“A Grassroots Movement of Cooperation and Unity by The People of God”

Value of Religious Beliefs

January 22, 2021

Hi Friend,

What would it take for you to walk away from everything you own and move to a foreign country?  Let’s say you own a business, a home, have friends and family and a few financial investments.  What circumstances could cause you to walk away from every bit of that, put your family on a dark, damp and oftentimes smelly ship for a voyage across the ocean to spend the rest of your life in a country where people spoke a different language, had different laws and a different culture?

It would probably take an absolute catastrophe, right?  Okay, imagine a challenge to your religious beliefs rising to the level of a calamitous event equal to a natural disaster or military invasion.

But that is precisely how America began! The majority of Americans have direct line ancestors that crossed the ocean to escape religious persecution.  The desire to worship the God of the Bible was that important! More than any other factor, the freedom to worship God as they understood Him, was the reason to risk everything to start a new country.  It probably wasn’t the way YOU understand God, but they made their way here so you could worship God in peace.

During the 17th Century a group of mixed religious people from the Palatinate region of Germany suffered severe persecution.  When a Lord from one area changed religious beliefs, he required that all subjects within his realm change.  As a result, Catholics suffered when a Lord converted to Lutheranism, or Protestants suffered when a Lord changed to Catholicism. This mixed group of persecuted people numbered in the multiple thousands.  Over 1,700 families immigrated to England.

In diplomatic discussions the English sought to secure religious and civil rights for the Protestants on the continent. They even considered proposing in the negotiations for peace at Geertruidenberg in 1708 that the change in a ruler’s religion should not “influence the worship or revenues of his subject [by which] most of the evil effects proceeding from such a change of religion will be avoided.”

One ship of about 300 passengers and crew left for America and a disease epidemic broke out in route. Of the 300 people on board only about 60 lived to make it to America.  Among the survivors were ancestors to Elvis Presley, Tim McGraw and his biological father Tug McGraw.

Religious persecution is inevitably accompanied by economic deprivation and oftentimes a shortage of food.  Too often the persecuted become the persecutors.

Anton Wilhelm Bohme, pastor of the German Court Chapel of St. James and an influential friend of the Palatines at court advised a correspondent in Germany on May 26, 1710 of “the desire of many people to seek a non-sectarian Christianity in Pennsylvania.”   In other words, many of those coming to America wanted an end to denominational intolerance.

America was a melting pot.   Huguenots, Anabaptists, Protestants, Catholics, Jews, Lutherans, Baptists, Methodists, Pilgrims, Puritans, Mennonites, Amish—all these and more came to America looking for a place to worship God without persecution.  Thus, the residents of this country established the 1st Amendment to the Constitution:

“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;”

Protection for a people to openly worship the God of Abraham is a magnificent principle.  It was the foundation for a free nation—even more, it is the core concept for an eternal Kingdom in the future.

Until next time,

Jim O’Brien

 

Common Faith Network