The Hamilton Corner

May 13, 2025 · 49:18

("Best-of" Edition from 5/2) Failure to properly understand our founding documents has set the course for chicanery in our nation.

Culture & Media

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0:00 - 15:00. Joshua 4:1-7 (ESV). History is important to God. It must be important to us. 15:00 - 31:00. Failure to properly understand our founding documents has set the course for chicanery in our nation. 31:00 - 48:00. The government has “powers.” Only the people have “unalienable rights.” or call: 800-326-4543 To donate call : 877-616-2396

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  1. 0:00Darkness is not an affirmative force.
  2. 0:03It simply reoccupies the space vacated by the light.
  3. 0:06This is the Hamilton Corner on American Family Radio.
  4. 0:10It should be uncomfortable for a believer to live as a hypocrite.
  5. 0:15Delivery people out of the bondage of mainstream media.
  6. 0:18And the philosophies of this world.
  7. 0:20God has called you and me to be his ambassador.
  8. 0:24Even in this dark moment.
  9. 0:26Let's not miss our moment.
  10. 0:28And now the Hamilton Corner.
  11. 0:32Good evening, everyone.
  12. 0:34Welcome to the Hamilton Corner.
  13. 0:35Abraham Hamilton III is my name joined by produce extraordinaire, often imitated, never
  14. 0:40duplicated.
  15. 0:41The real Jay Mac, ladies and gentlemen, and we are ready to rock and roll with today's
  16. 0:46edition of the program at this very moment.
  17. 0:49Many of you, if not most of you, are making your transition from your part-time jobs where
  18. 0:53you generate an income to your full-time jobs where you cultivate an outcome.
  19. 0:57And as you do so, I want to remind you to do so with intentionality, understanding the
  20. 1:02primacy that God places on, the family, recognizing that his desire for us to be effective in laboring
  21. 1:09in his harvest field is to come from the overflow of what we enjoy in him personally.
  22. 1:17We've been talking this week about the fact that God expects maturity in us because that
  23. 1:22is God's expectation.
  24. 1:24that is God's desire, it should be our desires.
  25. 1:29We should not be comfortable living with habitual sins,
  26. 1:34living in a manner to where we're not progressing
  27. 1:37and growing onto maturity.
  28. 1:39And I've said it all the time.
  29. 1:41I am not an advocate of the heretical notion of perfectionism.
  30. 1:45But what the scripture teaches very plainly,
  31. 1:47if that is that if we are in Christ,
  32. 1:50we should be growing from glory to glory.
  33. 1:54we shouldn't be just as weak.
  34. 1:58In year 20 and following the Lord as we were in year one,
  35. 2:00we shouldn't have the exact same struggles for 20, 30 years.
  36. 2:05That should not be.
  37. 2:07The Lord rebuked the believers through the book of Hebrews
  38. 2:11in the book of Hebrews chapter five,
  39. 2:12and by now you should be able to teach others.
  40. 2:17But you can't because you've been having
  41. 2:20a lifestyle diet of milk.
  42. 2:22You can't handle solid food,
  43. 2:23the solifood is for the mature.
  44. 2:26You know, when that lack of maturity is made evident
  45. 2:29by people cultivating and curating a lifestyle
  46. 2:33that resisted the ministry of the Holy Spirit
  47. 2:36to respond to his conviction and to grow from there.
  48. 2:41That is God's expectation.
  49. 2:43It should be our expectation.
  50. 2:45And as we walk with the Lord and we are maturing,
  51. 2:50you know, the Greek word perfection
  52. 2:53that James employs in his epistle is the word teleoise,
  53. 2:57which means maturation.
  54. 3:00That's something we should desire.
  55. 3:02You know, the Hebrew writer gives the picture
  56. 3:04that you can't abide solid food
  57. 3:06because solid food is for the mature.
  58. 3:07Imagine, and this is just such a ridiculous picture,
  59. 3:11but you imagine a 40, 50 year old man who can't eat meat.
  60. 3:16Not because of a vegan or vegetarian choice.
