

YOU ARE
PART OF A JURY TRIAL . . . the purpose is to determine America’s
Christian heritage. You have heard the
propaganda from the prosecution, but now it’s time for the defense. The evidence is overwhelming. Have you been lied to? We
challenge you to examine these facts and decide for yourself!
All nations that ever existed have been
founded upon either some theistic or anti-theistic principle. If we know our history, we know that America
was founded upon Christianity. Before
the Pilgrims set sail for North America,
Governor William Bradford stated motives for re-locating their church. He said
they had “a great hope . . . for
propagating and advancing the Gospel of the Kingdom.” The Pilgrims were all Christians! Inside
the rotunda of our capitol is a painting of the Pilgrims about to embark from Holland. The chaplain has
the Bible laying on his lap. The words state, “The New Testament according to our Lord and
Savior, Jesus Christ.” On the sail is the motto of the Pilgrims, “In God We Trust. God With
Us.”
Before setting foot upon the rocky coast of Cape Cod in 1620, the
Pilgrims met in the captain’s cabin and drew up the first contract of
government, America’s
“birth certificate,” the Mayflower Compact. Its purpose was to establish a “Holy Commonwealth” in which only
believers in Jesus Christ were fully part of the community, could vote, or hold
public office. It begins with these words: “In the name of God, Amen.” And it continues,
“Having undertaken for the glory of God and the advancement of the Christian
faith.”
Scholars recognize the Mayflower compact, based on
the pattern of biblical covenant and government, as the founding document that
led to the United States Constitution framed in 1787. When the New England
settlements finally gathered together in 1643, they formed their bond in what
is known as the New England Confederation. They alleged in that document:
“Whereas
we all came into these parts of America
with one and the same end and aim, namely, to advance the Kingdom of our Lord Jesus
Christ.”
OUR FOUNDING FATHERS PAVE THE WAY
Most people don’t realize what this nation was like at
its beginning. Even as late as 1776 – 150 years after the Pilgrims moved
their church to America,
we see the population of our country as: 98% Protestant Christians, 1.8%
Catholic Christians, and .2 of 1% Jewish. That
means (note well) that 99.8% of the people in America in 1776 professed to be
Christians! Pastors who were part of the “Black Regiment” (because of the black robes they wore)
preached resounding sermons that resonated throughout New
England. The
day after the famous nighttime ride of Paul Revere, the infamous “shot heard around the
world” killed a member of Reverend
Jonas Clark’s church only a few yards from the church parsonage, marking the beginning
of the American Revolution.
An
excerpt from the Declaration of Independence states, ”All
men . . . are endowed by their Creator
with certain unalienable Rights . . . .”
·
After signing the
Declaration, Samuel Adams, who was called the firebrand of the American
Revolution, affirmed his obedience to God by stating, “We have this day restored the Sovereign to whom alone men ought to be
obedient.”
·
Reverend Doctor
John Witherspoon, signer of the Declaration, described as the “man who shaped America” said, “God grant that in America
true religion and civil liberty may be inseparable . . . .”
·
Benjamin
Franklin, who signed the Declaration, delivered his most famous speech on June 28, 1787, at the age
of eighty-one. He stated, “The
longer I live, the more proof I see that God governs in the affairs of
man. And if a sparrow cannot fall to the
ground without His notice, is it probable that an empire can rise without His
aid? . . . except the Lord build the
house, they labor in vain.”
Other Christian signers of the Declaration are: Charles Thompson, who is responsible for the
first translation of the Greek Septuagint into English; Dr. Benjamin Rush,
founder of the first Bible Society in America; Francis Hopkinson, who published
the first American hymnbook; and Cesar Rodney, whose home state of Delaware
(the first state to ratify the U.S. Constitution) required that officeholders
sign a declaration of Christian faith.
John Hancock, president of the Continental Congress,
said, “Let us humbly commit our righteous
cause to the great Lord of the Universe.”
