
Providential Orchestration and the American Founding
The Purpose, Struggle, and Beauty of Earthly Life
Act I shows who we were before life begins. Act II starts the moment we step into the world. As choices and consequences appear, we feel the pull to grow, to test ourselves, to become. We enjoy gaining experience. We begin to sense the weight and wonder of agency. And slowly, gratitude rises — for life itself, for the freedom to direct that life.
While Act I reveals who we are. Act II reveals why we are here. Mortality isn’t an interruption of life but the next chapter of it — a chapter designed with purpose, challenge, and possibility. This is the proving ground of the soul, where agency becomes action, where character is forged, where the war in heaven plays out in real time, and where we begin to learn to walk by faith. Here we discover the meaning of liberty, the necessity of law, and the divine logic behind a world where freedom and responsibility walk side by side.
The Gift and Burden of Agency
In the premortal realm, we chose God’s plan—a plan centered on agency, revealed in the abstract. Mortality is where that choice becomes real. Here, agency is no longer theoretical; it is lived. It is tested. It is refined.
Agency in mortality means:
- choosing between good and evil
- learning from consequences
- shaping character through decisions
- gaining wisdom as we accumulate true knowledge
- discovering truth through experience
- becoming accountable for our stewardship
This is why liberty matters. A world without opposition would be a world without growth. A world without choice would be a world without becoming.
The Founders sensed this truth instinctively. They believed that freedom was not merely a political arrangement but a moral necessity—an environment in which human beings could rise to their divine potential.
The Purpose of Mortality
Mortality is the Lord’s university, a school of the soul. Its curriculum is demanding, but its purpose is glorious. Here we learn:
- courage through adversity
- compassion through suffering
- humility through limitation
- wisdom through experience
- faith through uncertainty
These lessons cannot be learned in any other way. Mortality is the only classroom where eternal beings can acquire mortal virtues. This is why God does not shield us from difficulty. This is why he strengthens us through trial, adversity, opposition, and success.
The Reality of Opposition
A world of agency requires a world of opposition. Without darkness, light cannot be chosen. Without sorrow, joy cannot be understood. Without temptation, virtue cannot be formed. Lehi taught that “there must needs be opposition in all things.” This is not a flaw in the plan—it is the plan.
Opposition is the catalyst of growth. It is the condition under which souls become strong. The Founders understood this principle in civic terms. They believed that liberty requires virtue, that virtue requires struggle. A free people must learn to govern themselves, restrain their passions, and rise above selfishness. Mortality teaches these lessons one decision at a time.
Providence in the Midst of Mortality
Providence does not remove hardship; it redeems it. It does not eliminate agency; it elevates it. It does not prevent suffering; it transforms it. Just as God prepared nations for liberty, he prepares individuals for eternity. The same divine pattern—order, purpose, progression—governs both.
In mortality, Providence works through:
- conscience
- scripture
- family
- community
- inspired leaders
- personal revelation
- the quiet whisperings of the Spirit
These influences guide us through the complexity of mortal life, shaping us into beings capable of eternal joy.
The Restoration and the Meaning of Mortality
The Restoration restores not only doctrines but perspective. It reveals that mortality is not a random test but a purposeful stage in an eternal plan. It is a probationary state, the time for men and women to prepare to meet God. It further clarifies:
- why agency is sacred
- why families matter
- why covenants elevate
- why truth liberates
- why Christ stands at the center of the human story
This restored understanding deepens our appreciation for liberty. A free society honors the divine purpose of mortal life. A tyrannical society frustrates it. Thus, the Restoration and the American Founding—though distinct—both affirm the dignity and destiny of the human soul.
Why Act II Matters for the American Story
A people who understands the purpose of mortality are capable of understanding the purpose of freedom. The Founders believed that liberty was essential for the development of virtue, and virtue was essential for the survival of liberty.
Mortality teaches:
- self‑government
- choice and accountability
- moral responsibility
- the value of conscience
- the necessity of law
- peace through strength
These are the very principles upon which the American experiment was built. Freedom is not merely a political arrangement. It is the environment in which eternal beings fulfill their mortal purpose.
Moving to Act III: Life Beyond Death
While Act II reveals why we are here, Act III reveals where we are going. Death isn’t the end of the story — it’s the doorway to the next act. In Post 8, we’ll explore the destiny of the soul, the meaning of resurrection, and the eternal significance of the choices we make in mortality. This final act completes the interlude and prepares us to return to the sweeping historical narrative of Christianity, Rome, London, and the Providential preparation for America and the Restoration. But before we rejoin that story, the next post will widen our view of God’s plan by drawing on the insights of other influential voices who help illuminate it.
In the end, mortality is not the destination. It is preparation — a time to learn, to choose, to become. But the story of the soul continues beyond the veil. To understand the full arc of human purpose, we have to look beyond this life to the promises, possibilities, and progression that await. From the purposes of mortality, we now turn to life after life.
website: americasgranddesign.com
blog: americasgrand.design