  61. 3:20Because you don't have teeth, can't handle that.
  62. 3:25I can't handle solid food.
  63. 3:29Maturity is what God desires in us, man.
  64. 3:32In contrary to what some people may say,
  65. 3:34who use grace as an excuse to live sin-filled lifestyles.
  66. 3:41God expects holiness, man, of his people.
  67. 3:45He expects holiness in his people.
  68. 3:48And it is as we are continuously being transformed,
  69. 3:54continuously growing, continuously being matured
  70. 3:58that we are more and more effective in being disciple makers.
  71. 4:03Outcome cultivation is the trade, if you will, of the mature.
  72. 4:10And we should be invested in that way.
  73. 4:12And God gives us the blessed privilege
  74. 4:15to begin that commitment right in our own home.
  75. 4:18So as you're making your transition,
  76. 4:21understand income generation is a vital function
  77. 4:23that we participate in,
  78. 4:25but outcome cultivation is demanding.
  79. 4:27the Lord's commission, the great commission,
  80. 4:30making disciples of all ethnos is to commission
  81. 4:35that God has given us.
  82. 4:37All right, to the word of God we go, Joshua chapter four.
  83. 4:41I wanna just remind us of something
  84. 4:42from the book of Joshua here.
  85. 4:44Joshua chapter four, verses one through seven.
  86. 4:48You're going to see this is one portion of scripture
  87. 4:50that communicates this,
  88. 4:51but all throughout the scripture you see,
  89. 4:53the Lord highlighting the importance of his people
  90. 4:56understanding his story, that is history.
  91. 5:02A proper view of history is recognizing God's story
  92. 5:06and in interacting with mankind over time.
  93. 5:09That's what history is.
  94. 5:10It is his story of interacting with mankind over time.
  95. 5:17History is important to God.
  96. 5:19History is important to God's people.
  97. 5:22When we are ignorant of his story of interacting
  98. 5:26with mankind over time,
  99. 5:28we become more easily susceptible to deception.
  100. 5:32Joshua chapter four, this is the account
  101. 5:37where the Lord gives instructions to the Israelites
  102. 5:39after they cross into the promised land
  103. 5:41through the Jordan River.
  104. 5:43And God is the one that gives Joshua
  105. 5:45a particular instruction here.
  106. 5:46Let's note what the word of God says,
  107. 5:48Joshua chapter four, verses one through seven.
  108. 5:50When all the nation had finished passing over the Jordan,
  109. 5:54the Lord said to Joshua, take 12 men from the people,
  110. 5:57from each tribe a man and command them saying,
  111. 6:00take 12 stones from here out of the midst of the Jordan
  112. 6:04from the very place where the priests
  113. 6:06feet stood firmly and bring them over with you
  114. 6:10and lay them in the place where you lodge tonight.
  115. 6:15Then Joshua called the 12 men from the people of Israel
  116. 6:18whom he had appointed, a man from each tribe.
  117. 6:21And Joshua said to them,
  118. 6:22pass on before the ark of the Lord your God
  119. 6:25into the midst of the Jordan
  120. 6:26and take up each of you a stone upon his shoulder,
  121. 6:29according to the number of the tribes of the people of Israel,
  122. 6:34that this may be a sign among you
  123. 6:38when your children ask in time to come.
  124. 6:41What do these stones mean to you?
  125. 6:44Then you shall tell them that the waters of the Jordan
  126. 6:46were cut off before the ark of the covenant of the Lord.
  127. 6:49When it passed over the Jordan,
  128. 6:51the waters of the Jordan were cut off.
  129. 6:54So these stones shall be to the people of Israel, a memorial forever.
  130. 7:02All right, here you have you notice in the text whose idea was it to create a memorial of the stones
  131. 7:07taken from the Jordan River? What Joshua's idea, it was God's idea. Why did God convey this to Joshua?
