CBN.com - - English settlers came
to America to spread the gospel.
April 29 marked the anniversary of an event that is central to CBN's
ministry today. On that day in 1607 a nation was born when travel-weary
Englishmen landed at Cape Henry on the shores of Virginia. There they
established the foundation for what would become the most powerful country
the world has ever seen.
Act 1, Scene 1 of the drama that was to be the United States unfolded
that day at Cape Henry, and the legacy of godliness on American shores
was sparked.
From these shores, settlers claimed the day for the glory of Jesus
Christ promising the gospel of God's kingdom would go forth to the nations.
America's destiny and purpose were sealed with the cross they erected
at Cape Henry. All that would follow in our nation's growth hinged on
the single proclamation that this land belonged to Jesus Christ.
In the Mayflower Compact of 1620, the Pilgrims reaffirmed the mission
set forth by the original Virginia settlers.
"All of us were taught that the Pilgrims came to America for freedom
of worship or religious freedom, but that's really not true," said Dr.
Peter Marshall, an author and historian. "They said that they came to
America to, 'propagate the gospel among the Indians and to become, themselves,
stepping stones for the furtherance of the gospel to the outermost parts
of the Earth.' So they were missionaries."
The Puritans carried the Cape Henry legacy further. On the deck of
the Arbella, halfway between England and Cape Cod, leader John Winthrop
declared, "We shall be as a city upon a hill. The eyes of all people
are upon us, so that if we shall deal falsely with our God in this work
we have undertaken and so cause him to withdraw his present help from
us, we shall be made a story and a byword throughout the world."
Winthrop's phrasing was revealing, said Marshall. " When you bring
up Winthrop's phrase there, `the city upon a hill,' that's the heart
and the core of what America's been all about since day one. Point being
here that the basis for American life was to be committed Christians
who were to so let their light shine to one another and then to the
whole world, that the world could see that as an example."
More than 100 years later, as America set off on her own course towards
independence, the Godly foundations laid in Virginia established the
character of our Revolution..
`Before God, I believe the hour has come," said John Adams of the Revolution.
"My judgment approves this measure and my whole heart is in it. All
that I have, all that I am and all that I hope in this life I am now
ready to stake upon it. And I leave off as I began, that live or die,
survive or perish, I am for the Declaration. It is my living sentiment,
and by the blessing of God, it shall be my dying sentiment. Independence
now and independence forever."
George Washington's pure, Christian heart, Benjamin Franklin's call
to prayer and John Adams' reverence for the will of God symbolize the
undying commitment of our Founding Fathers to the creation of a nation
which would glorify God. The American character was born in Scripture
and nurtured by the Holy Spirit, yet today, our national heritage is
under siege.
Bishop James Madison warned of such a risk in 1795: "The moment that
religion, the pure and undefiled religion, loses its influence over
our hearts, from that fatal moment, farewell to public and private happiness.
Farewell--a long farewell--to virtue, to patriotism, to liberty."
Nearly 400 years have passed since America was first conceived at Cape
Henry, and respect for our roots is growing cold. Yet one undeniable
fact still remains: At its core, the United States of America is a Christian
nation.