Indeed, the acknowledgement of God is not synonymous with religion.
The whole basis of the Constitution was a restriction of power, and the whole basis of the federalist system was that there was not one sovereign centralized power from which all authority flows.
Rights come from God, not from government.
The Constitution was about a limitation on power.
The point is that knowledge of God is not prohibited under the First Amendment.
And government's only role is to secure our rights for us.
The basic premise of the Constitution was a separation of powers and a system of checks and balances because man was perceived as a fallen creature and would always yearn for more power.
Power's not what the Constitution was about.
The First Amendment to the Constitution reflects that concept recognized in the Ten Commandments, that the duties we owe to God and the manner of discharging those duties are outside the purview of go...
If government can give you rights, government can take them away from you.
The forefathers, including James Madison, felt very strongly that the duties that we owe to God were outside of government's prerogative, that government had no business interfering with the way we wo...
Anytime you deny the acknowledgement of God you are undermining the entire basis for which our country exists.
But separation of church and state was never meant to separate God and government.
But today, government is taking those rights from us, pretending that it gives us our rights. Indeed, those rights come from God, and it was recognized throughout our history as such.
It can have a secular purpose and have a relationship to God because God was presumed to be both over the state and the church, and separation of church and state was never meant to separate God from...
If God gives you rights, no man and no government can take them away from you.