Noah Webster, God’s Law, and the United States Constitution

The Influence of the Bible on the Development of American Constitutionalism

By Stephen McDowell

 

 

American constitutionalism has been a keystone in the establishment of civil liberty in recent history. It has been said that next to the Holy Bible, America’s Constitution is the most important document ever written for the benefit of mankind. Such a statement seems justified when you consider that since the United States Constitution went into effect about two hundred years ago, over 175 nations have adopted constitutions, most modeled on that of America. To the extent these nations have applied, both internally and externally, the governmental principles in that document is the extent to which they have experienced liberty, justice, and prosperity. The civil liberty the world has experienced in the past two centuries is largely due to the gradual expansion of American constitutionalism.

 

Christianity is the source of civil liberty and American constitutionalism.

Where did American constitutionalism and ideas of liberty and individual rights originate? Their development can be traced to the origins of British law, but are ultimately rooted in the Christian religion. The foundation of American constitutionalism was an understanding by the American people of the Gospel and Biblical law. The founding father of American education, Noah Webster, understood the importance of imparting this truth to American youth. In the Preface to his History of the United States (first published in 1832) he wrote:

The brief exposition of the constitution of the United States, will unfold to young persons the principles of republican government; and it is the sincere desire of the writer that our citizens should early understand that the genuine source of correct republican principles is the Bible, particularly the New Testament or the Christian religion.1

The source of true liberty is the Christian religion. Webster expressed this idea before and after his conversion in 1808. In 1802 in “An Oration on the Anniversary of the Declaration of Independence” Webster said:

“If there is a possibility of founding a perfectly free government, and giving it permanent duration, it must be raised upon the pure maxims, and supported by the undecaying practice, of that religion, which breathes “peace on earth, and good will to men.” That religion [Christianity] is perfectly republican . . . . it is calculated to humble the pride and allay the discontents of men. . . . It restrains the magistrate from oppression, and the subject from revolt . . . . it secures a perfect equality of rights, by enjoining a discharge of all social duties, and a strict subordination to law. The universal prevalence of that religion, in its true spirit, would banish tyranny from the earth.”2

The primary reason civil liberty could be developed in America was because the people understood biblical law and lived according to the principles set forth in the law and the gospel. Their internal self-government and Christian character, and their understanding of important biblical concepts such as covenant and rule of law, allowed them to be able to develop external civil liberty and constitutionalism. Alexis De Tocqueville observed in Democracy in America that “in America, religion is the road to knowledge, and the observance of the divine laws leads man to civil freedom.”3

The governmental philosophy of a nation is the product of the educational philosophy of a nation. Webster knew that in order for America to be free and prosper, the youth and adults of America must be educated in governmental principles of liberty, which could only be found in the Christian religion.

In 1829 he wrote to James Madison:

“that the christian religion, in its purity, is the basis or rather the source of all genuine freedom in government.. . . I am persuaded that no civil government of a republican form can exist & be durable, in which the principles of that religion have not a controlling influence.”4

In addition to an understanding of the Christian religion, Webster believed citizens should also be taught fundamental governmental principles and a knowledge of how free governments are structured and operate. Webster provided the first instruction for Americans in our federal constitutional form of government in his American Spelling Book of 1794, which contained a Federal catechism. This was America’s first civics book. American constitutionalism was not a product of human reason. Webster wrote how the American people rejected the ideas of the French Revolution because the Americans “believe the opinion, that man can be governed by his reason improved, without the usual aids of religion and law, to be not merely a chimera, but a dangerous doctrine, calculated to undermine the foundation of morals and all social confidence and security.”5

American constitutionalism was rooted in the absolutes of God’s law. True law is in accord with God’s law. William Blackstone, whose Commentaries of the Laws of England (1765) was a primary resource for those studying law in America until the 20th century, said that “no human laws are of any validity, if contrary to [the] law of nature [which is] dictated by God himself . . . [or to] the law of revelation [which is] to be found only in the holy Scriptures.”6

Early American commentators on law, such as Joseph Story and James Kent, would agree with Blackstone on the Christian source of true law.7

De Tocqueville wrote in 1835 that “there is no country in the whole world in which the Christian religion retains a greater influence over the souls of men than in America.”8 This influence effected every sphere of life, including law and government.

 

Attack against Christian foundation of law in America

In his Spirit of the Common Law, Roscoe Pound, who was President of Harvard Law School in the 1920s, revealed the nature of the changing view of law in America. Pound, who was not a Christian, did not directly attack the Christian foundation of law in the United States. In fact, he said that the old Christian legal foundation was good and produced many good results; but, he went on to say that this foundation was not good enough to bring us into the modern era. According to him, we needed a new law system, one founded on a different premise. Pound and others claimed that law was rooted in the best that society had to offer—in the consensus of the society and what they deemed best for mankind—and as society grew and became better, the law would change with it. Evolving law and the sovereignty of the state replaced the absolutes of God’s law. Pound said “the state takes the place of Jehovah.”9

He sought to implement change through the law professors. Many in the judicial system began to embrace this evolving view of law. In the words of Charles Evans Hughes, Supreme Court Chief Justice from 1930 to 1941: “We are under a Constitution, but the Constitution is what the judges say it is.”10

The idea of evolutionary law, rooted in the will of man, has grown rapidly in recent decades. Many people today in America, and throughout the world, claim to be lovers of liberty and democratic government, yet through their attempts to remove every vestige of the Christian religion from our education, government, media, economy, and law are undermining the foundation of our liberty. “Strange, indeed,” Webster proclaimed, “that the zealous advocates of a republican government, should wage an inveterate war against the only system of religious principles, compatible with rational freedom, and calculated to maintain a republican constitution!”11

 

Historical Development of Constitutionalism

 

Civil liberty is a product of the Bible in the hands of the people. The Bible is the law of liberty—personal, religious, and civil. Modern civil liberty has its roots in the Law of God given to Moses by God around 3500 years ago. Jesus Christ affirmed the law of God and especially emphasized the internal aspect of the law. Webster said that the Gospel contains “the genuine principles of civil life—the only principles which can perfect the work of civilization.”12

Civil documents of liberty in history have been a product, directly or indirectly, of biblical ideas. When one examines the history of the civil documents, as well as the ideas contained in them, their biblical and Christian foundations are apparent. These especially took root and grew in Britain. This was due to the unique impact that Christianity had in the history of that nation.

Our civil liberties have been secured by some fundamental principles. One is the rule of law, where all men, including the rulers, are subject to the law of the land. Men are not a law unto themselves. Over the centuries written documents have emerged putting forth and developing this idea. Written law is important, but the source of that law is also important in securing liberty. As mentioned, the source of laws of liberty have been the law of God, revealed both in the laws of nature and in the Scriptures, His revealed will to mankind.

 

British Roots of Constitutionalism

American constitutionalism has its roots in British law. British law has its roots in Christianity. Christianity was introduced in Britain in the first century. As the Celts were converted they established decentralized churches, unlike those that developed in the Roman and Byzantine Empires. This was due in part to their being located on the outer edge of the Roman Empire where little power existed to control them.

 

Patrick’s Liber Ex Lege Moisi

 

By A.D. 150 the pastors of the Celtic Churches preached in the common language from interlinear Bible translations called glosses. The greatest of the pastors was Patrick who left England and went to evangelize Ireland in the first part of the fifth century. King Loehaire was converted and made Patrick his counselor, in which capacity he worked to introduce biblical law into the civil realm. Patrick wrote Liber Ex Lege Moisi (Book of the Law of Moses) which was applied by local chieftains or kings throughout Ireland. Liber was a compilation of laws from the Scriptures dealing with civil matters. It emphasized the rule of law and local self government.13

 

Alfred’s Code of Laws

Alfred the Great was the first king to unite all of England. He ruled from 871 to 899. Alfred instituted Christian reforms in many areas including establishing a government that served the people. Alfred was taught how to read by a Celtic Christian scholar known as Asser. He studied Patrick’s Liber and established the Ten Commandments as the basis of law and adopted many other patterns of government from the Hebrew Republic. The people in the nation organized themselves into units of tens, fifties, hundreds and thousands and had an elected assembly known as the “Witen.” These representatives were called a tithingman (over ten families), a vilman (over 50), a hundredman, and an earl. The earl’s territory which he oversaw was called a “shire,” and his assistant called the “shire-reef,” where we get our word “Sheriff” today. The Witen also had an unelected House made up of the noblemen, but the king was elected; he was not a hereditary king. Their laws were established by their consent. Alfred’s uniform code of Laws (890) recognized “common law” and had provisions for individual rights, such as trial by jury and habeas corpus. Alfred’s code was derived from Mosaic law and Jesus’ golden rule. Noah Webster said “Alfred’s code is formed from the laws of Moses, and from those of his own predecessors. It begins with the Ten Commandments.”14

 

Magna Carta (1215)

Anglo-Saxon law reached its height under King Alfred. It was in decline when William the Conqueror and the Normans invaded England in 1066. The Norman system of government removed the rights of the people. The kings abused the people, barons as well as commoners. Things worsened to the point under King John that the English barons drew up a contract that addressed the abuses and guaranteed the barons certain rights and privileges as contained in biblical law. King John, needing the help of the barons to raise money, reluctantly signed the Magna Carta in 1215. A Catholic clergyman, Stephen Langton, is likely the chief architect of the document. The Pope said it was illegal but the English Catholic Church, due to its Celtic origins, ignored the Pope and preserved the document and expounded it. A foundation of American constitutionalism is having an established and known set of laws. “Magna Carta announced the rule of law.”15 It asserted the principle that rulers were subject to the law as well as the common people. Throughout history most people have lived under “rulers’ law” where the rulers, in many ways, were the law. There is no security for the liberty and rights of man in such a system. Magna Carta was a great step forward in changing this. It proclaimed the power of the king was limited.

Initially, Magna Carta had little practical effect, especially for the commoners for it applied only to “freemen”, but over time the principles asserted in that document began to take root and grow and were extended to all subjects. A process had begun that would eventually remove the power from the crown and place it in the hands of the people at large. Many Englishmen, including American colonists, appealed to the Magna Carta as a written source of their rights and liberties. “The American colonists . . .viewed Magna Carta as a written constitution limiting the power of government and securing to the individual the rights of trial by jury, the protection of the writ of habeas corpus, and the guarantee that no person could be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of law.”16

Some provisions in the Magna Carta that contributed to the advancement of individual rights and civil liberty include:

• Rule of law — the entire document reflects the idea that the rulers are subject to the fundamental law. Article 61 says that anything done contrary to the charter should be considered invalid, and a provision was even given for a committee to use armed force against the king if he attempted to violate the charter (this was never used and this provision was omitted from later reissues of the charter).

•  Due process of law — “No free man shall be taken or imprisoned or dispossessed, or outlawed, or banished, or in any way destroyed . . . except by the legal judgment of his peers or by the law of the land.” Article 39. (This idea is seen in Amendment 5 of the U.S. Constitution.)

•  Trial by jury of peers —(see article 39)

•  No taxation without representation — “No scutage or aid shall be imposed in our kingdom except by the common council of our kingdom. . .” Article 12. (John Adams and other Americans cited Magna Carta to support this principle.)

•  Religious liberty — “. . . [T]he English church shall be free, and shall hold its rights entire and its liberties uninjured.” Article 1. (This applied to the church rather than the individual.) In the years that followed there were numerous reissues and confirmations of Magna Carta that helped to establish it as the fundamental law of the land. In addition, there were other documents issued over the centuries that built upon Magna Carta. This document came to be seen as a “higher law” similar to a constitution, which had greater force than ordinary laws.

