SAVE OUR NATION


Cross Publications, Savannah, Georgia, 2000.



IN GOD WE TRUST

This site describes the Christian heritage of our country, the United States of America.
Our historic documents were written with a Christian culture in place.
We have freedom and dignity as human beings because we are creatures of God.
The most common book found in American homes has always been and still is The Bible.
We need to trust in God and follow His way if we are to receive God's blessing.

Jesus Christ is more relevant today than ever before! In a secular global community that has essentially reduced everyone to a number, Jesus through his Church and his Word seems to be the lone voice crying out for the dignity and freedom of each individual human being. We hope and pray that Jesus Christ will help us Save Our Nation.


The United States of America and Western Civilization were founded on the Biblical ethic, where society is in harmony with God our Creator. Religious freedom and the lure of economic gain were the primary reasons for migration to America. Following the discovery of Florida by Ponce de Leon in 1513, St. Augustine, Florida became the first permanent European settlement in America in 1565, from which missionaries spread Christianity to the native American Indians. The first Mass of Thanksgiving on North American soil was actually celebrated by the Spanish with the Timucuan Indians from Seloy village in attendance on September 8, 1565 in St. Augustine, Florida.

Four of the original 13 English colonies were specifically chartered for religious freedom, as a refuge from religious persecution in England at the time - William Bradford and the Pilgrim Congregationalists at Cape Cod in 1620 and the Calvinist John Winthrop and the Puritans in 1629 in Massachusetts; Lord Baltimore George Calvert and his son Cecil Calvert for the Catholics in Maryland in 1632; Roger Williams and the Baptists in Providence, Rhode Island in 1644, the first colony established for religious freedom for all faiths; and William Penn and the Quakers in 1682 in Pennsylvania. The Mennonites also moved to Pennsylvania in 1683 at the invitation of William Penn, for Pennsylvania was also established for universal religious toleration.

Early American writings reflected this belief in God, such as the Mayflower Compact, which allowed for the first time ever consent by the governed, and A Model of Christian Charity, which warned of the dangers of seeking pleasure and profits over virtue.

The theocracy, a society where the State is ruled by the Church, of the Puritans eventually gave way to religious excess, exemplified by the Salem witch trials of 1692, in which 19 women were executed, and a hundred more awaited sentence based on "spectral evidence." The Salem witch trials led to a tension between Church and State.

However, spirituality stayed ingrained in American culture, as evidenced by the religious revivals of Johnathan Edwards and George Whitefield during the Great Awakening 1734-1740.

Thomas Jefferson was perhaps the leading philosopher and architect of our country. Jefferson was a Christian Deist and believed that God created the universe, but as a clockmaker - once set in motion, it would run itself on the rational laws of nature. In the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson speaks of God our Creator and the Natural Law. "All men are created equal with certain unalienable rights, among them Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of happiness."

The Liberty Bell of Philadelphia rang out on July 8, 1776, proclaiming the first public reading of the Declaration of Independence.
Inscribed on the Liberty Bell are the words and the citation from the Book of Leviticus 25:10 -
"Proclaim LIBERTY throughout all the Land unto all the Inhabitants thereof - Lev. XXV:X".

Our Constitution was framed to ensure that the United States would be a republic, that the supreme power would rest with American citizens who are entitled to elect representatives responsible to them.

The Bible was a part of colonial life, and our Constitution was written with a Christian culture in place. James Madison, the Father of the Constitution, recognized that we needed to govern ourselves by the Ten Commandments of God if we were to survive as a nation. We see this in our public life through the continuance in our oaths of office including the Presidency of the ending phrase, "So help me God."

The architecture of the U. S. Supreme Court building reflects this biblical foundation. For example, at the center of the sculpture over the east portico of the Supreme Court Building, there is the image of Moses holding the two tablets of the Ten Commandments; these are also engraved over the chair of the Chief Justice and on the bronze doors of the Supreme Court. The Ten Commandments of God are the foundation of the moral code and legal system of justice for Western Christian civilization.

On one hand, our founding fathers wanted to prevent a state-controlled religion, as seen under the absolute monarchies of Europe, such as the Anglican Church in England or the Holy Roman Empire throughout Europe. On the other hand, they wanted to protect religious freedom and freedom of speech, often the major reason for migration to America. This was the rationale for the First Amendment of the Bill of Rights to be included in the Constitution of the United States:

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion,
or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;
or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press;
or the right of the people peaceably to assemble,
and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

The "Father" of our nation, George Washington had a strong belief in God, and is forever pictured in prayer during the cold winter months at Valley Forge. When the Revolutionary War was finally won, he sent the following message to the Governors of the 13 colonies, that he would " make it my earnest prayer that God would have you, and the State over which you preside, in his holy protection." President George Washington stated it was impossible to rightly govern without God and the Bible. In his 1796 Farewell Speech following his second term as President, a speech noted for establishing and sustaining our great nation, he stated, "Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable supports."


