It's Time to Reconnect Our Severed Roots
To the church in Sardis that had a reputation of being alive but was, in fact, dead, Jesus had an appropriate word. He said, "Wake up!" (Revelation 3:2; NIV). I have lately felt that same urgency for the church in America. Wake up!
It is time to “wake up” and realize how this nation is being taken from us under
our very noses. It is time to connect the
dots and realize that we have been severed from our Christian roots. Roots
produce fruit and reconnecting with our roots is a key to seeing a national
healing as promised in II Chronicles 7:14.
The
Severing of Our Roots
This severing of our roots has consisted primarily in the revising of our history and the secularizing of the First Amendment to the the U.S. Constitution that reads, “Congress shall
make no law concerning the establishment of religion or hindering the free
exercise thereof.” Secularists have wrenched this statement from its historical
context and original intent and made it to mean, not freedom of religion, but freedom from religion.
They have done this by seizing on the first phrase of
the Amendment that reads, “Congress shall make no law concerning the
establishment of religion,” and from it concocting a so-called “establishment
clause.” Contrary to all historical evidence, the secularists have been
successful in claiming that anything “Christian” on public property is a
violation of this “establishment clause.”
Based on this phony “establishment clause,” prayer and
Bible reading have been banned from public schools throughout America. Crosses
and Ten Commandment displays have been removed from public buildings and monuments. Christmas
is now called the “Winter Holiday” and carols that mention Jesus can no longer
be sung by public school children who are also told they cannot talk about
their faith in God at graduation ceremonies.
Where
is the Church?
This situation could never have happened if the church
in America had been awake and informed. But while we were busy enjoying our
conferences, concerts, seminars and revivals, the secularists were busy
revising our history and concocting a plan to secularize the nation by severing
us from our Christian roots. As Alexander Solzhenitsyn, who spent time in a Soviet labor camp, said, “To destroy a
people, you must first sever their roots” (Hyatt, Pilgrims and Patriots, 175).
We are now seeing the cultural fruit of our severed roots. The vitriolic anger, crudeness and violence so obvious today can be traced to the rejection of everything Christian from the public life of the nation. We are seeing the answer to the question posed by Benjamin Franklin when Thomas Paine sent him a manscript for publication. Noting that it contained an attack on Christianity, Franklin refused to print it and rhetorically asked, “If men are this wicked with Christianity, what would they be if without it?”
We are now seeing the cultural fruit of our severed roots. The vitriolic anger, crudeness and violence so obvious today can be traced to the rejection of everything Christian from the public life of the nation. We are seeing the answer to the question posed by Benjamin Franklin when Thomas Paine sent him a manscript for publication. Noting that it contained an attack on Christianity, Franklin refused to print it and rhetorically asked, “If men are this wicked with Christianity, what would they be if without it?”
The
Truth About the First Amendment
That the First Amendment had nothing to do with
barring Christian symbols and teachings from the public square was made clear when the day
after voting to ratify the First Amendment, those same Founders issued a
proclamation for a national day of prayer and thanksgiving. Congress continued
to be opened with prayer and Bible reading and prayer continued to be a daily
part of the normal school day in America. Presidents also continued to issue
proclamations for special days of prayer and thanksgiving.
It was also made clear by George Washington, who in
his Farewell Address, after serving two terms as the nation’s first president,
called on the citizens of the new nation to cling to “religion and morality,”
which he called “indispensable” supports for a stable and prosperous nation. He went on to say
that the person who would seek to undermine “these great pillars of human
happiness” can never claim to be an American patriot.
By implementing the First Amendment, the Founders were
simply saying that America would never have an official, state church as had
been the case in Europe since the time of Constantine. Indeed, it was from
these oppressive state churches that their parents and grandparents had fled.
When Thomas Jefferson used the phrase “wall of
separation” in a letter to a Baptist association, he was assuring them that the
First Amendment guaranteed them protection from persecution by the state such
as they had known in the Old World, and even in Jefferson’s home state of
Virginia. Jefferson saw the First Amendment as a unilateral wall erected to
keep the government out of the church, not to keep the influence of the church
out of government.
The words and actions of the Founders themselves
make it clear that the First Amendment was not put in place to stifle
Christianity or to be indifferent towards it. This was also made clear by Joseph Story (1779-1845) who served as a Supreme Court justice for
thirty-four years from 1811-1845. Commenting on the First Amendment, he said,
We are not to attribute this prohibition of a
national religious establishment to an indifference in
religion, and especially to Christianity, which none could hold in more
reverence than the framers of the Constitution (Hyatt, Pilgrims and Patriots,
153).
America’s
Founders Revered Christianity
Yes, America’s Founders revered Christianity and they counted on the
moral influence of Christianity to maintain civil liberty. This was obvious to
the young French sociologist, Alexis de Tocqueville, who came to America in
1831 to study her institutions. After nine months of studying all facets of
American society, Tocqueville concluded that Americans had combined
Christianity and civil liberty so intimately in their minds that it was
impossible to make them conceive of one without the other.
According to
Tocqueville, this linking of faith with civil liberty was the reason for their
passion to spread the Gospel to the American frontier where new settlements
were springing up. He wrote,
I
have known of societies formed by the Americans to send out ministers of the
Gospel in the new Western states, to found schools and churches there, lest
religion should be suffered to die away in those remote settlements, and the
rising states be less fitted to enjoy free institutions than the people from
whom they came. I met with New Englanders who abandoned the country in which they
were born in order to lay the foundations of Christianity and of freedom on the
banks of the Missouri, or in the prairies of Illinois. Thus, religious zeal is
warmed in the United States by the fires of patriotism.
From his
observations, Tocqueville concluded, “From the beginning, politics and religion
contracted an alliance which has never been dissolved” (Hyatt, Pilgrims
and Patriots, 168).
It’s Time to Wake Up!
America’s Founders would be
astonished to see how the First Amendment has been distorted by modern
secularists into a weapon against religious liberty, the very thing they meant
to protect. They would be shocked to hear of a judge ordering a cross to be
removed from a Veteran’s Memorial or a Marine corporal being forced out of the
military because of a Bible verse posted in her work station.
Wake up America! It’s time to
reconnect with our Christian roots and pray for another Great Awakening across
the land. Only then will our land be healed.
Dr. Eddie Hyatt conducts “America Reawakening” events, which consists of an inspiring, 3-session PowerPoint presentation
that documents how America was birthed out of prayer and a great spiritual awakening.
This article was derived from his book, Pilgrims and Patriots, which is also the basis for America Reawakening. It is available from Amazon and his website at www.eddiehyatt.com.
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