The founders insisted that our rights are derived from God. If our rights are derived merely from state diktat then they can be taken away by the state under any pretext (or none at all). It is obviously the case that our rights can be taken from us even when we acknowledge that they come from God. Someone or some group may be powerful enough to deny us the freedom to speak openly, the freedom to peaceably assemble, and any other freedom we are granted in our Constitution. Such actions, however, would be obvious usurpations of rights the founders insisted were intrinsic to the human condition because they were granted by God, not men.
Politico reporter Heidi Przybyla recently said on MSNBC that Christian Nationalists (as a small subset of Christians) are the only people in America who have ever believed their political rights are granted by God. Her claim was rightly met with widespread ridicule and refutation. I have no way of knowing whether Przybyla’s words are as ignorant as they seem or rather whether they represent an open and unembarrassed rejection of America’s founding principles. One fellow traveler of Przybyla’s came to her defense with the assertion that if our rights are derived from God then they are at the mercy of anyone claiming to speak for God. Przybyla signaled that this was her main point as well. This inclines me to believe that Przybyla spoke of what she desires for our nation.
Any elementary school child knows (or at least once knew) the absurdity of the claim that the founders didn’t believe our rights come from God. The obvious example people have pointed to is the Declaration of Independence: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.” This was a notion acknowledged by virtually everyone at America’s founding. Consider a few examples (taken from Thomas G. West, The Political Theory of America’s Founding, p. 85-86):
The 1765 Massachusetts Assembly Resolves on the Stamp Act: “That there are certain essential rights of the British constitution of government, which are founded in the law of God and nature, and are the common rights of mankind.”
Alexander Hamilton: “[T]here is a supreme intelligence who rules the world, and has established laws to regulate the actions of his creatures. . . . This is what is called the law of nature. . . . Upon this law, depend the natural rights of mankind.”
James Wilson: “[P]roperly speaking, there is only one general source of superiotiy and obligation. God is our creator: in him we live, and move, and have our being. . . . [H]e, as master of his own work, can prescribe to it whatever rules to him shall seem meet. . . . This is the true source of all authority.”
Even John Locke argued similarly when he grounded the right to revolution against tyrants in his Second Treatise on Government in “the common refuge, which God hath provided for all Men, against Force and Violence.” Unless such a refuge existed in God’s moral law and the natural rights derived from it, Locke insisted elsewhere, man “could have no law but his own will, no end but himself.
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