  132. 7:14He tells us very plainly the memorial is to be constructed so that it provokes inquiry from your
  133. 7:20future generations, and when your future generations inquire as to what these stones mean, you redirect
  134. 7:27them to me as a source of their guidance, protection, and provision. The direction in this regard
  135. 7:37was an accurate recording of history, but I want you to notice the function of this accurate recording
  136. 7:46of history. God commanded this accurate recording of history because it pointed to a grander,
  137. 7:55larger, transcendent theological truth. This is one of the major reasons why it is such
  138. 8:08an egregious notion when the discipline of history and the study of history has been
  139. 8:15acceded to those who are anti-Christ, to those who are haters of God in his church,
  140. 8:25because we miss a vital component of the overarching purpose that history
  141. 8:30recordation should serve. Accurate recording of history, accurate records of events that have
  142. 8:38transpired in the past, an accurate recounting of things that have transpired, should point us
  143. 8:46toward a grander, larger theological truth.
  144. 8:51To say it even more simply,
  145. 8:54the discipline of historical study
  146. 8:57should bring us to behold the face of our God.
  147. 9:04But what invariably occurs
  148. 9:07when we do not have an accurate recording of history,
  149. 9:10when you have people who are revisionist
  150. 9:12or they nip and tuck to fit their own purposes,
  151. 9:16we end up missing huge components of things
  152. 9:18that should be didactic and instruction to us.
  153. 9:22And I always use this example, often when I'm talking about, you know,
  154. 9:27disciplining children from the home, cultivating the mind and things of that nature,
  155. 9:30the majority of people, many of you probably learned this right here in this
  156. 9:33program, the majority of people in our nation and around the world rightly
  157. 9:38regard Sir Isaac Newton as a scientist, a mathematician, you know, a physicist,
  158. 9:45Rightly, scientific experiment is central to who he is.
  159. 9:53But if you actually have a broader understanding of who Sir Isaac Newton was, you would be able
  160. 9:59to see that Sir Isaac Newton was primarily a theologian.
  161. 10:07And it would be an accurate description to say he did science almost as a hobby because
  162. 10:13As he wrote twice as much about God's Word, even writing which would be commentaries on
  163. 10:22Scripture exponentially more than he conducted scientific experimentation.
  164. 10:27In fact, you would find that the impetus for scientific experimentation was what he learned
  165. 10:33in Scripture largely.
  166. 10:36But why do most people today, why are most of us ignorant of that fact and those facts?
  167. 10:43intentional because we have a society that wants to benefit from Newton's scientific contributions
  168. 10:51to society while simultaneously concealing from the masses his Christian commitment and
  169. 11:01his theological devotion. Why? Because it says the states continue to purport their false
  170. 11:07notion like Nietzsche and others have have posited that religion is the opiate of the
  171. 11:15masses, that you cannot be an intelligent person, an intellectual person, and also be a person
  172. 11:21of faith.
  173. 11:22That's just a flat line.
  174. 11:24It's demonstrable in history, all the way up to the present.
  175. 11:30I saw a dialogue not too long ago, I think it was Charlie Kirk and Bill Maher, Bill Maher
  176. 11:35couldn't understand how a person that he's meeting, and he came to the point where he viewed
  177. 11:39Charlie Kirk as an intelligent person.
  178. 11:42he was mystified by the idea that intelligent people somehow need this
  179. 11:47crutch of faith. He couldn't reconcile those two thoughts largely because of
  180. 11:56things I could just share about Isaac Newton. I doubt Bill Maher would question
  181. 12:01Isaac Newton's intellectual acumen. But when we have a society whose historical
  182. 12:10understandings have been manipulated by half-truth, you know, partial truths. This
  183. 12:18This is why when I talk to my children and they'll tell you, I say, Hamiltonians, what
  184. 12:23is the half truth?
  185. 12:24They'll say half truth is a whole lie.
  186. 12:26Why?
  187. 12:27Because you can deceive by concealing half truth is a whole lie.
  188. 12:35The only reason why a person will tell half truth is because they're motivated to conceal
  189. 12:40a portion so that they do not want to convey.
  190. 12:43The study of history should bring us the students to behold the face of our God.
  191. 12:52How to structure Joshua, get the stones, build a memorial.
  192. 12:57Why?