Confirmatio Cartarum (1297)

Confirmatio Cartarum is one of the documents that confirmed the Magna Carta as a “higher law” by declaring any judgements contrary to Magna Carta were void. Confirmatio Cartarum recognized law as a sacred thing, in that the charters were sent to the churches to be kept and to be read twice a year to the people.17 This followed the biblical example where the Law of Moses was to be read to all the people every year. (Similarly, in 1776, the government of Massachusetts ordered that a copy of the Declaration of Independence be sent “to the Ministers of each parish, of every denomination, within this state” and “that they severally be required to read the same to their respective congregations, as soon as divine Service is ended.”)18 Those who violated the charters were to be excommunicated.19

In addition to helping to establish the Magna Carta as the fundamental law of the land, Confirmatio Cartarum “established Parliament [which had been put into place in 1295] as a truly representative organ of government by providing in section 6 that the taxes must be raised by the common assent of the realm.”20

 

English Petition of Rights (1628)

The Petition of Right was “the first of those great constitutional documents since Magna Carta, which safeguard the liberties of the people by securing the supremacy of the law.”21 Abuses of power by King James I (1603-25) and King Charles I (1625-49) helped motivate Sir Edward Coke to lead the battle for individual liberties in the House of  Commons. Charles agreed to the Petition of Rights in 1628, which strengthened many concepts of personal liberty, though it did little to stop Charles from governing in an arbitrary fashion. Ideas in this document include: Principles of due process and trial by jury upheld; Habeas corpus strengthened; Stopped quartering troops in private homes; No imprisonment without show of cause; Restriction of the King’s power to levy taxes without the consent of Parliament.

The Abolition of the Star Chamber in 1641 by the English Parliament was an important step in protecting the rights of individuals by advancing the ideas of due process of law, writ of habeas corpus, and privilege against self-incrimination (which is embodied in the fifth amendment of the U.S. Constitution). This act helped establish in England “a system of justice administered by the courts instead of by the administrative agencies of the executive branch of the  government.”22

 

English Bill of Rights (1689)

The English Bill of Rights reasserted and reenforced ideas that had been expressed before. It contained previously existing rights of the Parliament and people that had been violated by Charles II and James II, and which the newly proclaimed King William was required to observe. Lord Macaulay summarized the general significance of the document as follows:

The Declaration of Right, though it made nothing law which had not been law before, contained the germ of the law which gave religious freedom to the Dissenter, of the law which secured the independence of the Judges, of the law which limited the duration of Parliaments, of the law which placed the liberty of the press under the protection of juries, of the law which prohibited the slave trade, of the law which abolished the sacramental test, of the law which relieved the Roman Catholics from civil disabilities, of the law which reformed the representative system, of every law which has been passed during more than a century and a half, of every good law which may hereafter, in the course of ages, be found necessary to promote the public weal, and to satisfy the demands of public opinion.23

The American Colonies were already applying these ideas better than England (see next section), but the Bill of Rights reenforced these principles and gave the colonists another document to appeal to when they resisted England during the revolution. In addition to those mentioned above, other ideas in the English Bill of Rights that came to be expressed in the early U.S. and state constitutions include: the right to bear arms, control of the army by the legislative branch, the prohibition of cruel and unusual punishments, the prohibition of excessive bail, freedom of elections, the right to petition the government, and the prohibition of suspension of laws without the consent of the representatives of the people.

 

Development of Constitutionalism in America

English law was brought to America by the early settlers; but Americans added to and modified

English law such that they took a great forward step in the development of civil liberty. There were at

least 86 constitution-like documents written in colonial America from the time of colonization until 1722,

and there were 42 others written in England during America’s first century.24 These documents were

laying foundational ideas upon which American constitutionalism was being built. They contain general

principles, such as covenant, self-government, virtue, and the biblical purpose of government, and also

show the direct biblical foundation of American law, for example, acknowledging God, quoting Scripture

in capital laws, and presenting biblical penalties for violation of the law (such as restitution and repeat offenders put to death).

The spreading of Christianity was a primary motive for many of the early explorers and settlers of

America—from Leif Erikson, who was sent by King Olaf around the year 1000 to proclaim Christianity

to Greenland and Vinland,25 and Columbus, who believed the Lord inspired him to set sail,26 to the

Pilgrims, Quakers, and Scotch-Irish Presbyterians. Twelve of the original 13 charters, upon which the original 13 colonies were established, specifically mention the propagation of the Gospel as a primary

reason for their establishment. These charters also contain numerous rights and liberties. We will examine some of these charters and other important American documents that are sources of our liberties.

 

First Charter of Virginia (1606)

 

The First Charter of Virginia assured that the rights of Englishmen traveled with the colonists to North America. This view was unique to the English colonies of America, for other countries viewed

their colonists as outside the legal system of the home country. The Virginia Charter of 1606 was the first of many colonial documents that stated the American settlers had the rights of English citizens.27 Patrick

Henry mentioned this charter when he spoke of colonists’ right to have representatives levy taxes in his famous 1765 speech in the Virginia House of Burgesses.

The third paragraph of the charter speaks of their desire to propagate the “Christian Religion to such

People, as yet live in Darkness and miserable Ignorance of the true Knowledge and Worship of God, and in time bring the Infidels and Savages, living in those parts, to human Civility, and to a settled and quiet

Government.”28

The first Virginia settlers brought English law with them, but it was not established all at once, nor in

total. Joseph Story wrote:

The common law of England is not to be taken, in all respects, to be that of America. Our ancestors

brought with them its general principles, and claimed it as their birthright; but they brought with them and

adopted only that portion which was applicable to their situations.29

The first written laws in America came out of a provision in the Second Virginia Charter for “Laws

Divine, Morall, and Martiall, etc.” They were written between 1609 and 1612 by Sir Thomas Gates, Sir

Thomas West (Lord Delaware), and Sir Thomas Dale. These laws “represented the first written

manifestations of the common law in America.”30 The authors of these laws sought to honor God, with

requirements for all to worship, for no ungodly speech, for no blasphemy of God’s name, for no words or

acts against God’s holy word, to name only a few. Strict discipline was required for the survival of the colony, and consequently, freedoms were restricted. Many of these laws seem harsh today, but were in keeping with the laws then in effect in England.

 

 

 

 

 

Ordinances for Virginia (1618)

 

The Jamestown Colony was governed, in essence, by martial law for its early years. In 1618 the

London Company appointed Sir George Yeardley as governor. Under the new charter or Ordinances for Virginia, he abolished various cruel laws and put into effect new laws, which among other things, called for a legislative assembly. Elections were held in the summer of 1619 and on July 30 the first legislative

assembly in the American continent met in the church in Jamestown. The proceedings were opened in prayer by Rev. Richard Buck.31 The rights of suffrage in Virginia were broader than in England, with even indentured servants possibly being able to vote for the legislators, called burgesses.

The Virginia Charter was revoked in 1624 but the colonists held onto the right and desire to govern

themselves. In the following years several assemblies convened to deal with various special matters, even though they had no authorization. In 1639 and 1641 the King gave royal consent to Governors Wyatt and

Berkeley for a regular assembly of the people. Thus the right of the colonists to elect representatives for governing affairs in their colony became well established. Virginia served as a precedent for many other colonies, though some of them were taking their own steps to assure self-government.

 

Mayflower Compact (1620)

 

The Mayflower Compact is one of the most significant of the founding political documents in

America. It was written by a small group of English separatists seeking religious and civil freedom, who

were undertaking the planting of a colony “for the Glory of God, and Advancement of the Christian

Faith.”32 The Compact contains principles of self-government and covenant, which are foundational to

American constitutionalism. Andrew McLaughlin writes that “[b]ehind the compact lie the Puritan beliefs

in the word of God as a higher law, the establishment of the higher law in written documents, and the

formation of government by the consent of individuals.”33

The covenantal nature of American constitutionalism can be traced to these settlers, who on

November 11, 1620, still on board the Mayflower, “Do . . . solemnly and mutually, in the Presence of

God and one another, covenant and combine ourselves together in to a civil Body Politick.”34

This political document had its origin in the church covenant the Pilgrims had drawn up years

earlier—their political philosophy was derived from their Puritan theology.

This theology found in the Scriptures the right of men to associate and covenant to form a church and

civil government and to choose their own officers to administer both religious and civil affairs. Each member

of the congregation had a vote in the election of officers, and each congregation was considered as

independent and autonomous of every other and not subject to the authority of any centralized church

hierarchy.35

In 1623 the Pilgrims instituted trial by jury and private property rights. In 1636 they compiled “the

first comprehensive body of law in North America,”36 which served as a model for future American

codes of laws. These laws were based upon Scripture and English precedent. The Laws of the Pilgrims were later revised in 1658, 1671, and 1685, but they all were based upon the idea that the only true law

was the law of God as revealed in the Bible. The preface to the 1671 Book of Laws states that “Laws . . .

are so far good and wholesome, as by how much they are derived from, and agreeable to the ancient Platform of Gods Law.”37 The specific statutes reflected their biblical philosophy of life. They even quoted Scriptures to support many of their Capital Laws.

A great Puritan exodus from England began about 10 years after the Pilgrims first settled in America.

The Puritans came not just for religious freedom but to set up a Bible commonwealth.38 This was

certainly reflected in their laws and constitutions. The magistrates relied on the Old Testament law, but to

make civil laws more plain, Rev. Ward drafted the Massachusetts Body of Liberties in 1641. This

combined biblical law and English common law (which was itself rooted in biblical truth).39 The early

 

 

 

 

 

 

Puritan civil documents firmly established the basic premise of American civil society, that of the rule of

established law, rather than the rule of capricious men.

 

Charter of Massachusetts Bay (1629)

 

The men who formed a company to settle in Massachusetts Bay had a goal “to found a state based

upon the principles of the Bible and governed by the laws of God.”40 Before emigrating, they obtained an agreement that amounted to the transfer of governmental power from England to the colony. Charters for some of the later colonies followed this example and permitted the colonial governments to reside in the colonies.

The Charter of Massachusetts Bay provided the colonists power to elect officers to govern themselves

(representative government) and power to make their own laws that were not inconsistent with the laws of

England (a degree of self-government). Under the provisions of the Charter, the General Court of Massachusetts would later (in 1646) assert that their colonial government was not subordinate to

Parliament. Thus, the charter “provided at an early date the basis for the idea, often voiced by the colonial

patriots at the time of the American Revolution, that the statutes of England were limited in their

application to England and did not reach beyond the seas.”41

The charter reveals the Christian mission as the central motive of those behind colonization. In the

charter, provisions were made for establishing laws, electing representatives, punishing offences, etc.

“whereby our said People, Inhabitants there, may be soe religiously, peaceablie, and civilly governed, as their good Life and orderlie Conversacon, maie wynn and incite the Natives of Country, to the Knowledg

and Obedience of the onlie true God and Sauior of Mankinde, and the Christian Fayth, which in our

Royall Intencon, and the Adventurers free Profession, is the principall Ende of this Plantacion.”42

 

The Charter of Maryland (1632)

 

The Charter of Maryland (1632) revealed the motive of Catholic proprietor Cecil Calvert, Lord

Baltimore, in establishing the colony of Maryland — “being animated with a laudable, and pious Zeal for

extending the Christian religion.”43 Lord Baltimore established a policy of religious toleration in 1634,

which furnished a strong motive for many of the early settlers (both Protestant and Catholic), without

which the colony would probably not have been planted. The right of religious freedom was established

by law in the Act Concerning Religion (or the Toleration Act) of 1649. During its first century, Maryland was the scene of continued struggle over application of English laws in the colony. By 1732 it was firmly established that the English statutes of liberty did apply to the colonists in Maryland.