EG Leutze - George Washington crossing the Delaware, 1851, Metropolitan Museum of Art

Religious currents streamed through the American continent with the expanding frontier. John Wesley of the newly-formed Methodists of England appointed Thomas Coke in 1784 as the first superintendent of the Methodist Church in America. Methodist circuit-riders were effective missionaries in spreading the Christian faith to settlers in the mid-West. Charles Finney started the Second Great Awakening during the 1830s. Such Evangelical movements became the most influential religious activity in America, characterized by religious revivals which emphasized the need for a personal conversion to the way of our Lord Jesus Christ.

Abraham Lincoln appointed Salmon Chase as Secretary of the Treasury. During the Civil War, Chase wrote the US Mint on November 20, 1861 that "the trust of our people in God should be declared on our national coins." James Pollock, the Director of the Mint, first placed "God our Trust" and other phrases on coins from 1861 to 1863. The two-cent coin of 1864 was the first circulating US coin to bear the phrase In God We Trust. George T. Morgan designed the beautiful Liberty Silver Dollar series, produced from 1878 through 1904 and again in 1921; it was the first complete silver dollar set to include the inscription. Since that time, all of our coins and dollar bills have the inscription In God We Trust. In God We Trust became our national motto on July 30, 1956 under President Dwight D. Eisenhower.

The 1878 Carson City Silver Dollar depicting the inscription In God We Trust.

The tragic treatment of Native Americans led to the dispossession of Indian lands, and African-American slavery was not addressed until the Civil War, which was fought for freedom, freedom for all. In a tribute to the 52,000 Americans that had been killed, injured or lost in the 3-day battle of Gettysburg, Abraham Lincoln in his 1863 Gettysburg Address declared that "this nation under God shall have a new birth of freedom - and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth." The Thirteenth through Fifteenth Amendments to the Constitution were added after the Civil War to end slavery (1865), to provide equal protection to all that were defined as citizens (1868), and to grant the vote to former slaves (1870). The belief and expression "Nation under God" preceded and later was incorporated into our Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag of the United States of America.


The Statue of Liberty, Liberty Island, New York.


And where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty.
ll Corinthians 3:17

The Statue of Liberty, the symbol of freedom and of our nation, was given to the United States in 1884 as a gift from France as an expression of friendship. The inspiration for the Statue came from Edouard Rene Lefebvre de Laboulaye, the sculptor was Frederic Auguste Bartholdi, and the framework was designed by Alexandre Gustave Eiffel. There are three original Statues of Liberty. Bartholdi first created a life-sized model, which now stands in the Luxembourg Gardens in Paris. Our Statue of Liberty stands 151 feet tall and was placed on a pedestal on Liberty Island, New York, raising the height to 305 feet. The third Statue stands 35 feet tall on the tiny island Allee des Cygnes in the Seine River in Paris, given to France in 1889 by U. S. citizens living in Paris. The American poet Emma Lazarus conceived the poem in 1883 which gave the Statue its eternal meaning of freedom:
"Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free..."

The early twentieth century saw the beginning of new religious movements. The Pentacostal movement originated in 1901 with Charles Fox Parham at Bethel Bible College in Topeka, Kansas, and gained further momentum with his student W. J. Seymour, who founded the Azusa Street Revival in Los Angeles in 1906. Biblical Fundamentalism accepted the Bible as the only necessary source of teaching about Christ. Seeking to defend the Bible from modern liberalism, a group of Christian ministers published the twelve-volume The Fundamentals: A Testimony to the Truth from 1910 to 1915. The term fundamentalist first appeared in 1920 in a Baptist weekly newspaper, the Watchman-Examiner.

The Catholic Bishop Fulton J. Sheen and the Evangelist Billy Graham were the first to successfully utilize the media of television to spread the Word of God in the middle of the twentieth century.

During and after the world war years, Americans generally were raised the same, and our families gave us the same value system. In school, we were taught a morality based on the Bible and the Ten Commandments, said the Lord's Prayer, recited the Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag, and sang God Bless America.

God Bless America,
Land that I love
Stand beside her,
And guide her,
Through the night
With the Light from above,
From the mountains,
To the prairies,
To the ocean,
White with foam,
God bless America,
My home sweet home.
God bless America,
My home sweet home.

