our
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history. Only by going back and reading the original documents, as you
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are going to be challenged to do in this study of America's Christian
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History, can you determine the real story.
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The truth is that those that saved their money and possesed the fortitude
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to settle this country were for the most part character-filled
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Christians. Rev R.J. Rushdoony points out that it took two years living
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expenses just to cross and settle America and that the well-established
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families with the Puritan work ethic and Christian faith were the true
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hardy breed that settled our country. These godly men and women, due due
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to their family orientation, free-enterprise spirit, and Christian
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discipline, maintained cultural dominion over the sin-loving reprobates
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that we read so much about. Our history is evidence of the fact that, in
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the long-run, nothing can thwart an individual who has an understanding
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of his Commission from God to subdue the earth and who believes God for
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the victory.
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