TheRealMafoo said:
There is a reason the word god is not used, or ever used. It was not because "Divine Providence" is clearer, or easier to say. It's because while they were religious people, they felt strongly that religion should not be a basis for our government. To somehow think today that because they believed in God (and a lot of them did not), that attaching it to a national pledge would be ok, is to not know what they stood for. If she had said "founding fishes" and not fathers, then that would be along the same lines. I do think today, she feels out founding fathers would have enjoyed more references to God in out documents. If they wanted that, they would have done that. Now I agree 100% that she is not a moron, and has been victimized by the media, but there are real things about her to worry about, and this comment in my opinion is one of them (not because she didn't know when it was written, but because she thinks religion should play a larger roll in politics). |
They do use the word "God", read the Declaration.
But really you missed the point of divine providence if you think the founding fathers didn't see a role for God in government. The entire concept of Divine Providence is built on the notion that the concept of a higher power is essential to safeguarding the most important aspects of our democracy. Specifically that the rights of men are unalienable because they are endowed with those rights, not by men, but instead by their creator. And thus those rights, having been endowed by a higher power, are beyond the right of one man to strip from another.
They aren't saying 'All hail the christian god'. They are saying 'Whatever higher power you believe in..thats where your unalienable rights come from.'. Hence why they would wholeheartedly agree with "Under god"...even the ones who didn't believe in god. Because the notion of rights being beyond reproach was so vitally important that ascribing their endowment unto the citizenry to a power beyond the grasp of mankind was essential to protecting them.
Some of the founders go further than this:
"We have been assured, Sir, in the Sacred Writings, that 'except the Lord build the House they labor in vain who build it.' I firmly believe this; and I also believe that without his concurring Aid, we shall succeed in this political Building no better than the Builders of Babel"
This was said by Benjamin Franklin before the continental congress, does it sound familiar?
I'm sorry but Sarah Palin was right, you on the other hand are wrong. Do some historical reading and you will find more of stuff like this:
"The general Principles, on which the Fathers Achieved Independence, were the only Principles in which that beautiful Assembly of young Gentlemen could Unite…Now I will avow, that I then believed, and now believe, that those general Principles of Christianity, are as eternal and immutable, as the Existence and Attributes of God"
This was written by John Adams to Thomas Jefferson in 1813.
Much of what has been made of the supposed athiesm of many of these men are from quotes having to do with their very astute and correct observations that you cannot institutionalize religion as part of the government because it inevitably leads to abuse and problems. In this respect they certainly walked a fine line, but an essential line nonetheless as evidence by how crucial they viewed divine providence.
The fine line they walked was to make people understand that religion wouldn't rule the government but that a higher power laid the ground rules for which the government must operate within. Those ground rules being summarized as the right to life, liberty, and property.