Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is Lee Habib and this is Our American Stories.
To search for the Our American Stories podcast, go to
the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts. If
you want to know about the history of this country,
it is imperative that you know the role that the
Bible played in shaping it. Our founding fathers, both Christian
(00:30):
and non Christian alike, were heavily influenced by the Bible.
Here to share another story is Robert Morgan, who's the
author of one hundred Bible verses that made America, defining
moments that shaped our enduring foundation of faith. Take it away, Robert.
Speaker 2 (00:51):
Two or three years ago, when I was in New
York City, I spent a day in Lower Manhattan and
the area around Wall Street, within just a few blocks
out some of America's greatest historical sites. The Brooklyn Bridge
now spans the East River at a spot very close
to where George Washington's Revolutionary army escaped disaster during a
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remarkable nighttime evacuation. Nearby is France's Tavern, where Washington later
met with his generals after the war. Five minutes later,
I was gazing at the Statue of Liberty nearby, is
Fulton Street, the origin of a powerful eighteen fifty seven
religious revival that spread over the United States. And at
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the end of Fulton Street is the nine to eleven
Memorial Museum. So much history within just a few blocks.
And don't forget the nearby Federal Building, the site of
America's first presidential inauguration. The old Federal building that Washington
knew no longer stands, but the newer Federal building that
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now stands on the spot contains a small museum. And
there I saw Washington's inaugural Bible. I thought of the
springtime day in seventeen eighty nine when Washington placed his
hand on the Bible, took the oath of office, and
then bent over and reverently kissed the Bible in full
view of the great assembled crowd. That Bible has been preserved,
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and four other presidents have borrowed it for their own inaugurations,
Warren Harding, Dwight Eisenhower, Jimmy Carter, and George H. W. Bush.
W Bush wanted to use Washington's Bible, but his inauguration
was threatened by rain, and no one wanted to risk
damaging its hallowed pages. Only once has Washington's Bible faced
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the prospect of destruction. On September eleventh, two thousand and one.
It was on loan to the aforementioned France's Tavern Museum
in Lower Manhattan when terrorists destroyed the names by twin
towers of the World Trade Center. For two days, no
one knew if Washington's Bible had escaped ruin. The area
(03:08):
was sealed off as rescue workers searched for survivors. Finally,
on September thirteen, police officers and an unmarked cruiser entered
the area accompanying the custodians of the Bible. The air
was still thick with dust and smoke. In the tavern
was strewn with rubble, but the building itself seemed unharmed. Inside,
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untouched and unscathed, was Washington's inaugural Bible. The Bible, after all,
in its essential nature, is an indestructible book. For millennia,
its critics have tried to ban it, burn it, and
bar it from those who want it or need it. Still,
the Bible endures is the central book of human literature,
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as the centerpiece of spiritual life, and as the compelling
document that shaped the United States of the Maryriora. George
Washington came from a family of devout Christians. His father
was active in the Anglican Church, and his mother, Mary
Bell Washington, was godly and strongwilled, and she was an
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enthusiastic teacher of scripture to her son. Washington's wife, Martha,
was a devout believer in Christ. And furthermore, Washington brought
up his children, who were actually his stepchildren, on explicitly
Christian textbooks, on prayer books and Bibles with their names
gilded upon them. Washington's stepson, George Washington Park Curtis, who
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was known as Wash and raised at Mount Vernon, said
on Sundays, unless the weather was uncommonly severe, the President
and Missus Washington attended divine services at Christ Church, and
in the evenings the President read to Missus Washington in
her chamber a sermon or some portion from the sacred writings.
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Washington also used a variety of terms of reverence and
respect to describe Jesus Christ and the ornate language of
the day. He called Jesus the divine author of our
blessed religion, our gracious Redeemer, the Great Lord and Ruler
of the nations. The judge of the hearts of men
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and the giver of life. A later, President Calvin Coolidge said,
the foundation of our society and our government rests so
much on the teachings of the Bible that it would
be difficult to support them if faith, then these teachings
would cease to be practically universal in our country. Vice
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President Theodore Roosevelt said something very similar as he addressed
the Long Island Bible Society just weeks before being thrust
into the presidency. Roosevelt said, a large number of people
tend to forget the teachings of the Bible are so
interwoven and entwined with our whole civic and social life
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that it would be literally, I do not mean figuratively,
I mean literally impossible for us to figure out to
ourselves what that life would be like if these teachings
were removed. President Franklin Roosevelt said, we cannot read the
history of our rise and development as a nation without
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reckoning with the place the Bible has occupied in shaping
the advances of the Republic. The best way to keep
America strong is to know her history, to honor her roots,
to preserve her legacy, and to cherish the eternal God,
who in his providence placed this continent between two shimmering seas,
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and who, in his goodness provided a book that became
her moral and intellectual foundation.
Speaker 1 (07:02):
And a terrific job on the production, editing and storytelling
by our own Greg Hengler. And a special thanks to
Robert Morgan, who is the author of one hundred Bible
Verses that made America and the story of Washington's Bible.
I did not know that it was missing in action,
but to be discovered and of all places Francis Tervin
is just remarkable. The story of the Bible and its
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role in American history. Here on our American Stories. Here
aret our American Stories. We bring you inspiring stories of history, sports, business, faith,
and love. Stories from a great and beautiful country that
need to be told. But we can't do it without you.
Our stories are free to listen to, but they're not
(07:44):
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