WISE AND LEARNED MEN
WHO BELIEVED IN A CREATOR
by Dorothy E. Kreiss Robbins*
Institute for Creation Research, PO Box 2667, El Cajon, CA
92021
Voice: (619) 448-0900 FAX: (619) 448-3469
"Vital Articles on Science/Creation" February
1996
Copyright © 1996 All Rights Reserved
What did the wise
and learned men who founded the greatest republic in the world (the
U.S.A.--the most free and prosperous for over 200 years), believe about
the beginning of this universe? Were they evolutionists? Were they
theistic evolutionists?
Never has the
world seen so many men of such great learning and sagacity engaged in a
work over such a long time span (150 years) with such a wide and
benevolent influence. These men, whose erudition gained them respect in
the courts of the kings of Europe, whose writings have astonished the
world, did they believe in a Creator and a creation? Emphatically, yes!
They were believers in a Creator: the God of the Bible. The few
quotations gathered here must forever refute the proposition that
learned men cannot believe in the creation of the universe by a wise,
benevolent, and intelligent being: Jehovah God.
Let us begin with
the reputed discoverer of this hemisphere, Christopher Columbus
(1451-1506). Columbus had great learning in many sciences and was also
well acquainted with the Scriptures. In a prayer taken from a letter to
the sovereigns of Spain, dated October of 1492, we read: "O Lord,
Almighty and everlasting God, by thy holy Word Thou hast created the
heaven, and the earth, and the sea. . . ." And later, "(May
you) . . . be well received before the eternal Creator, to whom I pray.
. . ." (Las Casas' abstract of Columbus' Journal of the First
Voyage.)[1]
Kay Brigham says,
"The Admiral writes in his letter to the nurse of Prince John
(1501): 'My hope in the One who created us all sustains me; . . .' She
writes further, '. . . (T)he Holy Scriptures inspired the Discoverer to
execute the idea with a sense of mission (and strength). Others had
dreamed, but Columbus followed through and realized . . . the discovery
of the marvelous Americas (unknowingly) . . . (and) the expansion of
Christianity to 'Other Worlds.'"[2]
John Calvin
(1509-1564), of whom it was said: "(He) was the founder of the
greatest of republics. The 'Pilgrims' . . . were his sons . . . and that
American nation which we have seen growing so rapidly boasts as its
father the humble reformer on the shores of (Lake) Leman."[3] He,
who was one of the greatest intellects that ever lived, whose influence
is still felt throughout the world, wrote: ". . . God was pleased
that a history of the creation should exist-a history on which the faith
of the church might lean without seeking any other God than Him whom
Moses sets forth as the Creator and Architect of the world."[4]
The nation God
raised up was, indeed, begun by men who knew who He is. William
Bradford, the great leader of the Pilgrims (who wrote our founding
document, the Mayflower Compact), is the third person in our anthology
to whom we turn as proof of the Creator's being honored by those who
founded our country.
William Bradford
(1590-1657), Governor of the Pilgrims for 37 years, author of the famous
history of the beginnings of our country, and learned in several
languages, wrote: 'Though I am grown aged, yet I have had a longing
desire, to see with my own eyes, something of the most ancient language,
and holy tongue, in which the Law, and oracles of God were writ; and in
which God, and angels, spoke to the holy patriarchs, of old time; and
names were given to things, from the creation."[5]
Skipping hundreds
who believed as these did in an Almighty Creator, we come now to those
men most immediately influential in the laying of the foundations of our
sovereignty as a nation. The following quotations will give us a better
idea about our worthy progenitors. Consider first Sir William Blackstone
(1723-1780). Mr. Federer tells us, "When scholars examined nearly
15,000 items written by the Founding Fathers from 1760 to 1805 . . .
they found that Sir William Blackstone was quoted more than any other
author except one," and then quotes Sir William thus: "(M)an,
considered as a creature, must necessarily be subject to the laws of his
Creator, for he is entirely a dependent being. . . . (I)t is necessary
that he should in all points conform to his Maker's will. . . .[6]
Benjamin Franklin
(1706-1790) (so well known he needs no introduction), said: "I
believe in one God, the Creator of the Universe." March 9, 1790, in
a letter to Ezra Stiles, p. 250.
Samuel Adams
(1722-1803), "Father of the American Revolution," author of The
Rights of the Colonists (the most systematic presentation of the
American cause ever written and by whose suggestion Jefferson wrote the
Declaration of Independence), stated: "In the supposed state of
nature, all men are equally bound . . . by the laws of the Creator. . .
." He, Lieutenant Governor, was addressing the Massachusetts state
legislature, 1794, p. 24.
John Quincy Adams
(1767-1848), sixth President of the U.S.A. (so well educated he was only
a boy of 14 when made secretary to the ambassador to Russia), said:
"I see Him (Jesus Christ) explicitly and repeatedly announced, not
only as having existed before the worlds, but as the Creator of the
worlds without beginning of days or end of years." Written from
London, December 24, 1814, p. 17.
Noah Webster
(1758-1843), lexicographer and "Father of American Education,"
mastered 26 (!) languages to produce his American Dictionary of the
English Language, therein defining creation and creature thus:
"Creation . . . especially, the act of bringing this world into
existence, Romans I. . . . Creature, . . . Every being besides the
Creator, . . . "[7]
Edmund Burke
(1729-1794), outstanding orator, author, and leader in Great Britain,
defended the colonies in Parlament. "There is but one law for all,
namely, that law which governs all law, the law of our Creator." p.
