The Bible Behind America’s Founding
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July 4 gets all the fireworks, but our actual independence vote landed on July 2, 1776, and that one detail opens the door to a much bigger reset of what we think we know about America’s founding. We walk through the real timeline from Richard Henry Lee’s motion, to Jefferson’s draft, to the edits Congress made, to why July 4 is better understood as Declaration Day, not the day the vote happened.
Then we tackle the argument lighting up headlines: Bible passages in public school curriculum. We explain why studying the Bible as literature and history is not the same thing as preaching it, and why so many classic American texts assume biblical references. If students read Martin Luther King Jr’s Letter From Birmingham Jail but don’t know who Paul is or what the fiery furnace story refers to, they miss the point. We also get specific about the “unconstitutional” claim, including what the 1963 Supreme Court decisions actually allowed in history and literature classes.
Finally, we bring it back to the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence and the question underneath everything: can you understand the Founding Fathers without biblical literacy when Scripture was so commonly quoted in their political writing? We cover the Dunlap broadside printing, why signatures come later on August 2, and we share a simple reading list you can use with your family this week, from John Adams’s letters to John Quincy Adams and Calvin Coolidge.
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