Governor Morris, the person who wrote the Constitution in 1787
said, “Religion is the solid basis of
good morals; therefore education should teach the precepts of religion, and the
duties of man toward God.” William
Paterson, a signer of the Constitution, closed his speeches with Proverbs 29:2,
“When the righteous rule, the people
rejoice. When the wicked rule, the people groan.” George Mason, father of the Bill of Rights
stated, “My soul I resign into the hands
of my Almighty Creator.” Of the 55 delegates to the Constitutional
Convention, 52 strongly professed the Christian faith and signed at the end of
the Constitution, “Done in the year of our Lord, 1787.”
John Jay, first Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme
Court wrote, “Unto Him who is the
Author and giver of all good, I render sincere and humble thanks for our
redemption and salvation by His beloved Son.” To
this day every court session begins with this shout, “God save the United
States and this Honorable Court.” Statesman Daniel Webster warned of
political disaster. He stated, “If we
and our posterity neglect religious instruction and authority . . . no man can
tell how sudden a catastrophe may overwhelm us.” Noah Webster, who literally
wrote the English dictionary claimed, “The moral principles and precepts contained
in the Scriptures ought to form the basis of all civil Constitutions and
laws.” Patrick Henry, a
Christian patriot and golden-tongued orator of the Revolutionary period said, “I know not what course others may take, but
as for me, give me liberty or give me death!”
Henry also said, “It cannot be emphasized too strongly or too
often that this great nation was founded, not by religionists, but by
Christians; not on
religions, but on the Gospels of Jesus Christ.” A
slogan of the American Revolution was “No King but King Jesus!”
In 1799 the
Supreme Court in Maryland ruled that everyone appointed to public office had to
say, “I do profess faith in God the Father, and in the Lord Jesus Christ
His only Son, and in the Holy Ghost, one God, blessed forevermore; and I do
acknowledge the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments to be given by
divine inspiration.” The U.S. Supreme Court in 1892 gave us the Trinity Decision. The Court
declared: “These and many other matters add to the volume . . . of organic
utterances that this is a Christian nation.” Today, all state constitutions contain
statements about faith in God.
Two historians at the University of Houston
did a 10-year study on the ideas that shaped our republic. The three most
quoted individuals were Montesquieu, Blackstone and Locke. But biblical
citations dwarfed them all. Ninety-four percent of the founding father’s
quotes were based on the Bible. A
hundred and nineteen of the first schools, including Harvard, Princeton, Dartmouth, and Yale, were
founded on the Word of God. As late as 1850, Christians ran virtually
every newspaper in this country. The law and the federal and local judiciaries
were either all Christians or Jewish. Our
country is simply the result of a very successful church relocation project!
PRIORITIES
OF OUR EARLY US
PRESIDENTS
The first President of the United States, George Washington,
professed his Christian faith publicly in many of his speeches and writings. Washington said, “It is impossible to rightly govern the
world without God and the Bible.” His personal prayer book, written in his
own handwriting, declares: “O most
Glorious God, in Jesus Christ my merciful loving Father, I acknowledge and
confess my guilt, in the week and imperfect performance of the duties of this
day.” John Adams, our second
president, said, “Our Constitution was
made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate for the
government of any other.” James Madison, fourth president of the United States and
referred to as the “Father of the Constitution,” stated, “The belief in a God all powerful, wise and
good, is essential to the moral order of the world.” John Quincy Adams, sixth president of the United States and “Chief Architect”
of the Constitution said, “The highest glory of the American Revolution was
it connected, in one indissoluble bond, the principles of civil government with
the principles of Christianity.” Andrew Jackson, our seventh president
claimed,” That book, sir, (Bible)
is the rock on which our republic stands.”
Thomas Jefferson, third president, appointed
missionaries to the Indians and established tax-exempt status for
churches. Although Jefferson
is credited today as some form of authority regarding the First Amendment to
the Constitution, he had absolutely nothing to do with its writing. Jefferson
was not a delegate to the 1787 Constitutional Convention, he was not a signer
of the Constitution, nor was he a member of Congress in 1789, when the
Constitution was adopted. He did not
participate in any amendment debates, nor was he a member of any State
legislature at any time relevant to the passage of the First Amendment. In fact, he was not even in this country
when the First Amendment was written.
