July 4, 2019
MY CORNER by Boyd Cathey
July 4th
and What It Really Means
Friends,
NOTE:
The following column, with a few changes, is similar to the installment in the
MY CORNER series from July 4, 2018, Independence Day one year ago. At that time
it was a very popular reading. I think it holds up, and that its message
continues to be quite valid and its history important in today’s society. I
offer this version this year.
*****
We celebrate July 4 each year as the
anniversary of America’s declaration of independence from Great Britain.
For many Americans, the day has become little more than another holiday, a day
off from work, and a time to barbecue with family and friends.
The Declaration of Independence and the day we
set aside to commemorate it should make us reflect on the sacrifices of
the men who signed it. Representatives from thirteen colonies came together to
take a momentous step that they knew might land them on the scaffold or
suspended by the hangman’s noose. They were protesting that their
traditional rights as Englishmen had been violated, and that those violations
had forced them into a supreme act of rebellion.
For many Americans the Declaration of
Independence is a fundamental text that tells the world who we are as a people.
It is a distillation of American belief and purpose. Pundits and
commentators, left and right, never cease reminding us that America is a new
nation, “conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are
created equal.”
Almost as important as a symbol of American
belief is Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address. It is not incorrect
to see a link between these two documents, as Lincoln intentionally placed his
short peroration in the context of a particular reading of the Declaration.
Lincoln bases his concept of the creation of
the American nation in philosophical principles he sees
enunciated in 1776, and in particular on an emphasis on the idea of “equality.”
The problem is that this interpretation, which forms the philosophical base of
both the dominant “movement conservatism” today - neoconservatism - and
the neo-Marxist multicultural Left, is basically false.
Lincoln’s opens his address, “Four score and
seven years ago our fathers brought forth …” There is a critical problem with
this assertion. It was not the Declaration that “created” the new nation; the
Declaration was a statement of thirteen colonies, announcing their respective
independence from the mother country, binding themselves together in a military
and political alliance. It was the Constitution, drafted eleven years later
(1787), after the successful conclusion of the War for Independence, that
established a new nation. And, as any number of historians and scholars have
pointed out, the American Framers never intended to cobble together a country
based on the proposition that “all men are created equal.”
A brief survey of the writings of such
distinguished historians and researchers as Barry Alan Shain, Forrest McDonald,
M. E. Bradford, George W. Carey, and others, plus a detailed reading of the
commentaries and writings of those men who established the nation, give the lie
to the claim (See for example, Elliott’s Debates, a compilation of the
debates over the new Constitution).
The Framers of the Constitution were horrified
by “egalitarianism” and “democracy,” and they made it clear that what they were establishing was a confederated,
stratified republic, in which most of the “rights” were reserved to the authority
of the respective states (with their own particular arrangements), and in which
serious restrictions and limitations on voting and participation in government
were considered fundamental. Indeed, several states also had religious tests,
and others had established churches, none
of which were directly touched by the First Amendment, added to insure that
a national religious establishment
would not be effected. A quick review of The
Federalist Papers confirms
this thinking; and a survey of the correspondence and the debates over the
Constitution add support to this anti-egalitarianism.
Obviously, then, Lincoln could not found his
“new nation” in the U. S. Constitution; it was too aristocratic and
decentralized, with non-enumerated powers maintained by the states, including
the implicit right to secede. Indeed, slavery was explicitly sanctioned, even
if most of the Framers believed that as an institution it would die a natural
death, if left on its own. Lincoln thus went back to the Declaration of
Independence and invested in it a meaning that supported his statist and
wartime intentions. But even then, he verbally abused the language of the
Declaration, interpreting the words in a form that its Signers never intended.
Although those authors employed the phrase “all
men are created equal,” and certainly that is why Lincoln made direct reference
to it, a careful analysis of the Declaration does not confirm the sense that
Lincoln invests in those few words. Contextually, the authors at Philadelphia
were asserting their historic — and equal — rights as Englishmen before the Crown,
which had, they believed, been violated and usurped by the
British government, and it was to parliament that the Declaration was
primarily directed.
The Founders rejected egalitarianism. They
understood that no one is, literally, “created equal” to anyone else.
Certainly, each and every person is created with no less or no more dignity,
measured by his or her own unique potential before God. But this is not what
most contemporary writers mean today when they talk of “equality.”
Rather, from a traditionally-Christian
viewpoint, each of us is born into this world with different levels of
intelligence, in different areas of expertise; physically, some are stronger or
heavier, others are slight and smaller; some learn foreign languages and write
beautiful prose; others become fantastic athletes or scientists. Social customs
and traditions, property holding, and individual initiative — each of
these factors further discriminate as we continue in life.
None of this means that we are any less or more
valued in the judgment of God, Who judges us based on our own, very unique
capabilities. God measures us by ourselves, by
our own maximum possibilities and potential, not by those of anyone
else — that is, whether we use our own, individual talents to the
very fullest (recall the Parable of the Talents in the Gospel of St. Matthew).
One hundred years later the great Southern
philosopher and theologian Robert Lewis Dabney—much better read and better
informed than many of his post-War contemporaries—understood this exactly:
The
very axioms of American politics now are, that ‘all men are by nature equal,’
that all are inalienably ‘entitled to liberty and the pursuit of happiness,’
and that ‘the only just foundation of government is in the consent of the
governed.’… Our recent doctors of political science have retained these
formularies of words as convenient masks under which to circulate a set of
totally different, and indeed antagonistic notions; and they have succeeded
perfectly. The new meanings of which the ‘Whigs’ of 1776 never dreamed are now
the current ones.
The modern version is that there are no superiors or
inferiors in society; that there is a mechanical equality; that all have
specifically all the same rights; and that any other constitution is against
natural justice. Next: when our wise fathers said that liberty is an
inalienable, natural right, they meant by each one’s liberty the privilege to
do such things as he, with his particular relations, ought to have a moral
title to do; the particular things having righteous, natural limitations in
every case, and much narrower limits in some cases than in others.
Radical America now means by natural liberty each one’s
privilege to do what he chooses to do. By
the consent of the governed our forefathers meant each Sovereign Commonwealth’s
consenting to the constitution under which it should be governed: they meant
that it was unjust for Britain to govern America without America’s consent.
Which part of the human beings living in
a given American State should constitute the State potentially, the populus
whose franchise it was to express the will of the commonwealth for all—that was
in their eyes wholly another question, to be wisely decided in different States
according to the structure which Providence had given them. [Italics mine]
Dabney’s interpretation is the meaning the Founders
intended, as their writings and speeches clearly indicate. Lincoln’s “new
nation” would have certainly struck them as radical and revolutionary, a
veritable “heresy.” Even more disturbing for them would be the specter of
modern-day neoconservatives — that is, those who dominate the
conservative movement and claim to rigorously defend the Constitutional
republic against the abuses of the Marxist multiculturalist
left — enshrining Lincoln’s address as a basic symbol of American
political and social order.
They would have understood the radicalism
implicit in such a pronouncement; they would have seen Lincoln’s interpretation
as a contradiction of the “First Founding” of 1787 and a revolutionary denial
of its intentions; and they would have understood in Lincoln’s language the
content of a Christian and millennialist heresy, heralding a transformed nation
where the Federal government would become the father and mother and absolute
master of us all.
Thus, as we commemorate the declaring of
American independence 243 years ago, we should lament the mythology about it
created in 1863, and recall an older generation of 1787, a generation of noble
men who comprehended fully well that a country based on egalitarianism is a
nation where true liberties are imperiled.
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