No King
but King Jesus!
Must Be Our Battle Cry
By David Barton
This year marks 230 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 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 America, we may ask how has this been achieved? What
was the basis of American Independence? John Adams said “The general principles
on which the Fathers achieved independence were the general principles of
Christianity.” Perhaps the clearest identification of the spirit of the American
Revolution was given by John Adams in a letter to Abigail the day after Congress
approved the Declaration. He wrote her two letters on that day; the first
was short and concise, jubilant that the Declaration had been approved. The
second was much longer and more pensive, giving serious consideration to what
had been done that day. Adams cautiously noted: “This day will be the most
memorable epic in the history of America. I am apt to believe that it will
be celebrated by succeeding generations as the great anniversary festival.”
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. Adams contemplated whether it would be proper
to hold such celebrations, but then concluded that the day should be commemorated
– but in a particular manner and with a specific spirit. As he told Abigail:
“It ought to be commemorated as the day
of
deliverance by solemn acts of devotion to God Almighty.”
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]?”
An interesting question: why is it that in
America the Fourth of July and Christmas were our
two top holidays? Note his answer: “Is it not that, in the chain of human
events, the birthday of the nation is indissolubly linked with the birthday
of the Savior? That it forms a leading event in the progress of the Gospel
dispensation? Is it not that the Declaration of Independence first organized
the social compact on the foundation of the Redeemer’s mission upon earth?
That it laid the cornerstone of human government upon the first precepts of
Christianity?”
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.
Fifty-six Men
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.”
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.”
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 France,
Holland, and others decided maybe we weren’t such a bad risk and began loaning
us money. So where did we get money for the first three years? Congress, at
that time, could not have obtained a loan of one thousand dollars, yet Robert
Morris effected loans upon his own credit, of tens of thousands. In
1781, George Washington conceived the expedition against Cornwallis, at Yorktown.
He asked Judge Peters of Pennsylvania, “What can you do for me?” “With money,
everything, without it, nothing,” he replied, at the same time turning with
anxious look toward Mr. Morris. “Let me know the sum you desire,” said Mr.
Morris; and before noon Washington’s plan and estimates were complete. Robert
Morris promised him the amount, and he raised it upon his own responsibility.
It has been justly remarked, that: “If
it
were not demonstrable by official records, posterity would hardly be made
to believe that the campaign of 1781, which resulted in the capture of Cornwallis,
and virtually closed the Revolutionary War, was sustained wholly on the credit
of an individual merchant.” America couldn’t repay him because there was no
money and yet Robert Morris never complained because he had given his word.
You 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 Washington’s success at the
battle of Trenton, he finally returned home to find that his wife had died
and his children scattered. He lost almost everything that was important to
him but kept his word.
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.
Of Clergy and Mottos
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 14:17, etc.); however, this is not unusual considering the
prominent role that many ministers played in the Revolution.
One such example is John Peter Muhlenburg.
In a sermon delivered to his Virginia congregation on January 21, 1776, he
preached verse by verse from Ecclesiastes
3 – the passage which speaks of a season and a time to every purpose under
heaven. Arriving at verse 8, which declares that there
is a time of war and a time of peace, Muhlenburg noted that this surely was
not the time of peace; this was the time of war. Concluding with a prayer,
and while standing in full view of the congregation, he removed his clerical
robes to reveal that beneath them he was wearing the uniform of an officer
in the Continental army! He marched to the back of the church; ordered the
drum to beat for recruits and over three hundred men joined him, becoming
the Eighth Virginia Brigade. John Peter Muhlenburg finished the Revolution
as a Major-General, having been at Valley Forge and having participated in
the battles of Brandywine, Germantown, Monmouth, Stonypoint, and Yorktown.
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 Watts Hymnals – one of the strongest doctrinal hymnals of
the Christian faith (Isaac Watts authored “O God Our Help In Ages Past,” “Joy
to the World,” “Jesus Shall Reign,” and several other classic hymns). Distributing
the Watts Hymnals among the soldiers served two purposes: first, its pages
would provide the needed wadding; second, the use of the hymnal carried a
symbolic message. Reverend Caldwell took that hymn book – the source of great
doctrine and spiritual truth – raised it up in the air and shouted to the
Americans, “Give ‘em Watts, boys!”
The spiritual emphasis manifested so often
by the Americans during the Revolution caused one Crown-appointed British
governor to write to Great Britain complaining that: “If you ask an American
who is his master, he’ll tell you he has none. And he has no governor but
Jesus Christ.”
Letters like this, and sermons like those preached
by the Reverend Peter Powers titled “Jesus Christ the King,” gave rise to
a sentiment that has been described as a motto of the American Revolution.
Most Americans are unaware that the Revolution might have had mottoes, but
many wars do (e.g., in the Texas’ war for independence, it was “Remember the
Alamo”; in the Union side in the Civil War, it was “In God We Trust”; in World
War I, it was “Remember the Lusitania”; in World War II, it was “Remember
Pearl Harbor”; etc.). A motto of the American Revolution directed against
the tyrant King George III and the theologically discredited doctrine of the
Divine Right of Kings (which asserted that when the king spoke, it was the
voice of God speaking directly to the people) was simple and direct: “No King
but King Jesus!” Another motto (first suggested by Benjamin Franklin and often
repeated during the Revolution) was similar in tone: “Rebellion to Tyrants
is Obedience to God.”
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.
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Author and historian David Barton is the Founder and President of
WallBuilders, a national pro-family organization which distributes historical,
legal, and statistical information; and helps citizens become active in their
local schools and communities. WallBuilders is a name taken from the Bible book of Nehemiah. And just as Nehemiah led a grassroots movement in Jerusalem to rebuild
the walls of that city and restore its strength and honor; so, too, WallBuilders
seeks to energize the grassroots today to rebuild that which makes America
strong—its constitutional, moral, and religious foundations. For more information
regarding WallBuilders visit their web site at www.wallbuilders.com, call
them at (817) 441-6044 or write to them at P. O. Box 397, 426 Circle Drive,
Aledo, TX 76008-0397.