Friday, July 29, 2016

George Washington: Patriot, Leader and Founding Father

I've been wanting to post this one for some time, but with how I've been feeling [while awaiting transplant], this has not been accomplished. Here is some fascinating history on Founding Father and our First President, George Washington.

George Washington First Becomes a National Leader

On July 3, 241 years ago, George Washington took command of the newly formed Continental Army. Congress had selected him -- one of its own members -- to organize the farmers and local militia groups into an army capable of defeating the world’s greatest military power. Quite an undertaking!
One of his first orders to the new American military set a clear tone of what he expected from his troops and also told us much about his character. In that order, Washington urged that
"...every officer and man will endeavor so as to live and act as becomes a Christian soldier, defending the dearest rights and liberties of his country."
That his troops display Christian character was important to Washington, and he later additionally charged them:
"To the distinguished character of Patriot, it should be our highest glory to add the more distinguished character of Christian."
He also issued orders prohibiting swearing, profanity, and gambling. He clearly set a very high moral standard for his troops, but it was not more than what he expected from himself. In fact, while just a young boy, he copied out 110 maxims concerning good behavior and manners. Called his "Rules of Civility," he lived by them throughout his life, and they were especially apparent during his time as a soldier.
Washington longed for military life from the time he was a young boy, and he got his first experience during the French and Indian War, two decades before the American Revolution. He should have been killed in the Battle of the Monongahela, but his life was saved by God's Divine intervention. As he told his brother:
"[I] now exist and appear in the land of the living by the miraculous care of Providence that protected me beyond all human expectation; I had four bullets through my coat and two horses shot under me and yet escaped unhurt."
(Similar instances of his life being spared during the Revolutionary War are in the The Founders' Bible article, "George Washington: The Soldier Who Could Not Die").
It was as a result of what he did in the French and Indian War that he was first vaulted into the national spotlight. In fact, a famous military sermon preached in 1755 by the Rev. Samuel Davies (considered the greatest pulpit orator in American history) specifically singled out the young George Washington for special attention because of what happened in that battle.
It was largely because of Washington's experiences in that early war that he was chosen by his fellow citizens as a member of Congress, and then chosen by his peers in Congress as Commander-In-Chief. He led America on to a successful conclusion of the Revolutionary War, oversaw the formation of the U. S. Constitution, and guided us through the implementation of our new government as our first president. He is rightly honored as "The Father of His Country."
Washington fully understood that the important part he had played in America’s formation was by the direction of God, acknowledging:
“I have only been an instrument in the hands of Providence.”
As the anniversary of America's independence draws closer, let's honor one of the key individuals responsible for that independence: George Washington.

Religious Education Amongst Our Founding Fathers

A bit of history--much of this is unknown today--that is purposely forgotten by secularists who seek to removed religion from the public square as well as from our early history.

America's Founders at College
Too many indisputable facts from American history are ignored today because they impede the direction many progressives want to move culture. For example, while they claim that the Founders were largely secularists, few today know that most of them were graduates of colleges or universities that specialized in training ministers of the Gospel.
Princeton was founded in 1746, and John Witherspoon, a Gospel minister and signer of the Declaration of Independence, was the college's president from 1768-1794. He trained scores of individuals who became national and state leaders. Princeton required that "every student shall attend worship in the college hall morning and evening."
Yale University, founded in 1701, had Thomas Clap as its president from 1740-1766, when many of the Founders attended school there. Clap affirmed:
"The original end and design of colleges was to instruct, educate, and train up persons for the work of the ministry."
Harvard University was founded in 1636. (Pictured on the right is the original 1650 Harvard incorporation charter from the WallBuilders library.) Josiah Quincy, Harvard's president from 1829 to 1845, noted:
"[T]he College was conducted as a theological institution. . . having religion for its basis and chief object."
Altogether, 29 signers of the Declaration graduated from religiously-founded universities. But to acknowledge this today would certainly contradict the common educational assertion that our Founders were largely atheists, agnostics, and deists who wanted a secular country. But those assertions are not true.
Gouverneur Morris, a signer of the Constitution and the most active member of the Constitutional Convention, openly asserted:
"Religion is the only solid basis of good morals; therefore, education should teach the precepts of religion and the duties of man towards God."
In fact, he warned:
"There must be religion. What that ligament is torn, society is disjointed and its members perish. . . . The most important of all lessons is the denunciation of ruin to every state that rejects the precepts of religion."
Take note, America! This is a good warning to remember today.