 

Fundamental Orders of Connecticut (1639)

 

In 1636 Rev. Thomas Hooker led about 100 members from his church in New Town, Massachusetts

to settle along the Connecticut River. Not long after this, two other congregations from Massachusetts

went to settle in Connecticut. Thus, covenant church communities adhering to the principle of

self-government under God comprised the foundation of the Connecticut Colony. Religious and political differences with the Massachusetts leaders motivated them to emigrate. They were especially concerned with the almost unlimited power of the magistrates. Hooker wrote Winthrop that “the judges must have

some rule to judge by or government would degenerate into tyranny and confusion.”44 Their experiences helped shape the writing in 1639 of the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut, the first written constitution in history that led to the formation of a new commonwealth.

The content of the Fundamental Orders was greatly influenced by a sermon Hooker preached before

the General Court on May 31, 1638, in which he maintained that “the foundation of authority is laid in the

free consent of the people,” “that the choice of public magistrates belongs unto the people by God’s own allowance,” and that “they who have power to appoint officers and magistrates have the right also to set

 

 

 

 

 

the bounds and limitations of the power and place unto which they call them.”45 This constitution, which

contained many biblical rights and ideas expressed politically, would have a great influence on American constitutionalism. Historian John Fiske wrote that “the government of the United States today is in lineal

descent more nearly related to that of Connecticut than to that of any of the other thirteen colonies.”46

Adopted January 14, 1639, the Fundamental Orders began with the inhabitants covenanting together

under God “to maintain and preserve the liberty and purity of the gospel of our Lord Jesus which we now profess.”47 It gave the governor and magistrates “power to administer justice according to the Laws here established, and for want thereof according to the rule of the word of God.”48 The required oath of office ended with the elected official saying: “I . . . will further the execution of Justice according to the rule of

Gods word; so helpe me God, in the name of the Lo: Jesus Christ.”49 Some of the principles in the

document include the rule of law, poplar elections, representative government, freedom of speech, local self-government, and taxes levied only by representatives.

Noah Webster used Connecticut’s Constitution as a model for a new federal constitution in his

Sketches of American Policy. He said it was “the most perfect on earth” and provided a great example of

the balance of power between local and state governments.50

Connecticut’s code of laws (1642 and following, see Blue Laws below) were a model for many other

colonies. In 1662 Connecticut was granted a charter by Charles II which allowed much freedom in local matters, even up until the time of the revolution.

 

Massachusetts Body of Liberties (1641)

 

The Massachusetts Body of Liberties was probably the first real bill of rights and expresses the

colonists’ claims to individual liberties. It was a precursor of the U.S. Bill of Rights and was a great step

forward in civil liberty. The mixture of Puritan theology with English law shows the distinct trends of

American constitutionalism. Here are contained the important American ideas that the fundamental law of

the land should be written down and consented to by the citizens, that such a constitution expresses the

limits on civil government, and that individual liberties should be written as a bill of rights. The election of representatives was also affirmed.

Some of the rights and liberties contained in this document include: trial by jury, freedom of speech

and assembly, religious freedom, no double jeopardy, and no self-incrimination. In addition, monopolies

were forbidden, except for a short time in the case of inventions; cruel and inhuman punishment was forbidden; and cattle and goods were not to be taken without reasonable compensation.

The biblical worldview of the colonists was evident in this document. The Scriptures were the source

of the penal laws, civil liberties, and other ideas in the Body of Liberties. Section 1 states that no man’s

life or property can be taken except by some express law that has been sufficiently published, “or in case

of the defect of a law in any parteculer case by the word of god.”51 In section 94 where the capital laws

are listed, specific scripture verses are given to support such laws. Section 95 is “A Declaration of the Liberties the Lord Jesus hath given to the Churches.” Many other ideas in the document come directly from the Scriptures, such as section 47: “No man shall be put to death without the testimony of two or

three witnesses or that which is equivalent thereunto.”52

Other colonies would later follow the example of what Massachusetts did in the Body of Liberties.

These would eventually have a great effect on the Bill of Rights of the U.S. Constitution.

 

Charter of Rhode Island (1663)

 

Religious liberty was part of the fundamental law of the colony of Rhode Island—the first such

constitutional provision. (This was more than a legislative enactment, like in the Maryland Toleration

 

 

 

 

 

 

Act). Religious liberty up until this time was more religious toleration. Establishment of true religious

liberty was distinctly an American idea, and first became part of the fundamental law in Rhode Island.

Roger Williams founded Rhode Island in 1636 when he was forced to flee Massachusetts due to

conflicts with the Puritans. His extreme views concerning religious practices brought disfavor with the

Puritan authorities in Massachusetts Bay and with the Pilgrims in the Plymouth Colony. After

establishing Providence with some other individuals who for various reasons were out of favor with the

Massachusetts authorities, they drew up a written covenant in 1636 that, among other things, said the

authority of civil government should not extend to religious matters. The idea was that legislative powers should extend only to actions and not opinions.

Over the years other like-minded settlers came to Rhode Island. In 1644 Williams obtained a patent

for Rhode Island from the Long Parliament. In 1663, after the restoration of the English monarchy, the

leaders in Rhode Island obtained a charter from King Charles II. Since this charter recognized the rights

and form of self-government already in place, it remained in force through American independence, up until 1842 when a formal constitution replaced it.

In addition to the guarantee of religious liberty, the Charter of Rhode Island contained provisions for

the colony to make their own laws, provided that they were conformable to the laws of England, and to

set up their own forms of government. The American ideas of self-government and religious liberty were further extended. Other colonies, such as Carolina and New Jersey, would copy the provision of religious liberty found in Rhode Island.

The charter mentioned their intentions of “godlie edifieing themselves, and one another, in the holie

Christian ffaith and worshipp” and their desire for the “conversione of the poore ignorant Indian

natives.”53 Their plan for conversion was to be through their examplary lifestyle, both personally and

civilly—that the inhabitants “may be soe religiously, peaceably and civilly governed, as that, by theire good life and orderlie conversatione, they may win and invite the native Indians of the countrie to the

knowledge and obedience of the onlie true God, and Saviour of mankinde.”54

 

“Blue Laws” of New Haven Colony (1656)

 

In 1655 Governor Eaton, as an “able, judicious and godly man,”55 was appointed to form a code of

laws for the New Haven colony based upon the laws of the colony that had been developed over the

years, aided by the laws of the colony of Massachusetts and other writings. The past laws had been passed

on verbally and through hand-made copies. Five hundred copies of the new compilation were printed in

England in 1656. These came to be known as “blue laws” because these first printed laws were enveloped in blue colored paper. The name “Blue Laws” was later applied to laws in many other colonies, and, after independence, various states, even in use up until recent times.

Governor Eaton made “the sacred volume his guide, and has cited scripture in all cases upon which

his laws were founded.”56 Upon reading these laws, it is obvious that the Bible was the central source for

what constituted lawful and unlawful behavior. Scripture is quoted for capital offences, and in cases of

theft the biblical idea of restitution was applied. The incorrigible criminal was also addressed.57

The Blue Laws acknowledged “that the supreme power of making laws, and of repealing them,

belong to God only, and that by him, this power is given to Jesus Christ, as Mediator, Math. 28:19. Joh.

5:22. And that the Laws for holinesse, and Righteousness, are already made, and given us in the

scriptures.”58 This code of law formed the foundation of the civil government of the state and influenced laws throughout the United States.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Frame of Government of Pennsylvania (1682)

 

Pennsylvania was established in 1681 when Quaker William Penn was given a tract of land between

New York and Maryland by the King of England in payment for a debt the Crown owed to William’s

father, Admiral William Penn. Having experienced much persecution for his Christian beliefs, Penn asked

for the land desiring to plant a colony “which should open its doors to every kindred” and be a refuge for men of all creeds. He wanted it to be a model state — “a holy experiment” — in which his ideals could be

realized; an example of toleration and liberty on a grand scale. After Penn received the charter for

Pennsylvania he wrote that “my God that has given it me through many , will, I believe bless and make it

the seed of a nation.”59

Penn worked more than a year on formulating a constitution or Frame of Government for

Pennsylvania, which was adopted in England on April 25, 1682. The Christian nature of this document is

readily evident. The Preamble begins:

When the great and wise God had made the world, of all his creatures, it pleased him to chuse man his

Deputy to rule it: and to fit him for so great a charge and trust, he did not only qualify him with skill and

power, but with integrity to use them justly.60

Penn then summarizes the purpose of law by quoting the Apostle Paul from Romans 13 and other of

his epistles. He then writes of the divine nature of civil government:

This settles the divine right of government beyond exception, and that for two ends: first, to terrify evil

doers: secondly, to cherish those that do well. . . . So that government seems to me a part of religion itself, a

thing sacred in its institution and end. For, . . . it crushes the effects of evil, and is as such,. . . an emanation of

the same Divine Power, that is both author and object of pure religion.61

The Frame of Government recognized the Lord’s Day (the Sabbath), biblical standards for marriage

— “all marriages (not forbidden by the law of God, as to nearness of blood and affinity by marriage) shall be encouraged,”— and biblical qualifications for civil officials — “all . . . shall be such as possess faith in Jesus Christ.”62 All offenses against God were to be discouraged and punished, and many were listed.

Religious freedom was granted to all persons “who confess and acknowledge the one Almighty and

eternal God, to be the Creator, Upholder and Ruler of the world.”63

Besides direct recognition of Christianity, there were many civil rights and governmental ideas that

were derived from the Bible. These included the rule of law, representative government, freedom of the

individual, no arbitrary taxation, free and fair elections, trial by jury of peers, need for true witnesses,

punishment of perjury, and restitution to the wronged party. Private property rights were also protected

and ownership of land by all people was made easy. Ownership of land was a requirement to vote or hold

office, but it was easy for anyone to acquire land, including indentured servants. Freeman were to own 100 acres of land and have 10 acres cultivated, but they could purchase the land at one penny an acre.

Those who came as indentured servants, and had paid off their debt, were to own 50 acres, with 20

cultivated, to be able to vote and hold office. Inhabitants could even become freemen by paying “scot and

lot” (a contribution paid by the subject according to his ability) to the government.64 Some people today have depicted the founders as non-egalitarians by restricting freemen to property owners, but they fail to point out how easy it was to acquire property in many of the colonies, such as in Pennsylvania.

Many of these ideas existed in various degrees in other colonies but were greatly strengthened by

William Penn. His preface states the importance of these for liberty and communicates his spirit in ideas

of constitutionalism, which would be seen later in the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights.65

 

Pennsylvania Charter of Privileges (1701)

 

Penn’s original Frame of Government was replaced in 1701 by the Charter of Privileges. This document has been described as “the most famous of all colonial constitutions,”66 and is a further

 

 

 

 

assertion of constitutionalism where the liberties contained therein cannot be usurped by capricious

legislation of a majority. This document required six-sevenths of the Assembly to change it. It contains

many important rights and ideas such as: liberty of conscience (which Penn considered so important that

he declared in section eight that it should remain inviolable forever), religious liberty, representative

government, and due process. Section one contains qualifications of officers where “all Persons who also profess to believe in Jesus Christ, the Saviour of the World, shall be capable (notwithstanding their other

Persuasions and Practices in Point of Conscience and Religion) to serve this Government in any Capacity,

both legislatively and executively.”67

 

Resolutions of the Stamp Act Congress (1765)

 

Nine of the colonies were represented at this Congress which met to deal with the Stamp Act and the unjust attempt by Britain to impose taxes on the colonists without their consent. The Americans began to

assert their rights as Englishmen and stand upon the various liberties that had become a part of English and American law. These were men of principle acting upon constitutional rights and duties.