82.
Alexander Hamilton
(1757-1804), signer of the Constitution and author of 51 of the Federalist
Papers. "(L)iberty is a gift of the beneficent Creator."
Patrick Henry
(1736-1799), five-time Governor of Virginia, whose "Give me liberty
or give me death" speech has made him immortal, said: "It
cannot be emphasized too strongly" nor too often that this great
nation was founded, not by religionists, but by Christians; not on
religions, but on the Gospel of Jesus Christ. . . . " He defined
religion, like many others of our Founders, thus: 'That religion, or
duty which we owe to our Creator, and the manner of discharging it. . .
." pp. 288-289.
John Jay
(1746-1829), first Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court: "We (by
the Bible) enable (people) to learn that man was originally created and
placed in a state of happiness, but, becoming disobedient, was subjected
to the degradation and evils which he and his posterity have since
experienced. The Bible will also inform them that our gracious Creator
has provided for us a Redeemer, in whom all the nations of the earth
shall be blessed. . . . "From an address as President of the
American Bible Society, May 13, 1824, p. 318.
Thomas Jefferson
(1743-1826), third President of the U.S.A., chosen to write the
Declaration of Independence, said: "I have little doubt that the
whole country will soon be rallied to the unity of our Creator, and, I
hope, to the pure doctrines of Jesus also." He, too, recognized
that it was the God of the Bible who founded our country when he said in
his inaugural address in 1805: "I shall need, too, the favor of
that Being in whose hands we are, who led our forefathers, as Israel of
old, from their native land and planted them in (this) country." p.
323, 327, 332.
William Samuel
Johnson (1727-1819), lawyer, signer of our Constitution, President of
Columbia College for 13 years, in remarks to the graduating class of
that college, said: "You have . . . received a public education . .
. the better to serve your Creator and your country. . . . Your first
great duties, . . . are those you owe to Heaven, to your Creator and
Redeemer."
James Madison
(1751-1836), our fourth President, was known as the "Chief
Architect of the Constitution," and the original author and
promoter of the Bill of Rights. In the Constitutional Convention
he spoke 161 times. Madison said: "It is the duty of every man to
render to the Creator . . . homage. . . ." and defined
"religion" thus: "Religion ... the duty we owe our
Creator." p. 410.
George Mason
(1725-1792), the richest man in Virginia, American Revolutionary
statesman, and member House of Burgesses, was the author of the Virginia
Constitution and Virginia Bill of Rights. The first ten amendments
to the Constitution "are practically his." He too stated that
religion is "the Duty which we owe our Creator." "In his Last
Will and Testament, (he) wrote: '. . . My soul, I resign into
the hands of my Almighty Creator, whose tender mercies are over all His
works. . . .'" p. 424.
Andrew Jackson
(1767-1845), seventh President, lawyer, Congressman, U.S. Senator, Judge
of Tennessee Supreme Court (in a letter to a couple on the bereavement
of a child): "This charming babe was only given you from your
Creator and benefactor. . . . We have one consolation that this babe is
now in the bosom of its Savior." p. 309.
Not only
individuals, but whole bodies of people capable of establishing a nation
such as ours, were believers in the Creator and a creation.
The authors of 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 inalienable rights. . . ." July 2, 1776.
(Emphasis added.)
"We, . . .
the people of Massachusetts (establish this Constitution [of
Massachusetts, 1780. . . . ] Part I, Article II:) It is the right, as
well as the duty, of all men in society, and at stated seasons, to
worship the Supreme Being, the Great Creator and Preserver of the
Universe." p. 429.
In closing this
list of quotations (which is just a small sample of those that could be
given), we come to one by that great Christian man, George Washington,
found in his little book of personal prayers: "WEDNESDAY MORNING .
. . Almighty and eternal Lord God, the great Creator of heaven and
earth, and the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ; look down from
heaven . . . in pity and compassion upon Thy servant, who humbly
prostrate myself before thee, sensible of thy mercy and my own misery .
. . take me unto thy protection this day, keep me in perfect peace,
which I ask in the name and for the sake of Jesus. Amen." p. 659.
Can any honest and
reasonable person now doubt that, not only have we progenitors whose
faith in the Almighty Creator was very real, but that these same men had
no compunction about acknowledging the same. Shall we do less?
*Dorothy E. Kreiss
Robbins is the author of several books on the Christian History of the
American Constitution, most recently You, Your Child, and the
Constitution.
--
REFERENCES --
- All quotations (noted thus: 'p.'), unless otherwise noted, are
from America's God and Country Encyclopedia of Quotations,
William J. Federer, Fame Publishers, Inc., 820 S. McArthur
Blvd., Suite 150-220, Coppell, Texas, 75019-4214, 1994.
- Kay Brigham, Christopher Columbus, Libros Clie,
Galvani, 113, 08224 TERRASSA (Barcelona) Spain, 1990, p. 78.
- Merle D'Aubigne, The History of the Reformation in
Europe, quoted in Slater, Teaching and Learning America's
Christian History, p. 172.
- Calvins' Institutes (Beveridge),
vol. 1, Eerdmans, 1953, p. 153.
- William Bradford, Of Plymouth Plantation, edited by Samuel
Eliot Morison, Alfred A. Knopf, New York, 1952, p. XXVIII.
- Sir William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England, (1775),
Philadelphia, J. P. Lippincott and Company, 1879, vol. 1, p. 39.
- Webster's 1828 Dictionary.
Back |