POST 33 THE BIRTH OF A FREE PEOPLE

6 min.

Providential Orchestration and the American Founding

The Declaration of Independence

Thomas Jefferson captured the gravity of nation‑building when he wrote that forming a government is “a work of the most interesting nature and such as every individual would wish to have his voice in.” The American Revolution was not merely a political rupture—it was a civilizational turning point. It challenged centuries of inherited hierarchy, the divine right of kings, and the belief that ordinary people were unfit to govern themselves.

Jefferson’s critique of monarchy was unsparing: “In a few generations they become all body and no mind… such is the regimen in raising kings.” The Revolution demanded a new political order—one grounded in liberty, reason, and the moral agency of every human soul.

The Struggle Against Aristocracy

The Virginia Convention of 1776 provided strong evidence that bringing about change would be no easy task as George Mason’s preamble that “all men are by nature equally free and independent” aroused immediate objections. As independence on the national scene approached, many wealthy Virginians preferred a return to pre‑1763 conditions rather than a full break with Britain. The Founders understood the danger: any new government could be captured by entrenched elites unless carefully designed.

Mason, one of America’s most profound political thinkers, further warned of “a concerted British plan to make all colonists into slaves.” His Declaration of Rights became the first authoritative statement of inalienable rights.

The same preamble that aroused the opposition of the aristocrats, however, sunk deeply into the consciousness of Thomas Jefferosn, who, wanting meaningful change, was determined to carry his ideas about human rights to their logical conclusion.

Patrick Henry feared that “among most of our opulent families there existed a strong bias to aristocracy.” John Adams agreed, insisting that “a more equal liberty… must be established in America.” In other words, the Founders recognized that their most important and most complex task would be to construct a government that would not be taken over by the wealthy and powerful class in each state.

Jefferson’s Seventeen Days

Between June 11 and June 28, 1776, Jefferson worked alone in his upstairs parlor, shaping what he called “an expression of the American mind.” He drew from Mason’s ideas, his own earlier writings, and the shared philosophical inheritance of the Enlightenment.

Even after edits removed nearly a quarter of Jefferson’s draft—including a strong denunciation of the slave trade—the Declaration emerged as a timeless creed of human liberty.

In one example of an edit, Jefferson wrote: “We hold these truths to be sacred and undeniable.” Franklin, a member of The Committee of Five that had been assigned to draft a declaration of independence, crossed out “sacred and undeniable” and wrote “self-evident.” The conversation between Franklin and Jefferson about the famous edit was brief but pivotal.

Favoring the philosophical language of John Locke, Jefferson used the words “sacred and undeniable” which placed liberty’s foundation squarely in the realm of religion and natural law. These words had theological weight and lofty moral power.

But to Franklin, the appeal to divine authority invited theological disputation. He wanted to shift the foundation of American liberty away from religious dogma and onto shared human reason and science. By using “self-evident,” he established that you didn’t need a specific religious text to prove all men are created equal; you only needed clear thinking.

Jefferson expressed quiet indignation that his “precisely chosen” words were being altered. Franklin gently but firmly reminded him that the document had to represent the rational consensus of many hands, not just one.

Franklin’s edit helped ensure the American experiment was grounded in reason rather than religious revelation, cementing a universalism that remains a cornerstone of the nation’s political identity. He understood that to rally a continent and pass muster with the prickly delegates of the Continental Congress, the Declaration’s truths needed to be stated plainly, not preached. In other words, you did not need a Bible to know that all men are created equal. You just had to open your eyes and think clearly.

On Monday, July 1, John Adams arose early, composed a long letter to a former delegate, and then, knowing what was in store, walked to the State House. In the letter he had written, “This morning is assigned the greatest debate of all. A declaration, that these colonies are free and independent States, has been reported by a committee some weeks ago for that purpose, and this day or tomorrow is to determine its fate. May heaven prosper the newborn republic.”

John Adams: The Colossus of Independence

On that same July 1 morning, Adams delivered what witnesses called the greatest speech of his life. He argued that the fate of millions, born and unborn” depended on decisive action. Jefferson remembered him as “the colossus of independence.” Benjamin Rush wrote that Adams had not his superior, scarcely his equal for abilities and virtue.” Adams’ relentless advocacy ensured that independence was declared when it was—and that the Declaration became the moral foundation of the new republic.

The Declaration was adopted on July 4, 1776. The result was an official break with Britain that strengthened unity and helped attract foreign support, but it also meant the conflict became an all-out war for independence.

Writing of Adams in September, Benjamin Rush would tell a friend, “This illustrious patriot has not his superior, scarcely his equal for abilities and virtue on the whole of the continent of America.” He would later add, “Every member of Congress in 1776 acknowledged him to be the first man in the House.” Above all, with his sense of urgency and unrelenting drive, John Adams made the Declaration of Independence happen when it did.

Our Sacred Honor

The signing on August 2, 1776, was an act of profound courage. As William Ellery observed, each man signed with “undaunted resolution.”

They were lawyers, merchants, farmers, physicians, judges, and one clergyman. Many were wealthy; many would lose everything. Some died in poverty, some in prison, some in battle. Some “signed with regret, and several others with many doubts and much lukewarmness,” wrote Adams. Yet not one of the fifty‑six signers ever betrayed the cause.

With the exception of Dr. John Witherspoon, president of Princeton, who came from Scotland in 1768, all the rest of the signers had been born in America. Their average age was forty-five. Franklin was, at seventy, the oldest, and Edward Rutledge of South Carolina was the youngest at twenty-six.

For reasons of security the Declaration with the signatures was not published until January 1777, for it was fully understood that if the Revolution failed, the signers would be rounded up, their property confiscated, and their lives forfeited.

Providence and Moral Agency

The Revolution can also be understood through a theological lens: that God sought to create a political environment where moral agency could flourish—“that every man may be accountable for his own sins in the day of judgement.”

The Constitution, which would also be born of sacrifice and struggle, would become a safeguard for religious liberty and the rights of all flesh. And though it took generations, its principles ultimately helped secure freedom for the descendants of the 500,000 enslaved people living in America in 1776.

The Republic’s Moral Foundations

George Washington warned that religion and morality are indispensable supports” of political prosperity. The Founders understood that liberty requires virtue, and that self‑government demands self‑discipline. As James Russell Lowell later paraphrased, the republic will endure only as long as the founding ideas endure—ideas rooted in courage, sacrifice, and the belief that human beings are capable of governing themselves.

Conclusion: The Empire of Liberty

The American Founding was not an accident of history; it was foreordained. It was an inevitable chain of events leading to a sure conclusion; a deliberate, providential orchestration of ideas, character, and conviction. Seeking the ancient principles he wanted to incorporate in a new system of government, Jefferson was setting America’s sights on a new marker. Following its passage, his dominating concern would be to translate the Declaration into legal institutions and to make it a living reality. His compelling desire was to see the creation of an empire of liberty.

While George Mason anchored the principles of rights, John Adams fought to make independence real. For their part, each of the signers risked everything.

Their legacy is a nation built not on bloodlines or divine right, but on truths held to be self‑evident. And the preservation of that legacy—of children’s right “to play, to dance, and to sing”—depends on our willingness to remember, defend, and live the principles they pledged their sacred honor to secure.


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