In resisting the Stamp Act, the colonists not only argued that it violated their rights as Englishmen,

but it violated the higher laws of nature and of nature’s God. Samuel Adams said of the Stamp Act that it “is utterly void, and of no binding force upon us; for it is against our Rights as Men and our Privileges as

Englishmen. An act made in defiance of the first principles of Justice. . . . There are certain Principles

fixed unalterably in Nature.”68

 

Declaration and Resolves of the First Continental Congress (1774)

 

In September 1774 delegates from all of the colonies, except Georgia, met in Philadelphia to address the oppressive actions of England. For nearly a decade prior to this, the colonists had resisted various acts of Parliament which asserted the belief that England had the right to full powers of sovereignty in colonial

matters. The colonists’ resistance was met by acts of retaliation. These conflicts helped to solidify colonial ideas of individual liberty. Many of these ideas are well expressed in the Declaration and Resolves of the First Continental Congress.

Before taking up the important issues before them, the First Continental Congress passed a resolve

asking the Rev. Mr. Duché to open the Congress in prayer, revealing their Christian character. The

Journal of the Proceedings of Congress record the vote of thanks of Congress given to Mr. Duché “for performing divine service, and for the excellent prayer.” John Adams wrote to his wife Abigail of the

great effect Rev. Duché’s prayer had upon the Congress.69

The Declaration and Resolves of the First Continental Congress was an important forerunner of the

Declaration of Independence and the declarations of rights found in various state constitutions. It based the rights of the colonists on “the immutable laws of nature, the principles of the English constitutions,

and the several charters or compacts.”70 The law of nature was thus adopted as one of the foundations of

the rights of the colonists, and would be appealed to again in the other documents. James Otis, in his famous pamphlet “The Rights of the British Colonies Asserted and Proved,” had some years earlier

shown the colonists’ understanding of the laws of nature:

To say the Parliament is absolute and arbitrary is a contradiction. The Parliament cannot make 2 and 2, 5:

Omnipotency cannot do it. The supreme power in a state . . . strictly speaking, belongs alone to God.

Parliaments are in all cases to declare what is for the good of the whole; but it is not the declaration of

Parliament that makes it so: There must be in every instance a higher authority, viz. God. Should an Act of

Parliament be against any of His natural laws, which are immutably true, their declaration would be contrary

to eternal truth, equity, and justice, and consequently void.71

This was certainly not a new idea. As we have seen, the colonists often appealed to God’s higher law

as the source of the rights and liberties. Locke, Blackstone, and others also wrote of the laws of nature

 

 

 

 

 

being the will of God as revealed in His creation and in the conscience of man, and the laws of nature’s

God as being the will of God revealed in the Scriptures.

Rights exerted in this document include: no taxation without representation, no standing armies or the

quartering of troops without the consent of the colonial legislatures, no suspension of colonial legislatures or representative bodies, trial by jury, and right of petition.

 

Declaration of the Causes and Necessity of Taking up Arms (July 6, 1775)

 

Though fighting had already begun (on April 19, 1775 at Lexington), the Second Continental

Congress expressed hope for reconciliation with Great Britain in the Declaration of the Causes and

Necessity of Taking up Arms, but at the same time approved and justified the use of force against the

British. This document lists various reasons why force was now necessary to defend themselves. It states numerous violations of their rights by British policy including being deprived of trial by jury, suspension

of various legislatures, imposition of taxes without representation, and quartering soldiers in the colonists’

homes in times of peace. It lists one statute of parliament as a summary of all the abuses — that

parliament can “of right make laws to bind us in all cases whatsoever.”72

This document was to be proclaimed by General George Washington when he assumed command of

the Continental Army in Boston. They wanted the world to see that, “Our cause is just.” They gratefully

acknowledged God’s Providence and his “Divine favour,” and declared they would exert the utmost

energy of “those powers, which our beneficent Creator hath graciously bestowed upon us. . . ; being with

one mind resolved to die freemen rather than to live slaves.” They ended the Declaration:

With an humble confidence in the mercies of the supreme and impartial Judge and Ruler of the Universe, we

most devoutly implore his divine goodness to protect us happily through this great conflict, to dispose our adversaries to reconciliation on reasonable terms, and thereby to relieve the empire from the calamities of

civil war.73

 

Declaration of Independence (July 4, 1776)

 

Though fighting had begun in April 1775, most Americans were hesitant to declare independence. It was only after a series of events over many months that public opinion solidified in favor of such action.

These events included: England sending troops to fight against the colonists; King George issuing a proclamation on August 23, 1775, declaring that the colonists were all traitors in rebellion; and the

Parliament suspending trade with all of the colonies on December 22, 1775. After these events, no other action except independence seemed possible for the Americans to secure their liberties.

In accordance with the instructions from the Virginia Convention of May 1776, Richard Henry Lee

introduced in Congress on June 7 three resolutions which included a proposal for a declaration of

independence. A committee of five was appointed on June 11 to prepare such a document, and included

Thomas Jefferson who wrote the initial draft. After a few changes by the committee and Congress at

large, the Declaration was approved. The first paragraph states its purpose and appeals to “the laws of nature and of nature’s God” as the source of the authority for their action. As stated earlier, this phrase meant the will of God as revealed in nature and in the Holy Scriptures.

The second paragraph sets forth their political philosophy. This did not contain anything new, but

merely built upon the ideas that had developed over the centuries, especially since the beginning of the American colonies. They acknowledged the Creator as the source of unalienable rights — not men nor government. They then present a biblical view of the purpose of civil government and the appropriate

manner to go about correcting governments that are not fulfilling their biblical responsibilities. The listing of numerous grievances shows the principled response of the Americans in establishing the justice of their

cause before a “candid world.” They concluded by “appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world” and

“with a firm reliance on the protection of DIVINE PROVIDENCE.” The addition of these two phrases by

 

 

 

 

 

the entire Congress to Jefferson’s original draft make them even more significant, as it appears the

Congress wanted to make plain to the world their Christian convictions.

 

State Constitutions

 

Even before independence, Virginia had approved a Bill of Rights (on June 12) and a constitution (on June 29). Both of these were a model for many other state constitutions and bills of rights that began to be

passed after approval of the Declaration of Independence. The Virginia Bill of Rights, largely written by

George Mason, was “one of the most important forerunners of the first ten amendments to the

Constitution of the United States.”74 These various bills of rights reflected the Founder’s view that individual liberties should be embodied in the fundamental law of the land.

The Virginia Bill of Rights (as those of other states) contained fundamental principles that were

rooted in biblical truth and Christian civilization and had developed over centuries. It stated

that no free government, or the blessings of liberty, can be preserved to any people, but by a firm adherence

to justice, moderation, temperance, frugality, and virtue, and by a frequent recurrence to fundamental

principles.75

One of these fundamental principles was freedom of religion — “that religion, or the duty which we

owe to our Creator, and the manner of discharging it, can be directed only by reason and conviction, not by force or violence.” The Bill of Rights concludes by stating “that it is the mutual duty of all to practise

Christian forbearance, love, and charity towards each other.”76

Within a few years of independence all the states except Connecticut and Rhode Island had adopted

constitutions. Connecticut and Rhode Island were already operating under charters that allowed much

self-government and so only slight modifications were necessary to reflect their independent status. All of

the new constitutions of the states recognized certain fundamental rights of citizens. The Pennsylvania Declaration of Rights was similar to Virginia’s and acknowledged many inalienable rights including:

frequent and free elections, trial by jury, right to confront accusers and present evidence of defense, privilege not to be compelled to testify against oneself, freedom of the press, liberty of conscience,

freedom of speech and worship. The Constitution of Pennsylvania (August 16, 1776) recognized the

biblical purpose of government to protect “the community . . . and to enable the individuals who compose

it to enjoy their natural rights, and the other blessings which the Author of existence has bestowed upon man.” It acknowledges “the goodness of the great Governor of the universe (who alone knows to what

degree of earthly happiness mankind may attain, by perfecting the arts of government).”77

Delaware’s Constitution and Declaration of Rights (1776) was similar in protecting individual

liberties, but like many other states restricted the guarantee of civil liberties to Christians. Section 3 of the

Declaration of Rights states “that all persons professing the Christian religion ought forever to enjoy

equal rights and privileges in this state.”78 Since nearly every American at this time identified themselves with the Christian religion this was not as restrictive as some may suppose today. Eight of the original 13

states favored one denomination above others and four had required general affirmations of faith in

Protestant Christianity. The establishment of particular denominations would end by the 1830s, but the requirement of officials to adhere to Christian convictions would remain for some time. It could well be

argued that even today the U.S. Constitution (as well as various state constitutions) only allows Christians in public office, for, among other reasons, elected officials must take an oath of office. Upon examination,

this oath was clearly a Christian oath.79

All of the State Constitutions acknowledged God and protected numerous God-given rights. The

Constitution of Maryland (1776) states: “it is the duty of every man to worship God in such manner as he

thinks most acceptable to him; all persons, professing the Christian religion, are equally entitled to

protection in their religious liberty.” The oath of office included “a declaration of a belief in the Christian

religion.”80

 

 

 

 

 

The Constitution of Massachusetts (1780) acknowledged “the goodness of the great Legislator of the

universe . . . His providence. . . . and devoutly imploring His direction.” It declared: “It is the right as well

as the duty of all men in society, publicly, and at stated seasons, to worship the SUPREME BEING, the great Creator and Preserver of the universe.” It also recognized that “the happiness of a people, and the

good order and preservation of civil government, essentially depend upon piety, religion, and morality.”81

The unalienable right to worship God according to the dictates of conscience is contained in the

Constitution of New Hampshire (1784). It also recognizes “morality and piety, rightly grounded on

evangelical principles” as the “best and greatest security to government.”82

 

Northwest Ordinance (1787)

 

Initially passed by Congress on July 13, 1787 (and re-ratified under the U.S. Constitution of 1789),

the Northwest Ordinance provided government for the territory northwest of the Ohio River and set

requirements for the admission of new states into the union. It established the policy that the settlers of

the territories should enjoy the same liberties as citizens of the states, thus extending individual rights to new states. This was similar to the way that the Virginia Charter of 1606 extended English rights to the settlers. During the 180 years separating the two documents, many new unalienable rights and liberties

had become firmly established in American society. In keeping with what had become a familiar feature

of American law, the Northwest Ordinance contained a written bill of rights, the first such list by the

federal government. This assured extension of the individual rights guaranteed in the states, and listed in the various bills of rights of the states, to new territories and states.

The Ordinance required officials to take an oath of fidelity and of office, and promoted “extending the

fundamental principles of civil and religious liberty, which form the basis whereon these republics, their

laws and constitutions, are erected.” Article I provides for religious liberty, and Article II lists various

individual rights including habeas corpus, trial by jury, proportionate representation, no cruel or unusual

punishment, judgment of peers, and private property rights. Article III acknowledges the religious

foundation of schools and government when it states: “Religion, morality, and knowledge being

necessary to good government and the happiness of mankind, schools and the means of education shall

forever be encouraged.” Article VI prohibited slavery in the new territory and in any states that would be

formed.83

 

United States Constitution (1789)

 

After independence, the states entered into a “league of friendship” with each other under the Articles of Confederation (agreed to by Congress in 1777 and approved by all the states in 1781). The weaknesses

under the Articles were such that no permanent union of the states was likely. A lack of power for the

central government, no executive, and no taxing powers limited the Congress from adequately handling problems faced during the war and in the early years after the Treaty of Peace (1783) with Britain. Most

people recognized the weaknesses of the confederation, but many thought revising the Articles was sufficient. Others such as James Madison and Noah Webster knew more needed to be done.

