
the Constitution AND THE BILL OF RIGHTS was endowed to us by the creator
We The People Stand United
the Constitution AND THE BILL OF RIGHTS was endowed to us by the creator
We The People Stand United
We The People Stand United
We The People Stand United
Heaven is going to be filled with all kinds of people but God instituted this nation so the whole world would blend together
The Constitution Church Believes:
The Constitution and the Bill of Rights was endowed to us by the creator and handed down to man through our founding fathers.
The Constitution and the Bill of Rights Must be defended
The Constitution and the Bill of Rights should be preserved with it's ORIGINAL intent.
That No Law shall conflict with The Constitution and the Bill of Rights
That All people are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness
The Constitution Church is a non-denominational, non-profit religious organization. The Constitution Church was founded on the basic belief that the Constitution, The Bill of Rights and
Declaration of independence was endowed to us by the creator and handed down to man through our founding fathers.
We welcome people of all cultures, creeds, and belief systems to our church. We recognize the importance of maintaining open hearts and minds, embraces any individual, no matter his or her spiritual background
We believe in free speech, and We Welcome individual thoughts and ideas, However we ask our Citizens to respect all those who may have a difference in opinion. We ask all members to be respectful and Civil in their discourse.
The Term “God” is referenced in honor of the Founders of the Constitution. In our Church ALL denominations are welcome. We firmly believe in the First Amendment and welcome all Faiths.
Our Church is founded on: A significant number of the Constitutional Convention’s delegates acknowledged divine assistance in its creation, and that it must be protected and defended from those who would try and take it away and our Freedoms Contained therein,
James Madison stated, “It is impossible for the man of pious reflection not to perceive in [the Constitution] a finger of that Almighty hand which has been so frequently and signally extended to our relief in the critical stages of the revolution.”
George Washington wrote to Lafayette, “It appears to me, then, little short of a miracle, that the delegates from so many different states (which states you know are also different from each other in their manners, circumstances, and prejudices) should unite in forming a system of national Government, so little liable to well-founded objections”
Charles Pinckney, said: “Nothing less than the superintending Hand of Providence, that so miraculously carried us through the war . . . could have brought it [the Constitution] about so complete, upon the whole.
Thomas Jefferson (who was in France in 1787) ten years after its adoption exclaimed, “Can the liberties of a nation be thought secure when we have removed their only firm basis, a conviction in the minds of the people that these liberties are the gift of God?
Article V, Romans 3:23 Brothers and sisters, The Constitution wasn't written by angels. It was written by men who owned other men, argued over taxes like it was the Last Supper, and nearly walked out of Philadelphia because Ben Franklin wouldn't shut up about his gout. And yet-they stayed. They didn't because they were good. They stayed because they were broken, and they knew it. Fifty-five flawed souls in one hot room, sweating out the summer of 1787, hammering out a frame that could hold broken people without breaking itself. That's not divine perfection. That's divine patience. See, the Bible says all have sinned. All have fallen. No exceptions. Moses stuttered. David killed. Peter denied. Paul persecuted. And Madison? He couldn't walk right. But God didn't scrap them. He didn't throw the clay away. He gave them pencils. Article V isn't a loophole-it's mercy written in ink. The Congress, whenever two thirds...-whenever we mess up, we can fix it. Not erase it. Not burn it. Fix it. Slavery? Took three amendments to claw out of that stain. Women? One vote, ninety years late. Drinking? We even undid an amendment because we couldn't handle our own rules. And still-it stands. Because it wasn't meant to be sacred like Sinai. It was meant to be sacred like Sabbath: holy enough to keep, human enough to bend when we outgrow it. We don't worship the paper. We worship the God who let us write it. And when we stand up Sunday morning, hands on our hearts, we're not swearing to a document. We're swearing to a process. A fragile, editable, God-given promise that says: You are fallen. You will fail. And still-grace has a pencil. So go home. Argue with your neighbor. Fix your marriage. Vote your conscience. And if it's broken, bring it back. Because the frame wasn't the miracle. The fact we're still using it is. Amen.
Footnotes: [1] Franklin's gout: Diary of Gouverneur Morris, July 13, 1787-The old man groaned like a church bell. [2] Delegate count: 55 men signed. Eight delegates walked (e.g., Edmund Randolph). Room temp: 90°F, no AC. [3] Madison's limp: lifelong epilepsy and spinal defect-called it rheumatism to save face. [4] Article V text: The Congress, whenever two thirds of both Houses shall deem it necessary, shall propose Amendments... First used 1791. [5] Amendments timeline: 13th (slavery), 14th (citizenship), 15th (vote), 19th (women), 21st (repeal of 18th).
The Constitution wasn't written in Philadelphia. Not entirely. While Madison and Hamilton sweated in Independence Hall, the real drafting happened in a boarding house down the street-Mrs. House's Tavern. Nightly. Over ale. Ben Franklin would stumble in at midnight, wave his cane, and say, Add a comma. They'd laugh. But next morning? Comma was in. No minutes. No log. Just drunken genius. The whole thing's basically a bar napkin from 1787. And yet... Still works. That's God laughing at our plans.
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