  193. 12:58So that when your children ask you, what do these stones mean?
  194. 13:03You're able to point them to me.
  195. 13:08We are experiencing a similar phenomenon in our day and age where you have things like
  196. 13:12the 1619 Project flat lie about our country, flat lie.
  197. 13:19Well, at the exact same time, we have people on the other side who would be conservatives
  198. 13:23who tried to or who described themselves as conservatives,
  199. 13:26who kind of try to conceal some of the uglier portions of our history.
  200. 13:32Because they seek into humanistically many instances to protect who they view as heroes,
  201. 13:37as opposed to telling the whole truth.
  202. 13:42See, the one major feature of telling the whole truth is that it fortifies us against creating idols.
  203. 13:50When God records history about King David and the Bible,
  204. 13:53he doesn't just give us the fire's blue stones and down goes goliath.
  205. 13:58That's not all we know about David.
  206. 13:59No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
  207. 14:02Because the true study of history
  208. 14:04should bring us to behold the face of our God.
  209. 14:06The whole story fortifies us against creating idols,
  210. 14:09deifying human beings, but instead we're able to stand back
  211. 14:12and say, oh my goodness, what a mighty God we serve
  212. 14:15because he is a master at using crooked sticks
  213. 14:18to paint straight lines.
  214. 14:21Because the true study of history
  215. 14:23should bring us to behold the face of our God.
  216. 14:25Because history is his story of interacting with mankind.
  217. 14:30over time. The proper recording of history points us to transcendent theological truth.
  218. 14:44We would be wise to be voracious learners and students of true history because it is a feature
  219. 14:52and an aspect of us drawing near to our God. Three simple words uplift, inspire, and encourage
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  226. 15:24americanfamilystudios.net, americanfamilystudios.net.
  227. 15:39radio. Welcome back to the Hamilton corner, Abraham Hamilton the third here. Just a reminder,
  228. 15:45May 22nd through the 24th, we will be in Winston Salem, North Carolina at the North Carolinians
  229. 15:53for home educations thrive conference. I'm looking forward to being there. I will be providing
  230. 15:59several keynote addresses. Well, no, yeah, several keynote addresses and breakout session instruction.
  231. 16:05and I will be broadcasting, will be broadcasting a Hamilton Corner program from
  232. 16:11North Carolina, May 22nd through the 24th, simply go to nche.com to register. Then
  233. 16:20soon thereafter June 5th through the 8th we will be in Illinois. That's right we are
  234. 16:26going to the land of JB Pritzker. At Olivette Nazarene University I will be
  235. 16:34administering at the Illinois Christian Home Educators Conference June 5th through the 8th
  236. 16:40in Burbanay, Illinois. I'm learning how to say that. Burbanay, Illinois will be there as well.
  237. 16:47So mark your calendars. I told you it's going to be all over because it's going to be a hot summer.
  238. 16:53We'll be all over. To register for the Illinois Conference, simply go to iche.org and again,
  239. 17:01And stay tuned because we're going to be all over this summer looking forward to meeting
  240. 17:05you there, broadcasting from different places all over the country.
  241. 17:08And so it's going to be an amazing, amazing time this summer.
  242. 17:12All right.
  243. 17:15Consistent with the point that I was making earlier from scripture about the necessity
  244. 17:19of having a proper understanding of history, we are watching things happen in our own time.
  245. 17:25You know, the, it's commonly called the progressive era, but really it's the regressive era where
  246. 17:31kinds of things happen. You saw the passage of the Federal Reserve Act in 1913, you know,
  247. 17:37where not only do you have the creation of the Federal Reserve System, which is not federal,
  248. 17:41in which they have no reserves, you saw in my view the unconstitutional seating of the
  249. 17:48coinage authority to the Federal Reserve System, you know, there never should have been a system
  250. 17:54that where all of us are waiting with baited breath because we're hamstrung by what type
  251. 18:01of interest rate adjustments, the Fed is going to make, you know, it's a shrewdly named private
  252. 18:07bank, but that is exactly what it is, a private bank that which has been to this very day as
  253. 18:13I'm speaking to you, has still never yet been subjected to an audit.
