Coolidge's Declaration
by L. John Van Til
Issue 136 - July 22, 2009
Textbooks have pictured President Coolidge (1923-29) as an accidental,
dim-witted president who said little, and thus, was dubbed "Silent Cal."
Actually, he was the most popular political figure in America throughout
the 1920s. I have concluded that he should be known as "thinking" Cal
Coolidge.
One of Coolidge's passions was the works of the Founding Fathers. One of
his more important speeches was delivered on the 150th anniversary of
the
Declaration of Independence at Independence Hall on July 5, 1926. The
celebration was on July 5 because July 4 was a Sunday, and the nation
had
a long-standing custom of avoiding public celebrations on Sundays.
Coolidge took this occasion to remind Americans what it was that made
the
Declaration great: it was "a great spiritual document."
Coolidge asked his audience to look at the Preamble and note its three
main ideals, ideals which appeal to the inner spirit of man. What are
the three ideals? These "self-evident truths," the writers said, were
that "men are created equal," that they are "endowed by their Creator
with certain inalienable Rights," and that the just powers of government
must be derived from "the consent of the governed."
Coolidge went on to discuss at length the other, more conventional,
sense
in which the Declaration was a spiritual document. The Founders
naturally
saw the substance of the Declaration as arising from the religious life
of
Americans, a point Coolidge extracted from their speeches and writings.
In
particular, he noted how many Founders at the time of the Revolution
were
fond of quoting the Rev. Thomas Hooker's sermon before the Connecticut
General Court in 1638. Said Hooker, "The foundation of authority is laid
in the free consent of the people." Further, "The choice of public
magistrates belongs unto the people by God's own allowance." Coolidge
also
added that early in the 18th century the Reverend John Wise published a
number of works which were also often quoted in the Founder's
generation.
Hundreds of Election Day sermons also reiterated the spiritual
(biblical)
basis of rights. Coolidge also quoted Thomas Jefferson, who acknowledged
the significance of preachers at the time of the Revolution. These
preachers, said Coolidge, reached "the neighborhood of Thomas Jefferson
who acknowledged his 'best ideas of democracy' had been secured at
church
meetings." To emphasize that American religious life informed the
Founders, Coolidge quoted from George Mason's Virginia Declaration of
Rights, presented to the general assembly on July 27, 1776. Among other
things, Mason penned the following, "'Democracy is Christ's government
in
church and state.'"
Coolidge had much to say beyond the fact that the Declaration was rooted
in the religious and spiritual lives of Americans: Good historian that
he
was, Coolidge saw in his time the rise of the notion that the central
ideas of the Revolution had their roots in French thought. Coolidge
emphatically denied this notion. He did so by referring again to the
depth
of the Declaration's spiritual roots. In Coolidge's words, "These great
truths were in the air that our people breathed. Whatever else we may
say
of it, the Declaration of Independence was profoundly American."
As if speaking to political leaders in the 21st century, Coolidge said, "It is often asserted that the world has made a great deal of progress
since 1776, that we have had new thoughts and new experiences ... that
we
may therefore very well discard their (the Founders) conclusions for
something more modern." He went on to note that such reasoning cannot be
applied to the Declaration because the principles enunciated in it are
final and cannot be improved upon. In Coolidge's words, "If all men are
created equal, that is final. If they are endowed with inalienable
rights,
that is final. If governments derive their just powers from the consent
of
the governed, that is final. No advance, no progress can be made beyond
these propositions."
Coolidge concluded by affirming that the Founders were men "who came
under
the influence of a great spiritual development and acquired a great
moral
power." To him, "No other theory is adequate to explain or comprehend
the
Declaration of Independence. It is the product of the spiritual insight
of
the people." And finally, "We must not sink into a pagan materialism. We
must cultivate the reverence which they had for the things that are
holy."
L. John Van Til, Ph.D., is a Fellow for Law & Humanities with The Center
for Vision & Values at Grove City College.
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