Our Founding Fathers

It’s August!

As children go back to school, will you help support our efforts to contend for their freedom to proclaim the faith too?

Our Founding Fathers are indeed the fathers of all Americans. DEI taught us to despise them, to concentrate on their faults, to think of ourselves as somehow more enlightened. Critical theory is all about destruction, about seeing through something so that you can no longer see the thing itself. DEI is the philosophy of the scoff and sneer.

But as Americans, we do well to think on the God of providence and to celebrate this day with thanksgiving. Now, mind you, I honor all peoples as they sing their anthems, giving thanks for their own special heritage. But our heritage is a cornucopia, a legacy that we are called to live up to.

Did giants once walk the earth? They were men like us, but what men! George Washington was the indispensable man, a soldier and a statesman, the man who launched the daring crossing of the Delaware. Signing the Declaration was one thing, but bringing it to fruition meant tenacity. And in a field of geniuses and strong spirit, Washington the statesman held it all together. And as we honor Washington's military leadership, we offer a nod of appreciation to Nathanael Greene, who employed mobility, rope a dope tactics that befuddled the British to the point of surrender. As a Fort Wayne resident, I might also add Mad Anthony, a general who took a lead slug at Yorktown and kept it the rest of his life.

We do well to think of the fiery spirit of the first colonial resistance, the likes of Sam Adams, who formed the Sons of Liberty, thought to throw tea into the harbor, and gave us a rallying cry of no taxation without representation. Patrick Henry was a spark plug, who gave us the cry, "Give me liberty or give me death." Of a totally different temperament, Benjamin Franklin was the genius of the revolution who gave the movement an international legitimacy. John Adams gave the revolution a tenacious mind. Jefferson was perhaps Adams' reverse image, who offered up a grand and poetic vision that would expand to the West and ultimately to what was a manifest destiny.

Giants? Yes, these were giants. Think of the misery caused by those who followed, but with no understanding. The French Revolution was a horror show. The Russian Revolution brought to the world a menace that has resulted in the deaths of over a hundred million, and the enslavement of many more. It is the spirit of these two later revolutions that is embodied in DEI. Ours as a revolution was not about toppling all that came before it. It was born from a tradition that drew upon Athens and Rome, the Magna Carta, and the English parliament. Ours was a revolution made possible by courage, but also grounded in the natural law. This is not license, but liberty of a people that embodies a piety that honors God, family, and country, and in that order. So, yes, fireworks are called for. And so must we teach our children and grandchildren why we light them.

The Rev. Dr. Peter Scaer is chairman and professor of Exegetical Theology and director of the M.A. program at Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne, Ind.

Be Informed
Think marriage doesn’t matter? Learn more about a new study on the effects of divorce on children with Dr. Brad Wilcox of the Institute for Family Studies

 

Be Equipped
Tim Goeglein of Focus on the Family brings you up to speed on a new study on the correlations between Christian faith and marriage in a recent Issues, Etc. podcast.

Be Encouraged
“Our Lord Jesus Christ assures us that the Heavenly Father makes His love for our kind evident in sunshine and rainfall (Matthew 5:45) along with sparrows and lilies (Matthew 6:25-33). So, we may expect to learn about the sanctity of every human life not only from His Word but also from His world.” –Pastor Michael Salemink

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