  254. 18:22You had at that exact same time the amendment of our Constitution to change the way that
  255. 18:26the United States Senate is elected.
  256. 18:29The founders established a bicameral national legislature to where the House of Representatives
  257. 18:36is supposed to be reflective of the will of the people individually.
  258. 18:40The US Senate is supposed to be the reflection of the will of the states as an entity.
  259. 18:45Each individual state as an entity because the House of Representatives was supposed to
  260. 18:49carry the weight of the concern of the individual citizen.
  261. 18:53Whether US Senate was supposed to carry the weight of the state, the states as organized
  262. 18:58entities in requiring a balancing of the state's interests and the individual's interests in
  263. 19:04order for legislation to be created.
  264. 19:08We lost that as a result of the progressive era, which I call the regressive era.
  265. 19:13Not only that, in the halls of America's law schools, the regressive era brought us the
  266. 19:20ending of the Black stonion ethic that was taught with Black stones, legal commentaries
  267. 19:26and moved toward the case law method, which included within it a side lining of a study
  268. 19:35of the history of American Constitution and the Beystet forged it, the articulation of individual
  269. 19:41articles into which the study of American Constitution was reduced to nothing more than to evaluate
  270. 19:46past opinions of the court.
  271. 19:52of these things with the product of the Regressive Era.
  272. 19:55One of the foremost and egregious notions that really permeates our society today is
  273. 20:05that there is an attempt to navigate the U.S. Constitution with no consideration whatsoever
  274. 20:12for the Declaration of Independence.
  275. 20:15A proper understanding of our founding documents would have us to realize that the Declaration
  276. 20:20of independence is the mission and vision statement for our nation.
  277. 20:26That is what the founders sought to accomplish by creating our Constitution.
  278. 20:33The U.S. Constitution is the implementation vessel, the vehicle of execution for the vision
  279. 20:40articulated in the Declaration of Independence.
  280. 20:43It would be a proper exercise in jurisprudential analysis that when constitutional issues arise
  281. 20:50before the US Supreme Court, the appellate courts,
  282. 20:53the district courts, that we also consider
  283. 20:56what was the stated purpose articulated
  284. 20:59in the Declaration of Independence.
  285. 21:00Does the Declaration of the United thing
  286. 21:01have anything to say about this?
  287. 21:04That is something that was lost on us.
  288. 21:10Now some of you guys know I teach a constitutional law
  289. 21:13class, among the things I do, I got a lot to do.
  290. 21:16Elon must think, see where there's a lot of hats.
  291. 21:18Move over, Elon.
  292. 21:20I wear a lot of hats too.
  293. 21:22You know, as a father who's we're discipling our children from home, I teach my own children
  294. 21:29and some children from our church, both civics and constitutional law.
  295. 21:35And one of the things we discussed, this is very principle that I'm articulating to you
  296. 21:38right now.
  297. 21:40I want to present to you firstly something that should be done in America's schools and
  298. 21:46law schools, I would argue, reading from the actual declaration of independence.
  299. 21:54And I started the very top in Congress, July 4, 1776, the unanimous declaration of the 13
  300. 22:01United States of America, when in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one
  301. 22:05people to dissolve the political bans, which have connected them with another and to assume
  302. 22:10among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature
  303. 22:15and of nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of Vancant requires
  304. 22:21that they should declare the causes which impel them to separation.
  305. 22:28We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed
  306. 22:35by their creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the
  307. 22:42pursuit of happiness. That to secure these rights, governments are instituted among men,
  308. 22:48deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed. That whenever any form of government
  309. 22:54becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the people to alter or to abolish it
  310. 23:00and to institute new government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its
  311. 23:06powers in such form as to them shall seem most likely to affect their safety and happiness.
  312. 23:14I'll stop right there. I encourage everyone in this audience to read the entire
  313. 23:20Declaration of Independence. It's not very long and it'll be insightful for us to understand
  314. 23:27our nation's founding documents. But I pose this question to my students in class. In the American
  315. 23:36Article 4 guaranteed constitutional Republican form of government,
  316. 23:39the structure of our nation who enjoys unalienable rights?