 

Webster’s contribution to American constitutionalism

In the decade following America’s independence, Noah Webster sought to produce a strong union

among the newly independent American states. He saw that education was a key means of accomplishing this and wrote three textbooks — Speller (1783), Grammar (1784), and Reader (1785) — that provided a

content that was uniquely American, and also principles that were necessary to support the nation. His textbooks and educational reforms were intended to strengthen the unity among the American people,

which would strengthen their external union. Webster saw his work to bring a standardization to the

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

American English language as a means to unify the American people because he felt the union would be

strong as the people spoke the same language.

In his Sketches of American Policy (1785) he was one of the first (if not the first) to put in print a plan

for a new national government. Webster believed his proposals contained “the first distinct proposal,

made through the medium of the press, for a new constitution of the United States.”84 Webster promoted

his ideas as he traveled throughout the colonies. He visited George Washington and left a copy of his

booklet with him, who in turn showed it to James Madison. These men carried Webster’s ideas for a new form of national government with them when they participated in forming the United States Constitution during the summer of 1787.

Webster had seen the weakness of the national government under the Articles of Confederation when

he attempted to secure copyright legislation to protect his textbooks. Though agreeing with Webster’s

policy, the Congress was unable to enact copyright legislation under the provisions of the Articles and so Webster had to travel to all the states to promote copyright legislation laws.

Copyright legislation was just one of many of Webster’s ideas there were incorporated into the

United States Constitution. Not only had Washington and Madison read his Sketches, but virtually every

man who participated in the convention read it as well. Most of the principles Webster presented for creating a new government were put into the Constitution by the framers. His provisions included a

surrender of a degree of state sovereignty to a stronger Congress, “a supreme power at the head of the

union,” “all power is vested in the people,” equal representation of the states in Congress, and

congressional power to regulate and impose duties on interstate commerce.85 Webster also proposed the

abolition of slavery.86

Most of his ideas were not original. He was simply drawing from the best available sources and

included many of the documents examined above, including the Declaration of Independence and various

state constitutions (especially Connecticut’s). Washington, Hamilton and others had presented various

ideas for a new government, yet Webster was the first to give an overall framework. Madison and others acknowledged Webster’s key role. New York State Chief Justice James Kent said Webster was “the first

man who proposed the present government” of the United States.87

The document that was approved by the Constitutional Convention in September 1787 and sent to the

states for ratification had both a Christian power and form— a Christian power because the source of the Founders ideas primarily came from the Bible. The brief summary of the development of ideas of liberty given above reveal this to be the case, plus this is affirmed by a direct examination of the source of their political ideas. A study was published in The American Political Science Review that listed the citations from about 15,000 political documents written by the Founders between 1760 and 1805. By far the most quoted source in these political documents was the Bible—34% of all citations. The great majority of the

remaining sources were from writers with biblical ideas.88 In addition, almost ever one of the Founders

were Christians who had a biblical worldview. Even the 2 or 3 non-professing Christians at the

Convention had a biblical view of life. (Franklin is the most famous of these. His call for prayer at the

Constitutional Convention reveals his belief in God’s active involvement in His creation.89)

The form of the Constitution is Christian as well; that is, the framework of the document reflects a

Christian view of man and government. These general ideas include representative government, the

separation of powers, the rule of law, and the unique concept of federalism.90 The Preamble to the

Constitution contains a good summary of the biblical purpose of civil government. The document directly

acknowledges God in the requirement of an oath of office (Article 6), in recognizing the Christian

Sabbath (Article 1, section 7, paragraph 2), and in dating itself “in the year of our Lord” (Article 7).91 The first ten amendments to the Constitution were ratified in 1791. The individual liberties secured in this Bill

of Rights were developed out of Christian civilization and were derived from the Bible and a biblical

understanding of unalienable rights. These ideas were not new, but, as we have seen, were developed over

 

 

 

 

 

many centuries. To our Founders, the primary purpose of civil government is to protect the citizens’

God-given rights. Lack of a listing of these rights in the original Constitution caused many to oppose

ratifying it. Many of those who voted to ratify it in various states did so only after being assured a Bill of Rights would be added.

During the summer of the Constitutional Convention Webster was living in Philadelphia and he had

numerous discussions with many of the delegates. Near the close of the convention, Webster was asked

by one of the delegates to write a paper in support of the new constitution as a means of encouraging

ratification by the states. His 55 page essay — An Examination into the Leading Principles of the Federal

Constitution Proposed by the Late Convention Held at Philadelphia92 — was completed in about a

month, and then was printed and distributed widely. It played an important part in assuring the ratification of the new constitution.

In Examination Webster compares the Constitution to “the promulgation of the Jewish laws at Mount

Sinai.”93 He wrote the “the origin of the AMERICAN REPUBLIC is distinguished by peculiar

circumstances. Other nations have been driven together by fear and necessity. . . . In the formation of our constitution the wisdom of all ages is collected—the legislators of antiquity are consulted, as well as the

opinions and interests of the millions who are concerned. In short, it is an empire of reason.”94

As we have examined the development of ideas of liberty and constitutional principles, we have seen

that the greatest “wisdom of the ages” affecting civil documents of liberty has arisen from the Christian

religion and the precepts of the Bible. This is the primary source of American constitutionalism, and

consequently, civil liberty throughout the world. Such an understanding must be transferred to all Americans in this and future generations if liberty is to be maintained.

Noah Webster had a vision for educating all Americans, and posterity, in principles of liberty. His

entire life was devoted to fulfilling this end. His Speller of 1794 had a Federal catechism and was the first

text to educate Americans in the form of our government. His History of the United States taught

fundamental governmental principles. His textbooks also contained writings of the best of American literature which he intended to inspire youth with “a love of virtue, patriotism, and religion.”95 His An

American Dictionary of the English Language (1828) gave American Christian constitutional

definitions.96

Webster not only sought to educate Americans in the source of our liberties, in constitutional

principles, and in a knowledge of how our form of government works, but he, most importantly, sought to

infuse into Americans the power or spirit necessary to support liberty. Both the power and form of free nations is rooted in Christianity. Webster wrote: “Men may devise and adopt new forms of government;

they may amend old forms, repair breaches, and punish violators of the constitution; but there is, there

can be, no effectual remedy, but obedience to the divine law.”97 As we obey God’s law and act upon the

principles of Christianity, we shall see mankind advance, for, according to Webster, the gospel of the

Savior contains “the genuine principles of civil life—the only principles which can perfect the work of

civilization.”98

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

End Notes:

 

1. Noah Webster, History of the United States, New Haven: Durrie & Peck, 1833, p. v.

2. Noah Webster, “An Oration on the Anniversary of the Declaration of Independence,” New Haven, 1802, in

American Political Writing during the Founding Era, 1760-1805, vol, 2, Charles S. Hyneman and Donald S. Lutz, editors, Indianapolis: Liberty Press, 1983, p. 1227.

3. Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America, edited by Richard D. Heffner, New York: The New American

Library, 1956, p. 47.

4. Webster to James Madison, 16 October 1829, Madison Papers, Series 2, Library of Congress. Quoted in

Defining Noah Webster, Mind and Morals in the Early Republic, by K. Alan Snyder, New York: University Press of America, 1990, p. 253.

 

5. Webster, Ten Letters to Dr. Joseph Priestly (New Haven: Read and Morse, 1800), p. 8. Quoted in Snyder, p.

191.

6. William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (4 Vols. 1765-1769), St. George Tucker’s

American Edition, pp. 41-42.

7. See Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States (1833) by Joseph Story and Commentaries on

American Law (1826-1830) by James Kent.

8. Herbert W. Titus, God, Man, and Law: The Biblical Principles, Oak Brook, Il: Institute in Basic Life

Principles, p. 19.

9. Roscoe Pound, The Spirit of the Common Law, New York: The Legal Classics Library. 10. Quoted in David Barton, Original Intent, Aledo, Tex: WallBuilder Press, 1996, p. 172.

11. Noah Webster, “An Oration on the Anniversary of the Declaration of Independence,” New Haven, 1802, in

American Political Writing during the Founding Era, 1760-1805, vol, 2, p. 1227.

12. Noah Webster, Letter IX, Letters to a Young Gentleman Commencing His Education, New Haven: Howe &

Spalding, 1823, p. 149.

13. For more on the Celtic Church and Patrick’s Liber see, Leslie Hardinge, The Celtic Church in Britain,

London: Church Historical Society, 1973.

14. Noah Webster, Letter IX, Letters to a Young Gentleman Commencing His Education, p. 144.

15. Sources of Our Liberties, Richard L. Perry, editor, New York: American Bar Foundation, 1952, p. 1. 16. Ibid., p. 5.

17. See clause 3 of Confirmatio Cartarum, November 5, 1297, in Sources of Our Liberties, p. 30.

18. See America’s Providential History by Mark Beliles and Stephen McDowell, Charlottesville, Va.:

Providence Foundation, 1989, pp. 145-146.

19. See clause 4 of Confirmatio Cartarum, in Sources of Our Liberties, p. 30. 20. Sources of Our Liberties, p. 25, 31. 21. Ibid., p. 62. 22. Ibid., p. 132. 23. Ibid., p. 244.

24. See Donald S. Lutz, “From Covenant to Constitution in American Political Thought,” Publius, Fall 1980, pp.

101-133.

25. See Edward Channing, A History of the United States, vol. 1, New York: The MacMillan Company, 1919,

pp. 1 ff.

26. See Christopher Columbus’s Book of Prophecies, reproduction of the original manuscript with English

translation by Kay Brigham, quincentenary edition, Barcelona, Spain: CLIE Publishers.

27. See The First Charter of Virginia, paragraph 15, in Sources of Our Liberties, p. 44. 28. Ibid., p. 40.

29. Sources of Our Liberties, p. 36.

30. Introduction, For the Colony in Virginea Britannia, Lawes Divine, Morall and Martiall, etc., compiled by

William Strachey, edited by David H. Flaherty, the University Press of Virginia, Charlottesville, 1969, pp. ix.

31. See In God We Trust Tour Guide, by Stephen McDowell and Mark Beliles, Charlottesville, Va.: Providence

Foundation, 1998, p. 124.

32. The Mayflower Compact, in Sources of Our Liberties, p. 60. 33. Sources of Our Liberties, p. 57.

34. The Mayflower Compact, in Sources of Our Liberties, p. 60. 35. Sources of Our Liberties, p. 57.

36. The Laws of the Pilgrims, A Facsimile Edition of The Book of the General Laws of the Inhabitants of the

Jurisdiction of New Plimoth, 1672 & 1685, Wilmington, Del.: Pilgrim Society, 1977, p. xiv.

37. Ibid., p. 1.

38. See Builders of the Republic, vol. 8 of The Pageant of America, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1927, p.

8.

39. For the origins of common law see, Gary Amos, Defending the Declaration, Charlottesville, Va.: Providence

Foundation, 1994.

40. Sources of Our Liberties, p. 77.

 

 

 

 

41. Ibid., p. 80.

42. Charter of Massachusetts Bay, in Sources of Our Liberties, p. 94.

43. The Charter of Maryland, June 20, 1632, in Sources of Our Liberties, p. 105. 44. Sources of Our Liberties, footnote 4, p. 105.

45. John Fiske, The Beginnings of New England, New York: Houghton, Mifflin and Co., 1898, p. 136. 46. Ibid., pp. 137, 140.

47. Fundamental Orders of Connecticut (spelling has been modernized), in Sources of Our Liberties, p. 120. 48. Ibid.

49. Ibid., p. 123.

50. Harlow Giles Unger, Noah Webster, The Life and Times of an American Patriot, New York: John Wiley &

Sons, Inc, 1998, p.88.