The Bible guides us on the road of life, gives prophecy on the end times, and leads us to God in the afterlife. The Bible records salvation history and is composed of Hebrew Scripture, the Old Testament, which includes the Creation, the story of Adam and Eve, Moses and the Ten Commandments, and the awaiting of the Messiah. The New Testament includes the life and teachings of Jesus Christ in the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John; the Acts of the Apostles, the Letters of Paul, the Catholic or Universal Letters, and the Book of Revelation.




1963 was a tumultuous year for the United States - the year of Vietnam involvement, civil rights discord, the Supreme Court reversal of 80 previous decisions with the removal of the Lord's prayer and Bible readings from public schools, and the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, with the subsequent loss of values and direction in our society.

Secularism and atheism themselves became puritanical in the late twentieth century, as God, the Ten Commandments, the Bible, and school prayer were stamped out of public schools and American life. The result led to guns, sex education and the distribution of prophylactics in public schools, and subsequently violence, drug abuse, and loss of respect for one's neighbor in American life, with near-destruction of the American family.

The Supreme Court needs another chance to restore freedom of religion and prayer in our schools.
To quote Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart, who wrote the dissenting opinions in both Supreme Court decisions on school prayer (Engel v Vitale and Abington v Schempp), "To deny the wish of these school children in reciting prayer is to deny them the spiritual heritage of our Nation...If religious exercises are held to be an impermissible activity in schools, religion is placed at an artificial and state-created disadvantage. Viewed in this light, permission of such exercises for those who want them is necessary if the schools are truly to be neutral in the matter of religion. And a refusal to permit religious exercises thus is seen not as the realization of state neutrality, but rather as the establishment of a religion of secularism." Atheism denies the intelligent design of the universe. The religion of secularism should then fall under the First Amendment law of religious freedom and the separation of Church and State. At present the religions of Secularism and Atheism are dictatorial, imposing their beliefs on the American people.

Morality hit a new low during the 1992-2000 administration. The first step towards euthanasia became legal in Oregon, same-sex union became legal in Vermont, and the specter of a police state grew as the administration supported the invasion of our privacy through government surveillance and proposed the disarming of America, thus removing our best defense against tyranny. Traditional Bioethics came under attack with discussion of human cloning and improper means of stem cell research.

One can see from the Bible and the very biology of the human body that it is natural for a man and a woman to be together (Genesis 1:27-28). God created woman because "it is not good for man to be alone" (Genesis 2:18). From the beginning of time, as recorded in the Book of Genesis, God planned for man and woman to unite in marriage and live in harmony and mutual comfort for continuity of his creation, the human race (Genesis 2:23-25).

Homosexuality is the ultimate lie. Even though the Bible forbids homosexuality both in Hebrew Scripture (Leviticus 18:22) and in the New Testament (Romans 1:25-27), same-sex union is glorified as an attractive lifestyle and defended as a right by secular humanism. But realistically it is an unnatural lifestyle fraught with tragedy and danger. AIDS, the Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome, was first described in homosexual men in 1981, and, as the disease spread, was first called GRID (Gay Related Immune Disease). In fact, approximately 50% of AIDS patients in the United States are homosexual. The CDC reported in 2008 that 53% of new cases of HIV disease occur in male-to-male sexual contact. As with all human beings, it is important to treat those who lead such lives with compassion, dignity, and respect.

The most devastating effect on our future is the nightmare of abortion, as the death toll from legalized abortion reached 50 million this year. The civil rights of the unborn remain violated, in spite of public opinion and the visualization of the baby in the mother by ultrasound. With 50 million Americans missing 36 years of age and under, this group comprises the New American Minority!

Let us contrast Mexico with the United States. Whereas abortion, homosexuality, and materialism have led to a relative sparsity of the young in the United States, 50% of the 100 million people of Mexico are under age 30! The future rests with the young. It is not difficult to see that the prevailing language of the United States of America in a generation will be Spanish.

Hablas Espanol?


This young American waving our flag at a prayer service
became a symbol of hope following September 11, 2001.


The horrendous events of September 11, 2001 show our need for God's blessing on our Nation. We desperately need to pray to God for his help in this latest threat to human freedom and our Western Christian civilization.
Our children need to learn about God, the Bible, and the Ten Commandments if we are going to preserve our Western culture.
We must support marriage and the traditional family.
We must preserve our freedom and our Bill of Rights if we are to enjoy our God-given rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
America needs to turn back to God and live in harmony with our Creator.




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