  317. 23:47Is it government singular?
  318. 23:53Referring to the national government?
  319. 23:55Is it government's plural state governments who enjoys unalienable rights?
  320. 24:01The answer is very clearly stated in the Declaration of Independence.
  321. 24:04We hold these shoes to be self-evident that all men are created equal.
  322. 24:09Notice, they didn't say all governments are created equal.
  323. 24:12equal, that all men are endowed by their Creator with certain
  324. 24:18unalienable rights. Notice it doesn't say that governments are
  325. 24:23endowed with unalienable rights. So you have explained before
  326. 24:28the concept of unalienable rights was derived from the
  327. 24:35Reformation revelation rediscovered that the individual is
  328. 24:41made in the image of God. It is because the individual is
  329. 24:44made in the image of God that the individual has the capacity to navigate God's Holy Word.
  330. 24:53He doesn't require an intermediary to understand God's Holy Word. The tutor, if you will,
  331. 25:00for interpreting God's Word is God himself via his Spirit. God, the Holy Spirit,
  332. 25:05is the one who Jesus said would teach us and remind us of everything Jesus instructed.
  333. 25:11The Declaration of Independence articulates that it is the individual who enjoys unalienable
  334. 25:22rights that all men are created equal and all men enjoy unalienable rights.
  335. 25:27Well, the text that I use to teach my constitutional law class obviously includes a constitution and
  336. 25:34commentaries on the Constitution.
  337. 25:36And I have one of those commentaries I want to share with you today titled the Meaning of
  338. 25:40the Constitution written by former Attorney General Edwin Meese, the third.
  339. 25:46You know, some about those thirds now.
  340. 25:48Edwin Meese, the third was the United States Attorney General appointed by
  341. 25:54former President Ronald Reagan, President Ronald Reagan appointed
  342. 25:57at Meese and drawing from the very thing I just read to you from the
  343. 26:04Declaration of Independence in his essay titled the meaning of, let me get the
  344. 26:08right word, right title for his essay.
  345. 26:12Yes, the meaning of the Constitution.
  346. 26:19Ed Mies writes the following, quote, the United States Constitution creates a government of
  347. 26:28delegated and enumerated powers.
  348. 26:32Despite the popular term, states writes, no government, federal, state, county, or local
  349. 26:39actually possesses any rights at all.
  350. 26:43Recall from the Declaration of Independence that persons are endowed with unalienable
  351. 26:49rights.
  352. 26:51Governments possess only powers which in legitimate governments are derived from the consent of
  353. 26:59the governed.
  354. 27:00In particular, governments have only those powers that are given or delegated or enumerated to
  355. 27:09them by the people.
  356. 27:12The concept of enumerated or listed powers follows from the concept of delegated powers, as the
  357. 27:20functional purpose of a constitution is to write down and assign the powers granted to
  358. 27:28government.
  359. 27:30The delegation of powers to government and a written agreement as to the extent and limits
  360. 27:36of those powers are critical elements of limited constitutional government."
  361. 27:45When was the last time that we may have pondered individually or even pondered in our public
  362. 27:55discourse that truly speaking, there's no such thing as states' rights?
  363. 28:02Now, hear what I'm saying.
  364. 28:06have authority no doubt about it. But states enjoy powers. The federal government enjoys
  365. 28:13powers. Where do those powers come from? This is why I've long said, if I ever have the opportunity
  366. 28:23to moderate a presidential debate, the very, very first question that I'm going to ask the
  367. 28:27candidates is where do rights come from? Because the answer to that question will tell me an
  368. 28:37an extremely large amount as to what I need to know about that understanding of our constitutional
  369. 28:46Republican form of government, the formation of our nation, and what their role should
  370. 28:51be in our nation if they are campaigning to serve our nation as president.
  371. 29:01States have powers, delegated powers, and enumerated powers.
  372. 29:10The 10th amendment to our U.S. Constitution explains very plainly.
