120 lines
6.0 KiB
Plaintext
120 lines
6.0 KiB
Plaintext
Question 6
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WAS AMERICA FOUNDED as a CHRISTIAN NATION?
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The question of our Biblical origins has been bandied around in
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intellectual circles for many years, especially now that there is a
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renewed Christian involvement in the culture of AMerica.
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The major hurdle
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in answering the question is to define terms properly. The concept of a
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Christian nation is often written off because of misconceptions as to
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what this means. A Christian nation is not one in which al people in a
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society are all Christians, just as in an Islamic country, not all
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people are necessarily Moslems. But in a Christian nation, as our
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Founders would have defined it, the principles and institutional
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foundations are Biblically based and the people in general share a
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Biblical world-view.
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Nor should we confuse the term "Christian Nation" with a "Christian
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state." since the word state refers to a political body or the body
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politic of the nation, the term "Christian state" would mean one in
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which the government ruled in religious matters through a state church.
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This would, of course, preclude religious liberty.
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All Laws Are a Codification of a Religious System
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Nevertheless, it is imperative to understand that all laws of a nation
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are the codification of a presuppositional world-view, i.e., the laws of
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the Untied States have presupposed form the beginning that the Bible was
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the foundation of our system. Rev. John Wingate Thornton said:
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"The highest glory of the American Revolution, said John Quincy
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Adams, was this: it connected in one indissoluble bond, the
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principles of civil government with the PRINCIPLES OF
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CHRISTIANITY."
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Rev. Thorton's words condense and paraphrase comments Adams made in a
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July 4, 1837 oration, which are even more powerful in their full
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statement:
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"Is it not that, in the chain of events, the birthday of the nation
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is indissolubly linked with the birthday of the Saviour? That it
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forms a leading event in the progress of the Gospel dispensation?
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Is it not that the Declaration of Independence first organized the
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social compact on the foundation of the Redeemers's mission? That
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it laid the cornerstone of human government upon the first precepts
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of Christianity and gave to the world the first irrevocable pledge
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of the fulfillment of the prophecies announced directly from Heaven
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at the birth of the Saviour and predicted by the greatest of the
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Hebrew prophets 600 years before?"
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Such convictions as these concerning the Christian foundations of
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our government persisted into comparatively recent times. John W.
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Whitehead analyzes the Supreme Court's historic understanding of the
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relationship between Christianity and government in the United States:
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"In 1892 the United States Supreme Court made an exhaustive study
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of the supposed connection between Christianity and the government
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of the United States.
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After researching hundreds volumes of
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historical documents, the Court asserted 'these references add a
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volume of unofficial declarations to the mass of organic utterances
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that this is a religious people...a Christian nation.' Likewise in
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1931, Supreme Court Justice George Sutherland reversed the 1892
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decision in relation to another case and reiterated that Americans
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are a 'Christian people' and in 1952 Justice William O. Douglas
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affirmed 'we are a religious people and our institutions presuppose
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a Supreme Being.'"
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Christianity the Dominant Influence in America
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America was under the dominant influence of Biblical Christianity from
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1620 until well into the nineteenth century. There are many who, in
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their desire to lay claim to the great accomplishments of that era, have
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tried to minimize the Christian influence and take the credit for
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themselves. But only God deserves the glory for what He did in the
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founding of this great nation.
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People from many denominations came to America in the early years, but
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the vast majority of them shared a common faith in the basic tenets of
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Christianity. Whitehead's research reveals that
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"when the Constitution was adopted and sent to the States for
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ratification, the population of America numbered only about 3 1/4
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million. The Christian population numbered at least 2 million.
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James c. Hefley has commented that about 900,00 were Scotch or
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Scotch-Irish Presbyterians, with another million also holding to
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basic Calvanistic beliefs."
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Christian Nation in Apostasy
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It must be admitted that today, although we are still essentially a
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Christian nation in form (i.e., the Constitutional, legal structure,
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church affiliation), we are not one in conduct. For the first 250 years
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of our existence Christian character determined the conduct of
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self-government in homes, churches, and civil society. But today we have
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forgotten our heritage and only the skeleton remains. Even so, deep
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within the American character there lingers a Christian conscience ready
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to be revived by the spirit of God through awakened american Christian
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patriots.
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It should be noted that by stating that America was a Christian nation
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we are not saying that we were the "New Israel" or a special race that
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God must bless. Quite the contrary, God Blessed America because our
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forefathers built their nation with reliance on Him and His Word, and
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because God had a Gospel purpose for our nation. If we turn from His
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purpose we can expect His judgement, perhaps greater judgement than
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other nations because "to whom much is given, much is required."
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Every nation can be a nation under God if it chooses to follow Jesus
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Christ. Our history is unique in that we were allowed to express the
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full flower of Christian civilization and government. This fact should
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give us cause to ponder the price we have paid for the maintenance of
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our Christian liberty. Will we be the generation that presides over its
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death?
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