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America Is A Christian Nation And Founding Fathers

Discussion in 'History Forum' started by Ralph III, Jun 15, 2006.

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  1. Eric B

    Eric B Active Member
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    Oh, I wasn't discussing the version; I was discussing the movement (and poster whose name seems to reflect being part of that movement) that is named after it, and their position on the "Christian America" theory.
     
  2. Marcia

    Marcia Active Member

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    Regarding Moses leading the Jews out of Egypt....

    That is not a valid analogy at all. The Jews were foreigners in Egypt and did not originally come from there. They were made into literal slaves. Also, Moses was told by God to take them out of Egypt - this was all clearly initiated by God.

    However, the colonists in America rejected the King of their country (England) and rebelled against him. They fought a war to become independent of their King.

    Isn't this clearly going against the established government teachings of Rom. 13? After all, the early Christians were under some very harsh rulers who were persecuting and even killing them, but they did not rebel. So why is it okay that the colonists rebelled?
     
  3. Marcia

    Marcia Active Member

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    Isn't anyone going to answer my question?
     
  4. av1611jim

    av1611jim New Member

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    I don't know who this "THEY" is that you refer to. All I know is that nothing good ever came out of rebellion, Scripturally speaking.

    Obviously you don't know a whole bunch about history either. The "Reformation" was not about throwing off a government, per se, as much as it was a re-awakening to Scripture. As Scripture became more available to people they in turn challenged the unbiblical abuses by the Roman Chruch. Granted, The Roman Church held political power, yet the Reformers were not in rebellion to their rulers outside of Scriptural principles. i.e. "We ought to obey God rather than man." The Reformers were not interested in changing government as much as they were interested in changing a CHURCH!

    That scenario just simply was NOT the case in the rebellion of the Colonies. Twist, spin, dance, dodge, deflect, revise all you care to, but the simple truth is that GOD DOES NOT BLESS REBELLION.

    I have already posted the relevant Scriptures.

    Deal with them. Your straw men should be in Hollywood. They make great stand-ins for Dorothy's Scarecrow buddy.:laugh:
     
  5. av1611jim

    av1611jim New Member

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    Marcia;
    They dare not answer lest they appear to make God a liar. OR.....
    They dare not answer lest they have to admit that the Colonial Rebellion which founded our nation was in no way a 'Christian' thing to do and hence they would have to re-think their long and dearly held position. Oh my!!! THAT would sure injure someone's pride a bit would it not?

    Perhaps there is something MORE to being a Christian than swallowing the "Party Rhetoric" Hmmmmmmm?
     
  6. LadyEagle

    LadyEagle <b>Moderator</b> <img src =/israel.gif>

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    http://moseshand.com/studies/mctod.htm

    But on the other hand, they had been there for 400 years....So all of the people of the Exodus were literally born in Egypt.....

    As far as an American Rebellion, there had been repeated appeals and pleas to England and the final Declaration of Independence was heavily debated because the Americans, for the most part, still considered themselves to be Americans AND British/part of England. Revisionist history has turned this into something different than what actually led up to the war.
     
    #66 LadyEagle, Sep 5, 2006
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  7. corndogggy

    corndogggy Active Member
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    That's one flaw that everybody tries to bring up when they try to say that our founding fathers were Christian - trying to prove it by proving that they belived in a personal god. Well, yes, they did, but many of them did not believe in the divinity of Jesus, meaning that they were Deists, not Christians. There's a difference.
     
    #67 corndogggy, Sep 5, 2006
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  8. av1611jim

    av1611jim New Member

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    Still does not address the issue.

    The ISSUE is that God HATES rebellion.

    Deal with it. So far nobody that professes that we are a "Christian nation" has adequately faced the issue head on.

    Stop ducking, bobbing and weaving. "Rope-a-dope" will note work in this areana. It is dishonest (at best) to claim we were FOUNDED on Christian principles in light of this one fact. Rebellion.

    The FACT is that we rebelled AGAINST God when we rebelled against His appointed minister. i.e. King George. Romans 13
     
  9. RockRambler

    RockRambler New Member

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    It would probably be more accurate to say we were founded on MASONIC principles as to say we were founded on CHRISTIAN principles.