  373. 29:15Whatever powers have not been expressly enumerated within this Constitution.
  374. 29:21The word enumerated simply means listed, listed and numbered, listed and numbered.
  375. 29:27Whatever powers have not been listed in this Constitution as an overt granting to the national
  376. 29:38government, the federal government, those powers are inherently reserved to the states
  377. 29:45and to her people. Powers, not rights. This idea of our proper recognition of inalienable rights,
  378. 29:57vis-à-vis and versus state power is vitally important because what should become evident
  379. 30:03is that the power has is and should rest in the people.
  380. 30:16The legitimating factor of government is that its power is derived from the people's consent.
  381. 30:25So those who endeavor to serve our nation, in positions of public service, they're continuing
  382. 30:32and enduring evaluation should be,
  383. 30:35have the people given us the power to do this task?
  384. 30:40Have the people given us the power
  385. 30:43to exercise this authority?
  386. 30:45If the people have not given us the power
  387. 30:48to exercise this authority,
  388. 30:50to do so in this manner would be
  389. 30:53violative of our constitution
  390. 30:56and our social contract
  391. 31:00of the legitimacy of our government being focused on, the fulcrum of which is a consent
  392. 31:05of the governed. It would be a radical reformation as to how we understand what government is
  393. 31:13and what it's supposed to do. We would also be forced to confront face to face, face to
  394. 31:21face repetitively that inalienable powers are super supersede state, I'm sorry, inalienable
  395. 31:31rights. I'm sorry I didn't say they're right. Inalienable rights supersede state-granted,
  396. 31:38enumerated, designated, delegated powers. Which is why we should more frequently discuss public servants
  397. 31:50than we do. Leaders. Why? Surely they are leaders, but we should use nomenclature to remind ourselves
  398. 31:58and to remind them that the only reason why you have the authority that you have is because we
  399. 32:02He has given it to you.
  400. 32:07Inalienable rights supersede delegated powers.
  401. 32:15The main reason for that is the inalienable rights
  402. 32:19derived from God that determines these rights
  403. 32:23are intrinsic to mankind as a result
  404. 32:26of being bearers of his image.
  405. 32:30As Christians, how can we even begin to impact others
  406. 32:33when we live in a culture where truth is relative?
  407. 32:36It all starts with God's Word.
  408. 32:38Join us for Activate Summit 2025
  409. 32:40at Cadence Bank Conference Center in Tupelo, Mississippi,
  410. 32:43June 12th through the 14th, 2025.
  411. 32:46The theme is biblical bedrock,
  412. 32:48building on the authority of scripture,
  413. 32:50and it's designed to help you acknowledge
  414. 32:51the Bible's authority and submit
  415. 32:53to the clear teaching of scripture.
  416. 32:55Here from Frank Turic.
  417. 32:56Evolution describes what does behave,
  418. 32:58not what ought to behave, right?
  419. 33:00It doesn't give you achts,
  420. 33:02it just gives you what does happen.
  421. 33:03Todd Herman, God always uses evil for good.
  422. 33:06He's very intentional, and he intentionally
  423. 33:08shows you to live through times of mistakes.
  424. 33:10And more.
  425. 33:11The main sessions are for ages 13 and up,
  426. 33:14while Activate Kids is a separate track for ages 6 through 12.
  427. 33:17Register for Activate Summit 2025
  428. 33:20by visiting activate.afa.net.
  429. 33:23Get your tickets as soon as possible.
  430. 33:26Registration closes May 11.
  431. 33:34Hamilton Quarter Podcast and One-Bitted Common Terries
  432. 33:37available at aFR.net back to the Hamilton Corner on American Family Radio.
  433. 33:45Welcome back to the Hamilton Corner, Abraham Hamilton the third here. Just having a conversation
  434. 33:49about inalienable rights versus in vis-a-vis delegated powers, governments, federal government,
  435. 33:58state, local, county, municipal city, they enjoy powers. The powers are given by the people.
  436. 34:08The touchstone of the inalienability of rights
  437. 34:14come from the simple fact that they are God-given.
