Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Human Nature And The Declaration Of Independence Essay -- essays resea
 Human Nature and the Declaration of Independence            I would like to show that the view of human nature that is shown in The  Declaration of Independence is taken more from the Bible and that that view is  in disagreement with two of the three esays given in class. The Biblical  perspective of man is that he was created by a divine Creator with a specific  plan in mind and made in the image of his Creator. Men are entitled to the  pursuit of happiness but also required by the Laws of Nature and Nature's God to  be the just attendants of the land and of the governed. The Nature of man is  sinful so that they must be governed but those who govern must be accountable to  God just as the founding fathers were. God is Sovereign over men as the final  Judge.         The Declaration of Independence is a document co-written by the  founding fathers in order to declare their independence of the Crown of Britain.  They belived this to be within their rights indowed upon them by their Creator.  Believing that they were under religious persecution and certain forms of  "absolute tyranny" from Britian the founding fathers felt it was necessary to  break the bonds that connected them to the monarchy. Not only did they feel they  had the God given right to do that but they also based their arguments on the  workings of governments of the time and contemporary theories of government of  writers and political-social thinkers of their time.         The three essays that were given to us in class, Politics by Aristotle,  Of Commonwealth by Thomas Hobbes, and Of the Limits of Government by John  Locke are all very intersting essays on how government is supposed to funtion.  Although the founding fathers probably read all three of these essays and  simialar philosphical thought went into the writing of The Declaration of  Independence I think that the only essay of the really used by the founding  fathers was Of the Limits of Government by John Locke. Unfortunately the  version of this essay given to us in class was truncated and consisted actually  of two different essays written by John Locke. . Thomas Hobbes [1588-1679] is  the founder of the theories of Hobbism which calls on absolute monarchy in order  to deal with what he calls inherently selfish, aggrandizing nature of humanity.  ...              ...place to God, and afterwards to the laws."         It seems pretty clear to me when I readThe Declaration of Independence  and when I read quotes from the founding fathers and their contemporaries that  it was the work of strong Bible believing men that first made the monumental  leap in breaking union with Britian. Unfortunately their words and lives have  gone by the wayside in our hearts and minds.Instead of learning about George  Washington's famous words of Christian faith or how he emerged unscathed from  battle with his uniform riddeled with bullet holes our History books teach us  all about how he could not lie when he chopped down the cherry tree. If men such  as Hobes and Aristotle could have even welled up enough courage in their cold  and timid souls 200 years ago to break the tyrrany of the British, I strongly  believe that our country would have quickly decayed in immorality and greed.         "So whither you eat or drink or whatever you do, do it all for the glory  of God."  (1Cor 10:31)    - Christianity and the Constitution p.51,53 ; America's Providential History  p.156 ; Myth of Separation p.195-96                       
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