Our Sacred Trust

Post 2

4 min.

A Moment That Calls Us Back to Our Beginnings

In the introduction to this series, I reflected on the remarkable convergence of ideas and events that shaped the American founding. Before we explore those moments in detail, we must first consider why remembering them matters.

A 2009 survey revealed that 83% of American adults lack even a basic understanding of the American Revolution, and a later poll found that one in four Americans could not identify the nation from which we declared independence. These are not small oversights. They signal a widening distance between a people and the principles that first secured their liberty.

Why Our Founding Still Matters

The Declaration of Independence is more than a historical document; it is a moral proclamation, a bold assertion of universal rights endowed to all people. Its vision was never meant to be narrow or fleeting. It invited humanity to see freedom as a birthright—rooted in dignity, not granted by rulers.

As noted in the opening post of this series, the founding vision did not emerge in a straight line; it arose from a remarkable convergence of convictions and circumstances that pointed toward a larger purpose.

Our national concern for human flourishing—our instinct to defend liberty and extend opportunity—flows directly from this founding vision, written for the benefit of “all flesh.”

The Responsibility of Memory

Liberty is never self‑sustaining. It survives only when it is taught, cherished, and passed deliberately from one generation to the next. Abraham Lincoln warned that a nation can lose its freedom in as little as two generations if its people cease to understand the principles that uphold it. His warning was not theoretical; it was a sober reminder that forgetting is often more dangerous than any foreign threat.

Edmund Burke saw the same danger when he wrote that “the true danger is, when liberty is nibbled away, for expedients, and by parts.” Freedom rarely disappears in a single moment. It erodes quietly—through neglect, distraction, and the slow fading of civic memory.

Thomas Jefferson likewise insisted that education is essential to the preservation of liberty. A free people must be an instructed people. Without knowledge of their rights, their history, and the moral foundations of their institutions, citizens become vulnerable to those who would distort the past or redefine the meaning of freedom itself.

We are living in a moment when these warnings feel especially urgent. Much has changed in our civic life:

An Invitation to Remember Together

In the coming weeks, I will be sharing reflections on the ideas, events, and individuals who shaped the American experiment. My aim is simple: to strengthen our connection to the past so we may more fully inherit its blessings.

Knowing our history can help us rekindle a love for our country. Each reflection in this series will build on the last, helping us trace the patterns, principles, and providences that shaped the American experiment. May we remember together, stand together, and faithfully preserve the freedom entrusted to us.

Blog: americasgrand.design

website: http://www.americasgranddesign.com

Email: bruss1@comcast.net

SERIES INTRODUCTION

Providential Orchestration and the American Founding

Post No. 1

3 min

For generations, Americans have spoken of the founding era with a sense of awe—sometimes even reverence. Many of the Founders themselves described the events they lived through as “miraculous,” guided by a hand greater than their own. Yet modern historical writing often emphasizes uncertainty, chance, and human limitation. Pulitzer Prize–winning historian Jon Meacham notes that “nothing was foreordained about the American experiment,” while Walter Isaacson describes the revolutionaries’ sense of spiritual support as a kind of haze surrounding their efforts.

I understand why many scholars hesitate to speak of divine causation. Academic history prizes neutrality, and theological claims can feel out of place in that setting. But neutrality does not require us to ignore what the Founders said, what they believed, or how remarkably their independent choices converged toward a coherent outcome. If we take their words seriously—and if we examine the patterns of contingency and convergence with care—then the possibility of providential orchestration deserves thoughtful consideration.

That is the purpose of this 60‑day series.

Why This Series Matters

As we approach the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, we have an opportunity not only to remember events but to reflect on meaning. The American founding was not a straight line. It was a tapestry woven from uncertainty, courage, conflict, and conviction. And yet, again and again, circumstances aligned in ways that seemed improbable—sometimes astonishing—to those who lived through them.

My aim is not to preach, but to persuade. Not to insist, but to invite. Not to simplify, but to illuminate.

Across the coming posts, I will explore:

  • Contingency — the real alternatives that could have changed everything
  • Primary voices — what the Founders and their contemporaries actually said
  • Convergences — the surprising alignments that shaped the nation’s birth
  • Providence — the possibility that these alignments were not accidental

If the evidence holds together, the argument will stand on its own merits.

A Journey Told One Day at a Time

This series is designed to unfold gradually—one post every day or two—so that readers can walk through the American founding step by step. Each entry will connect another dot, reveal another convergence, or highlight another moment when events seemed to bend toward a larger purpose. You are warmly invited to follow along.

Visit the blog or listen to the podcast regularly. Share it with others who love history, faith, or the American story. Reflect on what these patterns might suggest about our nation’s origin, purpose, and destiny.

Author: Brent Russell

Email: bruss1@comcast.net

Website: www.americansgranddesign.com

Blog: americasgrand.design

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