51. Massachusetts Body of Liberties, in Sources of Our Liberties, p. 148. 52. Ibid., p. 153.

53. Charter of Rhode Island, in Sources of Our Liberties, p. 169. 54. Ibid., p. 173.

55. The Blue Laws of New Haven Colony, usually called Blue Laws of Connecticut . . ., By An Antiquarian,

Hartford: printed by Case, Tiffany & Co., 1838, p. iii.

56. Ibid., p. v.

57. Ibid., see pp. 157 ff and 155-156. 58. Ibid., p. 145.

59. McDowell, In God We Trust Tour Guide, p. 79.

60. Frame of Government of Pennsylvania, in Sources of Our Liberties, p. 209. 61. Ibid., p. 210.

62. Ibid., pp. 216, 218, 220. 63. Ibid., p. 220. 64. Ibid., p. 217.

65. Sources of Our Liberties, p. xviii. 66. Ibid., p. 66.

67. Pennsylvania Charter of Privileges, in Sources of Our Liberties, p. 256.

68. Sources of Our Liberties, p. 28. See also The Rights of the Colonists by Samuel Adams, in Christian History

of the Constitution, by Verna Hall, Foundation for American Christian Education, 1980, pp. 365-370.

69. See Journal of the Proceedings of Congress, 1774, a facsimile edition, Philadelphia: Library Company of

Philadelphia, 1974, pp. 24-25; and The Book of Abigail and John, Selected Letters of the Adams Family, 1762-1784, Cambridge, Ma.: Harvard University Press, 1975, p. 76.

70. Declaration and Resolves of the First Continental Congress, 1774, in Sources of Our Liberties, p. 287. 71. Sources of Our Liberties, pp. 264-265.

72. Declaration of the Causes and Necessity of Taking up Arms, in Sources of Our Liberties, p. 296. 73. Ibid., p. 299.

74. Sources of Our Liberties, p. 309.

75. Sec. 15, Bill of Rights, Constitution of Virginia, in Sources of Our Liberties, p. 312. 76. Ibid.

77. Constitution of Pennsylvania, Sources of Our Liberties, p. 328. 78. Sources of Our Liberties, p. 338.

79. For more on this see America’s Providential History; Daniel Dreisbach, Real Threat and Mere Shadow,

Westchester, Ill.: Crossway Books, 1987; B.F. Morris, Christian Life and Character of the Civil Institutions of the United States, Philadelphia: George W. Childs, 1864.

80. Sources of Our Liberties, pp. 349, 350. 81. Sources of Our Liberties, p. 373, 374. 82. Sources of Our Liberties, p. 382.

83. Northwest Ordinance, Sources of Our Liberties, pp. 395-396. 84. Letter of Webster, quoted in Unger, p. 83.

 

 

 

 

 

85. “Sketches of American Policy”, in Noah Webster: On Being American, Selected Writings, 1783-1828,

Homer d. Babbidge, Jr., editor, New York: Frederick A. Praeger, 1967, p. 31.

86. Unger, p. 89. 87. Unger, p. 84.

88. Donald S. Lutz, “The Relative Influence of European Writers on Late Eighteenth-Century American Political

Thought,” The American Political Science Review, Vol. 78, 1983, pp. 189-197.

89. See James Madison, Notes of the Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787, New York: W.W. Norton &

Co., 1987, pp. 209-210; and America’s Providential History, pp. 170-173.

90. For more see In God We Trust Tour Guide, pp. 37-48; and America’s Providential History, pp. 185-192. 91. See America’s Providential History, p. 179-180.

92. See Noah Webster: On Being American, Selected Writings, 1783-1828, p. 48. 93. Ibid., p. 50.

94. Ibid., pp. 50-51. 95. Unger, p. 60.

96. For more on Webster’s influence on early American see “Reforming America by Propagating a Christian

Philosophy of Education and Government, An Example from the Life of Noah Webster,” Stephen McDowell, The Journal of the Foundation for American Christian Education, Vol. 5, 1993, pp. 166-181.

97. Noah Webster, Value of the Bible and Excellence of the Christian Religion, 1834, republished by the

Foundation for American Christian Education, p. 78.

98. Noah Webster, Letters to a Young Gentleman, p. 149.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTION: HOPE AND CHANGE – TIME TO “REBOOT” SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT

Biblical World University

 By Ricki Pepin


 

“Free health care!” “Free cell phones!” “I don’t have to make my car payment any more!” Such were the excited ravings that accompanied the political slogan/promise of “Hope and Change.” Really? Is that all hope and change amounts to…more “free stuff”? Given the opportunity, what would you hope for…for yourself, your family, for America? If you were “King of America” what changes would you make? You may protest and say there is no king in America, but history tells a different story.

 

When the War for Independence was brewing, colonists were fed up with England and King George. The historical mantra we learn in school from this era is, “No taxation without representation.” But there was another slogan of far greater significance: “No King but Jesus.” This short maxim paints a vivid picture of our founding fathers’ belief in who governed America. It was further demonstrated by their use of the phrase in the Declaration of Independence, “the laws of Nature and Nature’s God” as the basis for this nation’s law.

 

This does not mean America was established as a theocracy but rather under the principles of Christianity such as liberty, justice, integrity, kindness, personal responsibility, charity. With this in mind, let’s “reboot” and find out what real hope and change means in America according to the principles of King Jesus.

 

The gospel is the message the church has been commissioned to teach. It’s a message that is much larger than is commonly taught, and is defined in part as, “…the history…of Jesus, including [His] character, actions and doctrines…with the whole scheme of salvation…” (Webster’s 1828 Dictionary) The doctrines of the gospel are defined as, “the principles or truths taught by Jesus.”

 

One of these principles speaks about hope, declaring that, “…Christ…who is in you…is our only hope for glory. (Colossians 1:27) What does that mean…hope for “glory”? Fasten your seatbelt for the answer: One of the definitions of “glory” is, “…an honorable representation of God.” What a job! How would individuals do this?

 

To answer, let’s look at another principle: God made the earth and everything in it, but gave mankind dominion over it (Genesis 1:28), meaning we are to replenish it, to rule and manage it in a way He would rule and manage it. What would that look like, ruling the earth and everything in it?

 

There are many components to God’s creation, and the gospel includes teaching and applying principles and truth to all of them. The gospel message is the message of hope and change. However, it is not just about personal salvation and going to heaven someday. It’s about transforming individuals, families, schools, communities, and governments in a way that would represent God’s plans on earth today! (Matthew 6:10)

 

Imagine this gospel teaching: Discovering truth through sciences, applying truth through technology, interpreting truth through humanities, implementing truth through commerce and social action, transmitting truth through education and arts, and preserving truth through government and law. Allow your mind to wander for just a few moments to think about what that “hope and change” would look like!

Time to “reboot.” Time to move the bar up. What if hope and change was understood not as a political slogan, but rather a national aspiration for personal character improvement? What if instead of looking for handouts from others, Americans looked into becoming better representatives of God? What if we searched for answers to problems beginning with gospel principles about proper self-government (how we behave as individuals), then extrapolate those principles to our families, our schools, our communities?

 

Historically, church and state worked hand-in-hand in America. In 1835, Alexis de Tocqueville, a French Statesman and historian wrote,

Religion in America…must be regarded as the foremost of the political institutions….This opinion is not peculiar to a class of citizens or a party, but it belongs to the whole nation and to every rank of society.

Writing about the greatness of America, he said,

Not until I went into the churches of America and heard her pulpit flame with righteousness did I understand the secret of her genius and power. America is great because America is good, and if America ever ceases to be good, America will cease to be great.

 

We have the capacity to make America great again, but we must have teaching and application of the whole gospel to unlock it. How about it Church? How about it Pastors and Priests? Being a Christian is not just about going to heaven. It’s about living a life on earth representing God in every area. We have lost our path in America because we have short-changed the gospel message and kept it within the four walls of the church building. Push back Christians! What would happen if we learned the whole gospel and released it in America again?

 

Something to think about.

 