Jefferson was no more of an authority
on the First Amendment than Bill Clinton is an authority on the Viet Nam
War.
Reference to separation of church and state does not
appear in the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, the Declaration of Independence or any other
of our country’s official documents. It does, however, appear in the Constitution
of the former Soviet Union. Additionally, it
is ludicrous to state the Founding Fathers intended the First Amendment to
outlaw prayer in public schools, when on the same day that Congress
passed the First Amendment, they also passed the Northwest Ordinance which states, “Knowledge, morality, and religion being essential for the happiness of
mankind, schools and the means of education are to be forever encouraged.”
In the first
150 years of the federal court system, the term “separation of church and
state” appear less than a dozen times.
In the last 50 years the term appears in over – 6,000 cases. The separation of church and state was so
foreign to the roots of America
that Jefferson and Congress even approved a special printing of
the Bible for use IN public schools!
Thirteen years AFTER the First Amendment was signed Jefferson penned the
(now famous) Danbury
letter. After it’s signing, Jefferson rode his horse to church. The church Jefferson attended was located in
(note carefully) the halls of the US Capitol! It is no exaggeration to say that on Sundays
in Washington,
the state literally became the church because of the many church services in
executive branch buildings including (note well) the Supreme Court!
A TOUR OF OUR
CAPITOL REMINDS US
·
The Supreme Court portrays Moses holding
the Ten Commandments.
·
The Capitol Rotunda contains eight oil
paintings. Four of these portray Jesus
Christ and the Bible: 1) Columbus landing on the shores of the New World, and
holding high the cross of Jesus Christ, 2) a group of pilgrims gathered around
an opened Bible, 3) a cross being planted on the shore of the Mississippi River
by Explorer De Soto, and 4) the Christian baptism of the Indian convert
Pocahontas.
·
Statuary Hall
contains statues of medical missionary Marcus Whitman holding a Bible. Another
statue is of missionary Junipero Serra, who founded the missions of Los Angeles, San Francisco,
and San Diego.
·
Inscribed on the
walls of the Library of Congress are
these quotes; “Nature is the art of God,” “The
heavens declare the glory of God,” and
“What doth the Lord require of thee but
to do justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God.” Micah 6:8.
·
The Jefferson Memorial, the Lincoln Memorial, and the Washington Monument all display extensive
Christian inscriptions.
President Harry S. Truman said, “The basis
of our Bill of Rights comes from the teachings we get from Exodus and St.
Matthew, from Isaiah and St. Paul.” Discussing God in the Pledge of
Allegiance, President George W. Bush stated, “It
is confirmation of the fact that we received our rights from God as proclaimed
in our Declaration of Independence.”
Don’t
be misled. Because of the blatant censorship and
distortion that has gone on in most of our schools and universities, a
multitude of people know literally nothing about the REAL
founding of our country. America
was not built on tolerance for wickedness, disrespect for the unborn, sexual
perversion, radical feminism, paganism and relativism – there is an eternal
right and wrong. Read the Constitution, the Bill of Rights, the Declaration of
Independence, and other documents for yourself, instead of just taking someone
else’s word for it. When we quit doing
this we become no better than sheep being led to slaughter. Democratic Senator Robert Byrd summed things up quite well when he said, “What are
we coming to when we cannot speak God’s name?
I, for one, am not going to
stand for this country being run by a bunch of atheists.” We have allowed an ever-growing number of
heathen to spring up in our nation until they are virtually surrounding the
church. It’s high time we, without
shame and apology, reclaim our Christian heritage and return to the greatness
with which God once blessed our nation!
Alliance for Life
Ministries / PO Box 5468,
Madison, WI 53705 / Email: ministry@alliance4lifemin.org / Web: www.allianceforlifeministries.org