    (I say that as someone who was a 32nd degree Mason, before I was saved)
     
  10. Eric B

    Eric B Active Member
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    I'm not trying to Twist, spin, dance, dodge, deflect, revise, erect a straw man, etc. I myself, always thought it was hypocritical to see old-line Fundamentalists (IFB, and KJV Only advocates--that's who the "THEY" were) and others speak of our "Christian origins" and ignore the rebellion of the revolution, especially when they spend so much time blasting the "rebellion" of the 60's generation to the present, which they see as destroying this "Christian heritage".
    So that's why I was surprised to see you deny the Christian America theory. I thought you all believed in it. Well, at least it's nice to see someone who is consistent. I myself have always rejected that idea as well. It totally misorients our perspective into thinking our job is to save the nation through opposing the liberals, or whatever. All peoples have sinned, and the only "Christian nation" is the spiritual nation Peter describes in 1 Pet.2:9.

    The Reformers may not have been in rebellion to the form of Church government (after all, Luther was trying to reform the RCC from within, but this shows they still went along with the unbiblical notion of a state church). However, when he went against their doctrine and they did not change it for him, then he was in rebellion against their authority, and "we ought to obey God rather than man" is rebellion (against the "man" you are not obeying) justified by God under the premise that the "man" in that case has forfeited his God-given authority through persecution of the truth or otherwise using it to oppose God. You could say then "that is not rebellion, because you are on God's side", but that is basically semantics.
     
  11. LadyEagle

    LadyEagle <b>Moderator</b> <img src =/israel.gif>

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    The Mayflower Compact

    But you who say we were not founded as a Christian Nation have overlooked the Mayflower Compact:




    http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/amerdoc/mayflower.htm


    You are forgetting that we were not founded on rebellion, we were founded as a colony for "the Glory of God and Advancement of the Christian Faith."

    The Declaration of Independence did not come until over 150 years later, when the original founders of this colony, America, were all dead and buried.
     
  12. LadyEagle

    LadyEagle <b>Moderator</b> <img src =/israel.gif>

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    In his diary entry dated February 22, 1756, John Adams wrote:

    http://www.leaderu.com/orgs/cdf/onug/jadams.html

    Amen, Brother Adams.
     
  13. corndogggy

    corndogggy Active Member
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    Did I miss something? Are we still ruled by England? America was founded when we broke free of England and its religious persecution. If you want to go back further than that, then the original founders were actually the Native Americans... maybe we should incorporate their religious beliefs according to your way of thinking. At the least, unless you can prove that the original Native Americans were Christians... with your style of thinking, this was not a Christian nation.
     
  14. av1611jim

    av1611jim New Member

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    Quote: ""The Reformers may not have been in rebellion to the form of Church government (after all, Luther was trying to reform the RCC from within, but this shows they still went along with the unbiblical notion of a state church). However, when he went against their doctrine and they did not change it for him, then he was in rebellion against their authority, and "we ought to obey God rather than man" is rebellion (against the "man" you are not obeying) justified by God under the premise that the "man" in that case has forfeited his God-given authority through persecution of the truth or otherwise using it to oppose God. You could say then "that is not rebellion, because you are on God's side", but that is basically semantics.""
    _____________________________________________________________

    Semantics baloney!

    Can you Biblically show how the Sanhedrin "forfeited" their authority?

    Remember that Saul was in rebellion against God for over 38 years after David was annointed by Samuel, yet God never removed him from authority.
    Though God "rejected" Saul from being king of Israel, God never REMOVED him from leadership of that nation until Saul DIED.

    You say " "we ought to obey God rather than man" is rebellion ..." but that is not so, for if it were then God has contradicted Himself and you make God a liar. Besides, Luther was still under subjection to that government wherein he found himself. He did not try to OVERTHROW it. His focus was on changing it from within, as you so clearly pointed out.

    In any case, King George was still the ruling authority. The Colonies' WAR was to make a government in their OWN image rather than subjecting themselves to the mighty and loving hand of God, and TRUSTING HIM for the results. That is what Christians do. Haven't you read anything of the early church and what THEY endured? I dare say they had it much worse than our founders, yet they did not lead rebellion against Rome! They trusted He who knows the end from the beginning and who knows the very number of hairs on our heads.

    Besides, can anybody on this board who is convinced that we, The USA, are a Christian nation; honestly say that Jesus would have advocated the rebellion of the Colonies? HE WHO said love your enemies, pray for those who despitefully use you and do good to them who hate you?

    I trow not.

    By the way. When painting KJVo's and IFB's with such a broad brush as you have, sometimes you get paint on yourself! Remeber that, won't you?
     
