The 4th of July – A Time to Remember
By David Barton
This
year marks 228 years since our Founding Fathers gave us our National Birth
Certificate. We continue to be the longest on-going Constitutional Republic in
the history of the world. Blessings such as these are not by chance or
accidental. They are blessings of God.
On July 2, 1776, Congress voted to approve a complete separation from Great Britain. Two days afterwards — July 4th —the early draft of the Declaration of
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Independence was signed, albeit by only two individuals at that time: John Hancock, President of Congress, and Charles Thompson, Secretary of Congress. Four days later, on July 8, members of Congress took that document and read it aloud from the steps of Independence Hall, proclaiming it to the city of Philadelphia, after which the Liberty Bell was rung. The inscription around the top of that bell, Leviticus 25:10, was most appropriate for the occasion: “Proclaim liberty throughout the land and to all the inhabitants thereof.”
To see the turmoil in other nations, their struggles and multiple
revolutions, and yet to see the stability and blessings that we have
here in |
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It is amazing that on the very day they approved the Declaration, Adams
was already foreseeing that their actions would be celebrated by future generations.
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John Adams
believed that the Fourth of July should become a religious holiday –
a day when we remembered God’s hand in deliverance and a day of religious
activities when we committed ourselves to Him in “solemn acts of devotion
to God Almighty.” Such was the spirit of the American Revolution as
seen through the eyes of those who led it, evidenced even further in
the words of John Quincy Adams, one who was deeply involved in the activities
of the Revolution. In 1837, when he was 69 years old, he delivered a Fourth of July speech at Newburyport, Massachusetts. He began that address with a question: “Why is it, friends and fellow citizens, that you are here assembled? Why is it that entering on the 62nd year of our national existence you have honored [me] with an invitation to address you…?”
The answer was easy: they had asked him to address them because
he was old enough to remember what went on; they wanted an eye-witness
to tell them of it! He next asked them: “Why is it that, next to the
birthday of the Savior of the world, your most
joyous and most venerated festival returns on this day [the Fourth of
July]?” |
According to John Quincy Adams, Christmas and the Fourth of July were intrinsically connected. On the Fourth of July, the Founders simply took the precepts of Christ which came into the world through His birth (Christmas) and incorporated those principles into civil government.
Men of Honor & Integrity
Have
you ever considered what it meant for those 56 men — an eclectic group of
ministers, business men, teachers, university professors, sailors, captains,
farmers — to sign the Declaration of Independence? This was a contract that
began with the reasons for the separation from Great Britain and closed in
the final paragraph stating, “And for the support of this Declaration, with
a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge
to each other our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor.”
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Dr. Benjamin
Rush, the father of American Medicine and a signer, recorded that day
in his diary. In 1781, he wrote to John Adams “Do you recollect the
pensive and awful silence which pervaded the House when we were called
up, one after another, to the table of the President of Congress to
subscribe to what was believed by many at that time to be our death
warrants? The silence and gloom of the morning was interrupted, I well
recollect, only for a moment by Colonel Harrison of Virginia (a big
guy) who said to Mr. Gerry (small in stature) at the table: ‘I shall
have a great advantage over you, Mr. Gerry, when we are all hung for
what we are now doing... From the size and weight of my body I shall
die in a few minutes, but from the lightness of your body you will dance
in the air an hour or two before you are dead.’ This speech procured
a transient smile, but it was soon succeeded by the solemnity with which
the whole business was conducted.” |
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These
men took this pledge seriously. Robert Morris of Pennsylvania is an example
of the highest level of integrity. He was chosen as the financier of the
American Revolution. What an honor, except that there was no bank willing
to give any loans to help fund the Revolution. It was three years and
the Battle of Saratoga before America got any kind of funding at all.
After winning that battle, foreign nations like |
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see the same thing in the life of John Hart. He was a strong Christian
gentleman and Speaker of the House of Representatives in New Jersey. He
promised to help provide them with guidance and leadership. There were
three things that were important in his life; his Savior, his family and
his farm. Because of his signature on the Declaration, the British were
seeking him (and the rest of the signers) to execute as traitors. John Hart fled his home after which his farm
was ravaged, his timber destroyed, his cattle and stock butchered for
the use of the British army. He did not dare to remain two nights in the
same location. After |
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John Hancock, a very wealthy individual lived in a mansion reflecting his princely fortune — one of the largest in the Province of Massachusetts. During the time the American army besieged Boston to rid it of the British, the American officers proposed the entire destruction of the city. “By the execution of such a plan, the whole fortune of Mr. Hancock would have been sacrificed. Yet he readily acceded to the measure, declaring his willingness to surrender his all, whenever the liberties of his country should require it.” A man of his word, he demonstrated his integrity. |
Patriot
Pastors
The
16 Congressional proclamations for prayer and fasting throughout the Revolution
were not bland (i.e., the acknowledgment of Jesus Christ, the quoting of Romans
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One such example
is John Peter Muhlenberg. In a sermon delivered to his |
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Another minister-leader in the Revolution was
the Reverend James Caldwell. His actions during one battle inspired
a painting showing him standing with a stack of hymn books in his arms
while engaged in the midst of a fierce battle against the British outside
a battered Presbyterian church. During the battle, the Americans had
developed a serious problem: they had run out of wadding for their guns,
which was just as serious as having no ammunition. Reverend Caldwell
recognized the perfect solution; he ran inside the church and returned
with a stack of
The spiritual emphasis manifested so often by the Americans during
the Revolution caused one Crown-appointed British governor to write
to |
Conclusion
Preserving
American liberty depends first upon our understanding the foundations on which
this great country was built and then preserving the principles on which it was
founded. Let’s not let the purpose for which we were established be forgotten. The Founding Fathers have passed us a torch;
let’s not let it go out.
To
learn more about the quest for our freedom, read WallBuilder
resources such as Lives of the Signers,
Wives of the Signers (both reprints);
or view one of our video’s, The Spirit of
the American Revolution; or listen to the stories recounted by David Barton
in America’s Birthday. These, and many more, are available from WallBuilder’s
online store. To order or request a free catalog, call toll-free 800-873-2845;
or you may write to WallBuilders,