 

~~~~~

Ricki Pepin is a former employee of the FBI. She is a published author and international lecturer.  Her primary passion is teaching citizens how to work together to restore America’s foundations.

To that end, she has been leading courses on the U.S. Constitution, in collaboration with the Institute on the Constitution, for over 17 years and recently produced three teaching DVDs to assist others in the duplication of these efforts.  Her ultimate desire is to bring a return to limited, Constitutional government where everyone has the FREEDOM to discover and walk out their own God-given destinies of Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness.

Ricki is married to retired Air Force Colonel Michael Pepin. She has two children and four grandchildren.

Contact info:

Website – www.rickipepin.com

e-mail – ri***@pe***.com

 

Ricki has worked with the Providence Foundation for many years and uses PF materials in some of the classes she teaches. The PF Biblical Worldview University offers her course on God’s Health Plan.

 

 

 

Start a Course in Your Church on “Restoring America as the Land of Liberty”

Become a Providence Foundation Instructor or Class Facilitator

 


 

What courses should I teach?

For a great foundation in biblical worldview and providential history we recommend either of two courses:

1) Monumental: Restoring America as the Land of Liberty

2) America’s Providential History

Monumental has 12 or 13 sessions and America’s Providential History about 16. A description of each of these follows. For a short introductory course (four sessions) we suggest “Fundamentals for Biblical Transformation.”

Monumental: Restoring America as the Land of Liberty

America has undergone a radical shift in recent times, from an exceptional nation—the most free, prosperous, and virtuous in history— to a nation in decline. There are numerous signs of decay in the American culture: the breakdown of the family; the abandonment of sexual morals; the decline of education; the rampant killing of unborn children; the rise of big government; and the growing hostility to Christianity in schools, colleges, the military, business, and government.

The good news is that we can do something to solve these problems and restore America. We can follow the blueprint that the Founders of the nation gave us to build a free nation.

This 12-lesson course provides the blueprint for restoring America as the land of liberty. This package contains the Dove-nominated film by Kirk Cameron Monumental, a book authored by Stephen McDowell on Restoring America as the Land of Liberty, and discussions on DVD by Kirk and Stephen on the twelve chapters in the book.

Section 1: The Founder’ Blueprint for Liberty:

1) The Forefathers Monument: A Matrix of Liberty

2) Faith

3) Morality

4) Law

5) Education

6) Liberty.

Section 2: The Story of Liberty:

7) The Chain of Liberty: Preparation of the Seed of the American Republic

8) The Pilgrims: Planting the Seed of the American Republic

9) The Christian Colonization of America: Cultivating the Seed of Liberty

10) Advance of Liberty in Early America: Fruit of the Seed of the American Republic

11) Decline of the American Republic in the 20th Century: Growth of a Different Seed

12) Being Watchmen on the Walls: Replanting the Seed of the American Republic

Be a part of advancing God s monumental story. This course is the ideal means of providing you and your family and friends with the ideas necessary to live in Christian liberty.

Instructors: Stephen McDowell and Kirk Cameron. Book author: Stephen McDowell

Format: 13 sessions. Session 1: The film Monumental. The other 12 sessions are comprised of reading a chapter, listening to a 30-minute discussion of the chapter, and answering review questions.

 

 

America’s Providential History

* This course is highly recommended for everyone. It not only teaches a great overview of Christian history and Biblical worldview, but introduces the student to many primary source writings.

A course using the books: America’s Providential HistoryAmerica’s Providential History, A Documentary Sourcebook; and Teacher’s Guide to America’s Providential History. There are CDs teaching much of the material in America’s Providential History that can be used as a supplement with this course, but these are optional.

Discover why many historians consider the Bible America’s founding document. Learn how God’s presence was evident at our nation’s founding in the men who fought for independence and shaped the Constitution. Beginning with ancient history, the course presents a providential view of significant events leading to the establishment of America. It examines the Reformation, the Pilgrims, the role of the clergy and church, the Christian foundations of education and economics, and the development of liberty. Cites primary source documents that show our nation grew from Christian principles and reveals how to bring them back into the nation today.

The Documentary Sourcebook contains over 25 historical writings. Reading primary source materials is the best way to learn of the faith and worldview of America’s founders. These writings show the Founders had a Christian philosophy of government, they understood the divine purpose of civil government, and they knew that government begins internally in the heart of man with the ability to govern his own life; hence, self-government is essential for civil liberty. Selections including: Columbus’ Christian Character and Divine Mission; The Fast and Thanksgiving Days of New England; Election Day in Early America; Letters of John Quincy Adams to His Son on the Bible and Its Teachings and much more. The Teacher’s Guide contains questions for each chapter, supplemental readings from the Documentary Sourcebook, lists of materials for further study, chapter outlines, tests, and more.

Authors: Stephen McDowell and Mark Beliles

Format: Course comprised of 3 books. Various written assignments are given in APH Teacher’s Guide. Sixteen or more sessions.

CHURCH AND STATE – COHORTS OR COMBATANTS?

 

The Bible and Economics

By Ricki Pepin


 

 

We’ve all heard the protests: “Separation of church and State! You can’t post the 10 Commandments in a courthouse! You can’t have Jesus in a Christmas play in a public school! That would violate the First Amendment!” Really? Have any of the people making such proclamations read the First Amendment, or what any of the founders said in regard to the relationship between the church and the state? Time for a dose of truth by way of a brief history lesson.

Wake-up call: The words “separation of church and State” appear nowhere in any founding document. The First Amendment says, “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof…”

Let’s think this through. Allow me to ask (and answer) a few questions:

  • To whom is this amendment addressed? (Answer – Congress)
  • Can a child violate this amendment by writing a paper about Jesus? (Answer – no. Why? Because they aren’t Congress.)
  • Can a teacher violate this amendment by reading or teaching from the Bible? (Answer – no. Why? Because they aren’t Congress.)
  • Can a school violate this amendment by putting on a Christmas play or Easter pageant? (Answer – no. Why? Because they aren’t Congress…are you beginning to see a trend here?)
  • Can local government officials violate this amendment by displaying the 10 Commandments, a cross, or a nativity scene at a courthouse or anywhere on government property? (Answer – no. Why? Because they aren’t Congress.)
  • Who is the only one who can violate the First Amendment? (Answer – Congress. Individuals cannot. Schools cannot. Local governments cannot.)
  • Lastly, what is the only way Congress can violate it? (Answer – By making a law to establish a particular denomination, or to make a law abridging any individual’s free exercise of their religious beliefs.)

 

John Adams said, “…it is religion and morality alone which can establish the principles upon which freedom can securely stand.” Does this sound like John Adams thought religion and government (which protects our freedom) would be at odds with each other?   Hardly. Rather, his words re-state what the founders put in the Declaration of Independence about the relationship between church and state – that America’s government system would be based upon the laws of Nature and Nature’s God. This was a clear collaboration of religion and government as the founders understood these terms – the laws of Nature and Nature’s God – to be the 10 commandments and your God-given conscience. In other words, religion lays the foundation for government and law.

However, both John Adams’ statement and the brief exposition of the clear, simple meaning of the First Amendment, still brings up an often asked question – Whose religion? Should you teach exclusively Biblical tenets in school? Should all American law be based only on the Christian religion, or should we be more inclusive and also use the tenets of Buddhists, Muslims, Satanists, Humanists, et al?

The answer may astound many, but Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story clarified what religion was protected under the First Amendment in A Familiar Exposition of the Constitution of the United States, 1840. He wrote:

The real object of the First Amendment was not to countenance, much less to advance Mohammedanism, or Judaism, or infidelity, by prostrating Christianity, but to exclude all rivalry among Christian sects and to prevent…the exclusive patronage of the national government [to any particular Christian denomination].

What a revelation! Time to push back and remove the muzzle from Christian expression in public. Time to educate and stand up for what our founders and founding documents really say about church and state. America is a Christian nation because it was founded under Christian principles such as kindness, loyalty, integrity, honesty. Other religious beliefs are tolerated in America, but only if their practices conform to the laws of Nature and Nature’s God.

Christian citizens in every arena – public school students, teachers, government workers, pastors, etc. – do NOT relinquish their First Amendment rights to free exercise of their religion in any public setting. Let’s bring God back front and center to every area of our lives, including school and government! What would America look like if Church and State began to act more like cohorts, not combatants?

Something to think about.

 

Learn more about your Constitution with Ricki Pepin and the Institute on the Constitution and receive your free gift.

 

 

Patriotism – Something to Think About

Biblical World University

For PDF Version: Patriotism – Something to Think About

By Ricki Pepin© – August 2014


 

Most Americans today would call themselves patriots. Would you? But what does that mean…to be an American…to be a patriot? What is the basis for your self-description as a patriotic American? This is something to think about!

Words matter. Definitions matter. How you perceive yourself matters. Is our education system producing people who know how to think, or is it producing people who are told what to think? What impact would each of these techniques have on an individual’s perception of their world? Learning how to think (from the right foundation) would produce independent, freedom-seeking individuals. Being told what to think would produce obedient and dependent citizens waiting for their next instructions or government handout.

Do you think like an American? Something as basic as, “What is right?” is a profound question that needs to be approached with an absolute standard on which to base the answer. In America, that standard is called the “rule of law.” Our Declaration of Independence refers to it as “the Laws of Nature and Nature’s God.” If we don’t understand what the Founders meant by these phrases and the definition of these terms, we cannot grasp what it means to be an American.

Noah Webster wrote America’s first dictionary in 1828. As a master of 27 languages, his definitions are both accurate and an excellent source for looking at life through the eyes of the founding fathers. He defined “patriotic” in part as “protecting [one’s country by] maintaining its laws and institutions in vigor and purity.” What is America’s law? The Constitution. What is it based upon? The Laws of Nature and Nature’s God. And how did Noah define this term? Simply – the 10 commandments and your God-given conscience. What a revelation! Did you know America’s laws came right out of the Bible? Do you imagine the average person who calls himself a “patriot” knows this, or that he is to stand up for and protect these laws? Do our current laws reflect this standard?

So how does this relate to you, patriotism and thinking like an American? To answer this question, let’s ask a couple more: What is it you hope for in your future…for yourself…for America? What matters most to you? Faith? Family? Security? Money? Medical care? No matter what you answered, all these hopes and dreams for your future relate to freedom: freedom to pursue happiness, freedom to make individual choices.

And this brings us to the most important question of all: What is the single biggest factor in your life that will determine your freedom to be able to pursue these dreams for your future? It is the type and form of government in America. It is the laws of the land and how they are upheld. Simply put, it is freedom and justice. It is living according to the Laws of Nature and Nature’s God. It is adhering to the rule of law. It is “protecting [one’s country by] maintaining its laws and institutions in vigor and purity.

What would America look like if we followed these standards? Would abortion be legalized? Would homosexuals be allowed to marry? Would our borders be open to all regardless of their heath profile or criminal background? Would you be able to use your own property as you desire without government permission or intrusion? Are these rhetorical questions, or can an educated, activated populace – true American patriots – recapture the vision of America and restore her to one nation under God? I believe we can.

Something to think about!!

 

~~~~~

Ricki Pepin is a former employee of the FBI. She is a published author and international lecturer.  Her primary passion is teaching citizens how to work together to restore America’s foundations.

To that end, she has been leading courses on the U.S. Constitution, in collaboration with the Institute on the Constitution, for over 17 years and recently produced three teaching DVDs to assist others in the duplication of these efforts.  Her ultimate desire is to bring a return to limited, Constitutional government where everyone has the FREEDOM to discover and walk out their own God-given destinies of Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness.

Ricki is married to retired Air Force Colonel Michael Pepin. She has two children and four grandchildren.

Contact info:

Website – www.rickipepin.com

e-mail – ri***@pe***.com

 

Ricki has worked with the Providence Foundation for many years and uses PF materials in some of the classes she teaches. The PF Biblical Worldview University offers her course on God’s Health Plan.

 

The Christian Idea of Government

The Christian Idea of Government

For PDF Version: The Christian Idea of Government

By Stephen McDowell


 

All government begins in the heart of man with his ability (or inability) to direct, regulate, manage, and control his life. There are two spheres of government — internal and external. Internal government is self-government. External government occurs in the family, church, business, associations, and civil government. External spheres of government are a reflection of the degree of internal self-government a person or people possess. Internal government is causative to external government.

The flow of power in a Christian society is from the internal to the external, from the inside-out. All authority and power comes from God. It flows from Him into the heart and mind of man, and then out into the family, church, business, schools, and civil realm. This idea greatly affected the development of government in America. Elias Boudinot, President of the Continental Congress and first President of the American Bible Society, revealed a fundamental principle upon which America was founded:

Another essential ingredient in the happiness we enjoy as a nation, and which arises from the principles of the revolution, is the right that every people have to govern themselves in such manner as they judge best calculated for the common benefit.[1]

This was a new concept, because during most of history people lived under “ruler’s law,” where the rulers made the laws and the people had no voice in the matter. However, in America, the people made the laws, and everyone, including the rulers, was subject to them.

America’s Founders understood that a people cannot govern themselves in civil affairs if they do not govern their own lives well. Robert C. Winthrop, Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives from 1847-49, said in 1849:

All societies of men must be governed in some way or other. The less they may have of stringent State Government, the more they must have of individual self-government. The less they rely on public law or physical force, the more they must rely on private moral restraint. Men, in a word, must necessarily be controlled either by a power within them, or by a power without them; either by the Word of God, or by the strong arm of man; either by the Bible or the bayonet.[2]

The basis of the ability for man to govern himself well is rooted in his being in subjection to a higher power. The Founders’ firm commitment to God, as well as their commitment to govern their lives according to His laws as contained in the Bible, was the foundation for self-government in America. Examination of the scores of constitutions, compacts, and charters written in colonial America readily reveals that the source of their civil law was found in the Bible. For example, in the Massachusetts Body of Liberties (which was a precursor to our Bill of Rights), written by Rev. Nathaniel Ward in 1641, the Pentateuch (the first five books of the Bible) was the basis for its criminal code, and “in case of the defect of a law in any partecular [sic] case” the standard was “the word of God.”[3] Often the colonists would quote directly from the Scriptures and give references to justify their civil laws, as seen, for example, in the laws of the Pilgrims.[4]

Self-government is limited apart from God; therefore, the ability to govern well is limited where the people and leaders do not seek to govern themselves and their nation under God. George Washington said, “It is impossible to govern the universe without the aid of a Supreme Being.”[5]

The Christian idea of government led to the establishment of the American Christian Constitutional Federal Republic. It was unique in history and was only possible because the citizens were self-governed.

The foundation for self-government is laid in the families of a nation. Families must begin early teaching the principle of self-government. One night, many years ago I was teaching my son, who was then about five years old, about self-government. I gave him a definition he could understand, telling him that “self-government is doing what you are supposed to do without anybody telling you.” The next morning he woke me early, took me to his bedroom, pointed to his bed, which he had made up all by himself without anybody telling him to do so, and remarked: “Dad, I was being self-governed, wasn’t I?” The transformation of nations begins with such small steps.

