
4 min.
Providential Orchestration and the American Founding
Beginning the Human Story: Our Premortal Identity
Every great story begins before the first scene. The story of the West is no different. Before Sinai, before nations rose, before the rise and fall of empires, there is a deeper truth about the human person — a truth older than history itself.
The Hebraic worldview insists that human beings are not accidents of matter or products of power. We are not random outcomes of biology or playthings of fate. We are souls with purpose, known and loved by God before we were born, prepared for a purpose far greater than we understood. This is where the Western story truly begins.
We Existed Before We Were Born
In the restored gospel, premortal life is not a metaphor–it is reality. We lived as spirit sons and daughters of God. We learned. We grew. We chose. We prepared. We were not blank slates waiting to be written upon. We were eternal beings with identity, agency, and divine potential.
This truth changes everything:
- Our worth is not earned–it is inherent.
- Our purpose is not accidental–it is intentional.
- Our life is not random–it is part of a divine plan.
This single idea — that personhood is sacred and given — is the foundation of everything that follows in Western civilization:
- the belief in human rights
- the insistence on moral accountability
- the rejection of tyranny
- the dignity of the individual
- the possibility of freedom
Human beings are sacred. Freedom is not a luxury. It is a calling.
The Soul Before Society
Modern culture often treats the human person as a blank slate, a bundle of desires, or a unit of production. But the Hebraic imagination sees something far deeper: a soul with eternal worth. Because the soul is real:
- morality is not a social invention
- justice is not a matter of preference
- truth is not a cultural construct
- freedom is not merely political
- life has meaning beyond survival
A society that believes this will shape its laws, institutions, and culture differently than one that does not.
The Grand Council and the Choice That Defines Us
In that premortal realm, God presented his plan–a path that would allow us to become like him. That plan required:
- A mortal body
- A world of choice
- A Redeemer
- A Way Back
We accepted that plan. We chose it freely. We embraced the risks because we understood the promise. Mortality was not a punishment. It was an opportunity–The next step in our eternal progression.
The Eternal Identity of the Human Family
Because we lived before we were born:
- Every person is our spiritual sibling.
- Every life has divine worth.
- Every soul carries eternal potential.
- Every human story begins in glory, not dust.
This is the foundation of human dignity. This is the root of moral equality. This is the spiritual truth that undergirds the Western idea of rights. Before we were citizens of nations, we were citizens of heaven.
Why This Matters for America
America’s founding generation did not begin with a theory of government. They began with a theory of the human person. They believed:
- that dignity is prior to government
- that rights flow from the Creator
- that conscience cannot be coerced
- that liberty requires inward self‑government
These ideas did not come from the Enlightenment alone. They came from a much older source — the Hebraic vision of the human soul.
The First Freedoms
Because we were known by God before we were born, freedom is not simply the absence of restraint. It is the space in which each human soul can answer its purpose. This is why the West speaks of:
- freedom of conscience
- freedom of worship
- freedom of thought
- freedom of speech
These freedoms are not political conveniences. They are spiritual necessities.
The Beginning of the Story
Act I is the foundation of everything:
- Why law matters
- Why liberty matters
- Why justice matters
- Why America matters
Before there was a nation, there was a person. Before there were founding documents, there was a soul. Before there was history, there was intention. That intention — the divine purpose behind human life — is the root from which the entire Western tradition grows.
Looking Ahead to Act II
Act I shows who we are before life begins. Act II starts when we step into the world. As choices and consequences appear, we feel the pull to grow and prove ourselves. We enjoy gaining experience. And we become grateful — for life, and for the freedom to live it with purpose.
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