
From Articles to Constitution: America's Journey to Unity
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The path to American independence wasn't a sudden revolution but a carefully orchestrated progression spanning decades. This fascinating journey from separate colonies to united nation offers profound lessons for today's constitutional restoration efforts.
When the British Parliament passed the Intolerable Acts in 1774, they inadvertently sparked unity among thirteen previously disconnected colonies. As David Barton explains, "We were 13 separate nations...It's kind of like being in Europe - France versus Spain versus Germany versus Italy. They don't think alike, they don't act alike." These colonies had even experienced border wars with each other, yet facing common British oppression, they began working together.
The Articles of Association (1774) marked their first collaborative step, followed by the Articles of Confederation (1777, ratified 1781), culminating in the Constitution (1787). This progression mirrors biblical wisdom from Deuteronomy 7 where God promised to deliver victory "little by little" rather than all at once. Our constitutional republic emerged through patient, incremental development as colonies became comfortable with each new level of cooperation while maintaining their sovereignty.
This historical perspective offers crucial insight for today's challenges. Constitutional restoration won't happen overnight or through a single election. As Tim Barton notes, there's encouraging progress with originalist judges asking, "What is the actual, proper role of the federal government according to the Constitution, according to the founding father's original intent?"
The episode also explores how judicial activism transformed the 14th Amendment from its original purpose of securing rights for formerly enslaved people into a mechanism for federal overreach into state and local affairs. This "selective incorporation" allowed courts to apply federal restrictions to every level of government, dramatically expanding federal power beyond constitutional boundaries.
What meaningful change could you contribute to America's ongoing constitutional restoration? Like Roger Sherman, who signed all four founding documents, your consistent engagement matters in our generation's chapter of liberty's story.
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