(DOWNLOAD) "America’s Primal Prayer" by Michael Nedderman # eBook PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: America’s Primal Prayer
- Author : Michael Nedderman
- Release Date : January 11, 2016
- Genre: Politics & Current Events,Books,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 322 KB
Description
America’s Primal Prayer will be controversial in the political and culture wars for several reasons but especially if the 75% of Christians who currently don’t vote (70 million or so) learn: (1) that the Founders dedicated the nation to Jesus Christ, consequently, (2) this is truly “one nation under [that] God,” and (3) that such an understanding desperately needs their political support which would be an important way, as Jesus put it, to “confess me before men” (Matt 10:32-33). Without the support of those non-voting Christians, secular (godless) Left Wing Extremists will succeed in their unrelenting attack on the American Theory of Government and its Jesus-based “Chain of delegated Authority” (God > man > government) and “Liberty Equation” (that our rights come from God).
Michael Nedderman began this project in a 2009 letters-to-the-editor debate and after a fruitless search for any commentary on what he thought is obvious: the reference to the “Supreme Judge of the world” in the last paragraph of the Declaration of Independence is a clear reference to Jesus Christ inserted into Jefferson’s draft by the Christians in the Second Continental Congress, the Declaration’s actual author. That reference clarifies Jefferson’s less specific references to “Nature’s God” and “Creator,” as well as to Congress’ own reference to “divine Providence,” with an explicit identification that it is Jesus Christ to whom the nation perpetually prays for guidance and righteousness using his well-known biblical title: “…appealing [praying] to the Supreme Judge of the world…” (comment and emphasis added).
America’s Primal Prayer demonstrates that the Founders dedicated the nation to Jesus Christ when they officially, perpetually, and gratefully “confess[ed] [him] before men” (Matt 10:32-33) in the Declaration on behalf of the entire nation, then and now, when citing him as (1) the moral authority for independence (first sentence), (2) the beneficent source of our unalienable rights and individual political sovereignty from which “we the People” delegate only limited powers to government (second sentence), and (3) by humbly offering two prayers to Jesus for protection and guidance (concluding paragraph)--yes, the Constitution is one important answer to those prayers.
While the phrase, “one nation under God,” wasn’t added to the Pledge of Allegiance until 1954, it’s an explicit reference to the historical fact of the Declaration’s Christ-based Chain of Delegated Authority (God > man > government), and of that Chain’s manifestation in the Constitution as the immutable Liberty Equation inherent in the American form of government (that our rights come from God) which has a 240 year history of not being the theocracy the secular (godless) Left falsely alleges.
Significantly, the American Theory of Government, as it manifests in the Constitution, cannot be changed (the meaning of “immutable”) because it is set in the “historical concrete” of the Declaration of Independence and politely sealed with the term, “self-evident,” meaning that the founding generation, even today, is saying that anyone who disagrees is objectively, perpetually, and inexcusably wrong.
That self-evident political Theory, including its Christ-based Chain of Delegated Authority and Liberty Equation, is woven into the unamendable fabric of the Constitution because its “we the people” are the very same people “created equal” and providentially endowed by Jesus Christ (the Declaration’s “Creator”), the very same “we the People” who “consent to be governed” by the terms of the Constitution which intrinsically expresses the Founders’ Fear of sinful people with power. To argue otherwise would require making the absurd assertion that the Constitution’s “we the People of the United States” was intended to be outside of the all-encompassing set of people defined by the Declaration’s “all men.” Clearly, “we the People” is a sub-set of “all men.”
And then there’s Parts 2 and 3...