The flow of power in a Christian society is from the inside-out. The flow of power in a pagan society is from the outside-in, from the top-down. This top-down flow occurs because the people see the rulers as the source of power and authority — they are the ultimate authority in the earth. However, the state is not man’s savior, nor is it the ultimate authority in the earth. Caesar thought he was, but Jesus made clear his authority was from God and was limited.[6] Most leaders throughout history have had this Caesar mentality, with most citizens agreeing. The spread of Christian ideas, especially after the Protestant Reformation, changed this in many nations, but, unfortunately, a majority of these nations are moving back toward a pagan view of government. Many people in the United States are embracing this idea as well. When trouble comes, who do people look to for help, provision, and “salvation”? Many first look to civil government, thinking the government owes them this provision. Many in the media agree and often lambaste the government if it is not acting fast enough, being efficient, or providing enough relief. (Since it is not the purpose of civil government to provide all things for the citizens, it will never do this effectively or efficiently.)

Secularists have no savior, so they often look to government to be their savior — to bring peace, to establish a utopia, to meet needs, to provide material things, and so on. Christians have a Savior and do not need government for this. From a Christian perspective, civil government is a divine institution with a legitimate function, but it is very limited in what it is supposed to do. It is to protect the righteous, punish the evil doer, and administer God’s justice in the civil realm that is under its sphere of authority.[7]

The Christian idea of government teaches that the state exists to serve man, not vice versa; that government flows from the internal to the external, from the bottom-up; that government begins with self-government, then flows to the family, church, and the civil realm.

 

 

[1] Elias Boudinot, “Oration at Elizabethtown, New Jersey, on the Fourth of July, 1793.” American Eloquence: A Collection of Speeches and Addresses, by the Most Eminent Orators of America, New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1858, Vol. 1, p. 265.

[2] Robert C. Winthrop, “Address to Massachusetts Bible Society Meeting, May 28, 1849,” Addresses and Speeches on Various Occasions, Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1852, p. 172.

[3] Richard Morris, editor, Significant Documents in United States History, Vol. 1, New York: Van Nostrand Reinhold Co., 1969, p. 15-16.

[4] The Laws of the Pilgrims, 1672 & 1685, A Facsimile Edition, published by Michael Glazier and the Pilgrim Society, 1977.

[5] Maxims of Washington, compiled by John Frederick Schroeder, New York: D. Appleton & Co., 1854, p. 341.

[6] See Matthew 12:17-21; John 19:11; Stephen McDowell, Building Godly Nations, Charlottesville: Providence Foundation, 2003, pp. 43 ff.; Mark A. Beliles and Stephen K. McDowell, America’s Providential History, Charlottesville: Providence Foundation, 1989, pp. 29 ff; Stephen McDowell, Rendering to Caesar the Things that Are God’s, Charlottesville: Providence Foundation, 2009.

[7] Rom. 13:1-5; 1 Pet. 2:13-14; for more on a Biblical view of government see Building Godly Nations, Chapter 3; Stephen McDowell and Mark Beliles, Liberating the Nations, chapters 1, 11, Charlottesville: Providence Foundation, 1995.

 

Become a Providence Foundation Instructor or Class Facilitator

Become a Providence Foundation Instructor or Class Facilitator

 


 

Teach others the ideas and principles needed to restore America and transform nations!

 

  • Be a part of bringing Godly transformation to America and the nations.
  • Be educated in applying Biblical principles to all spheres of life.
  • Learn America’s Christian history and providential world history.
  • Be equipped to educate others in a Biblical worldview.

 

 

The Providence Foundation provides in-depth teaching in a Biblical worldview, and then encourages those we have trained to teach others. The goal is for everyone to apply the truth they have learned in their lives, family, occupation, community, and nation. The fruit of this is transformation.

We seek to train those who equip others. To accomplish this goal, we have over the years trained hundreds of people who have taught others in classes and discussion groups. Consider joining with these men and women by becoming a PF Instructor or Facilitator.

 

How do I become an instructor or facilitator?

Hundreds of thousands of people have personally benefited from reading our books, listening to audio messages, and taking courses. Thousands of people, churches, schools, colleges, and groups have taught or offered classes using our books and materials. We are glad our products have been of use and hope to see many more people use them in the years to come. We would love for you start a class or discussion group in your community.

Hundreds of people have chosen to work more closely with us. They have received more in-depth training, with the goal of imparting to others the ideas of liberty they learned. Some have become representatives or instructors of the Providence Foundation, where we help them promote their work of teaching and transformation in their locality.

Some years ago we established our Biblical Worldview University (BWU) as a means of providing systematic training in five general areas: General Biblical Worldview, Providential History, the Family and Christian Education, the Marketplace, and the State.

Graduates of BWU are eligible to become a member of our international network of approved instructors of the Providence Foundation. See the Worldview University tab  to learn more about the requirements for graduation. Any graduate who is interested in becoming a PF instructor can contact us to arrange a personal interview. Completing the interview successfully is the last step in becoming a PF instructor.

Facilitators are those who want to see others educated but do not want to formally teach. They can set up and lead a discussion group using various BWU courses. Facilitators do not have to be graduates of BWU.

 

Steps to take to become a PF Instructor:

  1. Get trained through our Biblical Worldview University

Enroll online or request a BWU catalog (in**@pr******************.com) . If you already have training in Biblical worldview, we can extend some credit to you for this, thus enabling you to complete the BWU training faster. Contact us for details.

  1. Set up a personal interview and provide references.

After completing the training and graduating from BWU, arrange for a personal interview and provide a couple of references.

  1. Begin to set up classes and teach others.

We will assist certified instructors to organize and teach classes. We also have various Powerpoint presentations and other resources to assist you in teaching.

If you have a desire to teach others but are unable to become a PF Instructor at this time, please do so, using any of our materials that will help you.

 

What courses should I teach?

 

For a great foundation in biblical worldview and providential history we recommend one of three courses:

 

1) Monumental: Restoring America as the Land of Liberty

2) America’s Providential History

3) God’s Blueprint for Life, Liberty, & Property: A Bible Study on the Ten Commandments

 Monumental has 12 or 13 sessions and America’s Providential History about 16. A description of each of these follows. For a short introductory course (four sessions) we suggest “Fundamentals for Biblical Transformation.”

Monumental: Restoring America as the Land of Liberty

America has undergone a radical shift in recent times, from an exceptional nation—the most free, prosperous, and virtuous in history— to a nation in decline. There are numerous signs of decay in the American culture: the breakdown of the family; the abandonment of sexual morals; the decline of education; the rampant killing of unborn children; the rise of big government; and the growing hostility to Christianity in schools, colleges, the military, business, and government.

The good news is that we can do something to solve these problems and restore America. We can follow the blueprint that the Founders of the nation gave us to build a free nation.

This 12-lesson course provides the blueprint for restoring America as the land of liberty. This package contains the Dove-nominated film by Kirk Cameron Monumental, a book authored by Stephen McDowell on Restoring America as the Land of Liberty, and discussions on DVD by Kirk and Stephen on the twelve chapters in the book.

 

Section 1: The Founder’ Blueprint for Liberty:

1) The Forefathers Monument: A Matrix of Liberty

2) Faith

3) Morality

4) Law

5) Education

6) Liberty.

Section 2: The Story of Liberty:

7) The Chain of Liberty: Preparation of the Seed of the American Republic

8) The Pilgrims: Planting the Seed of the American Republic

9) The Christian Colonization of America: Cultivating the Seed of Liberty

10) Advance of Liberty in Early America: Fruit of the Seed of the American Republic

11) Decline of the American Republic in the 20th Century: Growth of a Different Seed

12) Being Watchmen on the Walls: Replanting the Seed of the American Republic

 

Be a part of advancing God s monumental story. This course is the ideal means of providing you and your family and friends with the ideas necessary to live in Christian liberty.

Instructors: Stephen McDowell and Kirk Cameron. Book author: Stephen McDowell

Format: 13 sessions. Session 1: The film Monumental. The other 12 sessions are comprised of reading a chapter, listening to a 30-minute discussion of the chapter, and answering review questions.

 

America’s Providential History

* This course is highly recommended for everyone. It not only teaches a great overview of Christian history and Biblical worldview, but introduces the student to many primary source writings.

A course using the books: America’s Providential History; America’s Providential History, A Documentary Sourcebook; and Teacher’s Guide to America’s Providential History. There are CDs teaching much of the material in America’s Providential History that can be used as a supplement with this course, but these are optional.

Discover why many historians consider the Bible America’s founding document. Learn how God’s presence was evident at our nation’s founding in the men who fought for independence and shaped the Constitution. Beginning with ancient history, the course presents a providential view of significant events leading to the establishment of America. It examines the Reformation, the Pilgrims, the role of the clergy and church, the Christian foundations of education and economics, and the development of liberty. Cites primary source documents that show our nation grew from Christian principles and reveals how to bring them back into the nation today.

The Documentary Sourcebook contains over 25 historical writings. Reading primary source materials is the best way to learn of the faith and worldview of America’s founders. These writings show the Founders had a Christian philosophy of government, they understood the divine purpose of civil government, and they knew that government begins internally in the heart of man with the ability to govern his own life; hence, self-government is essential for civil liberty. Selections including: Columbus’ Christian Character and Divine Mission; The Fast and Thanksgiving Days of New England; Election Day in Early America; Letters of John Quincy Adams to His Son on the Bible and Its Teachings and much more. The Teacher’s Guide contains questions for each chapter, supplemental readings from the Documentary Sourcebook, lists of materials for further study, chapter outlines, tests, and more.

Authors: Stephen McDowell and Mark Beliles

Format: Course comprised of 3 books. Various written assignments are given in APH Teacher’s Guide. Sixteen or more sessions.

 

God’s Blueprint for Life, Liberty, & Property: A Bible Study on the Ten Commandments

America is becoming a lawless society because the church has become lawless. The church has in many ways disregarded all uses of God’s basic moral laws as revealed in the Ten Commandments: for civil use as a curb against sinful action in society, for didactic use as the rule by which we should govern our lives and grow to maturity, and for theological use as a mirror that serves as a schoolmaster to bring us to Christ. Through a series of questions and answers, using hundreds of Scriptures, this Bible study will guide you through the prohibitive nature of the commands, the positive corollaries and rights rooted in these commands, and their application in civil society.

Author: Stephen McDowell
96 pages, paperback

 

What People Are Saying

“This is the best workbook I’ve read that shows God’s miraculous hand in American history. If you want your children and grandchildren to understand why America became the freest, most powerful and blessed nation in all of history, then you need to read this awesome book. I highly recommend it. My family and I have been captivated by Stephen McDowell’s America’s Providential History and I want you and your family to be blessed by its pages as well.” – Kirk Cameron

“Many years ago I read the America’s Providential History book. The impact of the history of our country had a life changing effect in my life. God has spoken to my heart to share this book at our conferences and make it available to other Christians so that they may obtain knowledge and become aware of their Christian heritage and experience the effect of it in their lives. The lack of knowledge concerning the history of our country has had a tremendous negative effect on America and Americans.” – Dave Meyer, Life in the Word / Joyce Meyer Ministries

“When I went to college, it was all about memorizing information.  There was very little focus on thinking for myself.  However, now that I attend the Biblical Worldview University at Providence Foundation, things are changing.  I am now learning to identify the principles found in the Bible so that I can apply them to every area of my life including my usefulness in my future and third career.” – Mary from California

“Wow, what an amazing course! What you carry is so transformational…. The school was LIFE CHANGING! I feel like life won’t ever be the same for me. Everything changes.” – A student from Pennsylvania

“Eleven other leaders in the Oklahoma State Department of Education and I are currently in week four of the Monumental workbook and DVD series. It is a powerful series and we are thankful for the opportunity to study it alongside God’s Holy Word.” – Michele, Oklahoma Director of Elementary English Language Arts