  15. av1611jim

    av1611jim New Member

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    I am not forgetting anything LE. But prehaps you ought to RE-READ the portion you, yourself, have bolded!
    The people of the Mayflower Compact honored their King and country!!! They were not in rebellion and did not rebel as did the "Founding Fathers".
    As a matter of fact, they had no plans to start a new nation, but in fact they came for religious freedom and the spread of the gospel. A NEW government was not their intent, as their own words so clearly point out!

    Do the words "Our Sovereign Lord King James" sound like they were founding a new government???
     
    #75 av1611jim, Sep 6, 2006
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  16. LadyEagle

    LadyEagle <b>Moderator</b> <img src =/israel.gif>

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    Hey, wait a minute and take a deep breath here! That was the point I was trying to make - They were not in rebellion. Unless I am going blind, the premise some have made on this thread was that America was founded on rebellion - I posted about the Mayflower Compact to show that just the opposite is true - it was not founded on rebellion AND, they were, indeed, Christians. You can't have it both ways, either America was founded as Christian or it wasn't. The Mayflower Compact shows the whole idea of founding America was for "the Glory of God and Advancement of the Christian Faith."

    Next question: If America becomes an islamic republic, are Christians to submit to the authority of allah and sharia law, or are we to "obey God rather than man?"
     
  17. Marcia

    Marcia Active Member

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    When the first colonists came and signed that Mayflower Compact, they were founding the country for England, not as a separate country apart from the rule of England. It was not the US then! It only became independent and became the US when it rebelled against the King.

    Right, and they changed it with the Revolution when they broke away.

    I don't think England was making people follow the Anglican Church here in the early colonies. After all, they gave land to Fox for Quakers (PA), to Roger Williams for Baptists (RI), to whoever for MD to be Catholic, the Methodists went to Ga, etc.

    Only if a government forbids you to preach Jesus, do you refuse to submit. But that is not open rebellion as in overthrowing the government or fighting it with arms.

    What did the early Christians do? Did they lead a rebellion? No, they refused to submit and suffered the consequences. That is why they are martyrs.
     
  18. El_Guero

    El_Guero New Member

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    Uh . . . they were not the first . . . but, they were separatists.



    It was a weee bit more complicated than that.



    Yes, England was making people follow the Anglican Church here in the early colonies Baptists were placed in stocks for preaching and they were imprisoned for preaching . . . and we still preached through the jail cell windows . . . And until about 1840 we (Baptists) had to pay taxes to support the Anglican clergy.

    Again, a weeee bit more complicated than that.
     
  19. av1611jim

    av1611jim New Member

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    The Pilgrims of the Mayflower Compact were NOT here to establish "America" as a Christian nation.

    Do the words "Our Sovereign Lord King James" mean anything at all to you Lady Eagle. You posted those words, not I. No, you do not get my point at all!

    The people of the Mayflower are not the SAME people as those referred to as our "Founding Fathers". They are only seperated by about 150 YEARS!

    The United States of America was founded on rebellion against King GEORGE! Not King James. King James was looooooong dead by then. "He stinketh by now..."

    Do you get it now?
     
    #79 av1611jim, Sep 7, 2006
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  20. Eric B

    Eric B Active Member
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    And when the Church government wouldn't change from the inside out, then Luther broke away and had his own church, just like the colonists.
    What I am trying to understand here is where you draw the line between "rebellion" and "obeying God rather than men".

    I am not the one who painted them that way. Every time I see them they are complaining about the modern society and church, as if we were once a Christian society. Perhaps rather than a "Christian America", you believe in a "Christian British kingdom"? (Hence why you are so against the American revolution)?
    Well, all have sinned, and I wonder if you oppose the British (and the rest of Europe's) conquest of much of the world. Many people condone that, but then only condemn "rebellion" against it, as if conquest was of God (His means of "giving" certain people material favor) and didn't violate His commandments.
    Its that sort of inconsistent double standard that leads people to rebel in the firdt place. Then appealing to "just trust God" is misused to guarantee the dominance of whoever is in power under the premise that God wants them in power, which leads to the inference that perhaps God favors them.
    I'm not saying we should be overthrowing governments, and we can look to the exampple of the early Christians, but this is not to be used by or in favor of professing "Christian" governements to maintain others' oppression.
    Good point. And the same could have been asked about Communism. 20 years ago, many of the same people telling the oppressed to "trust God" were sure up in arms about the "threat" of them taking over, as well as the claim of them already influencing our government, media, education system, etc. Then, we bragged of taking them down.
    Is the opposition of a government only wrong when it has already conquered you?
     
    #80 Eric B, Sep 7, 2006
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