  438. 34:18Hence the description, the right to life
  439. 34:21is a God-given right.
  440. 34:25The right to liberty is a God-given right.
  441. 34:29The right to pursue, not a guarantee of,
  442. 34:31but the pursuit of happiness is a God-given right,
  443. 34:35which means that no man or man-instituted governing system
  444. 34:40can lawfully, rightfully deprive the individual of these rights.
  445. 34:48That's what it means, man.
  446. 34:51That's what it means.
  447. 34:54Can I do so without due process of laws?
  448. 34:59Continuing in this notion, and again, I found the documents have all kind of wisdom for us
  449. 35:05if we would have put it into practice.
  450. 35:12The preamble to our Constitution would simply read, we the people of the United States in
  451. 35:18in order to form a more perfect union,
  452. 35:20establish justice, ensure domestic tranquility,
  453. 35:23provide for the common defense,
  454. 35:25promote the general welfare,
  455. 35:26and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves
  456. 35:29and our posterity,
  457. 35:30do ordain an established constitution
  458. 35:32for the United States of America.
  459. 35:34It lists five purposes,
  460. 35:38four which the US Constitution was created.
  461. 35:40Created.
  462. 35:41One, in order to form a more perfect union.
  463. 35:47The term perfectly is used in our constitution,
  464. 35:49very similar to the biblical usage of the word perfect.
  465. 35:53It didn't mean absent of error,
  466. 35:54it meant increasingly better.
  467. 36:01In order for our union to be better and better and better
  468. 36:03over time, we're creating this constitution.
  469. 36:07That's purpose one, second purpose, to establish justice.
  470. 36:10Third purpose, ensure domestic tranquility.
  471. 36:12Fourth purpose, provide for the common defense.
  472. 36:15Fifth purpose, I say five, I meant six purposes.
  473. 36:18Fifth purpose, to promote the general welfare,
  474. 36:20which has nothing to do with entitlement programs.
  475. 36:23We'll probably have to do an entire program,
  476. 36:26an entire show on that portion alone.
  477. 36:29Sixth purpose to secure the blessings of liberty
  478. 36:32to ourselves and to our posterity,
  479. 36:34from which I've argued numerous times.
  480. 36:37How can you secure the blessings of liberty
  481. 36:38to your posterity if we are killing our posterity intentionally?
  482. 36:48One of the points, and again, going all the way back
  483. 36:49to the first segment, the reason why we should study history,
  484. 36:53accurate rendering of history points us to transcend the theological truth.
  485. 37:00What a lot of us don't realize is that even the phrasing,
  486. 37:06many of us continually don't realize,
  487. 37:07even the phrasing in the preamble to the constitution was something that was
  488. 37:11debated during our founding era. This is, this is just a simple truth.
  489. 37:19Turning back to my text, commenting on the constitution says this quote,
  490. 37:24appreciation of the preamble begins with a comparison of it to its counterpart in the
  491. 37:32compact, the Constitution replaced the articles of confederation.
  492. 37:36I'm going to pause right there for a second.
  493. 37:40A lot of people fail to remember that the Declaration of Independence signed July 4th,
  494. 37:491776 following the Declaration of Independence.
  495. 37:56There was a source of governing in the United States of America before the U.S. Constitution
  496. 38:01that ever you've been drafted.
  497. 38:02It's called the Articles of Confederation.
  498. 38:05The U.S. Constitution, in fact, was drafted to replace the Articles of Confederation because
  499. 38:12many of the founders, except for states like Rhode Island, found the Articles of Confederation
  500. 38:16to be woefully inadequate to serve the purposes that have been articulated in the Declaration
  501. 38:22of Independence.
  502. 38:26The document that became the U.S. Constitution was an outlier in governing documents of its
  503. 38:31It's kind when compared to those not only in our own articles of Confederation, but in
  504. 38:36governments around the world.
  505. 38:40The preamble to the Constitution diverged from the introductory paragraph or the preamble
  506. 38:47to the articles of Confederation back to the text.
  507. 38:52In the articles of Confederation, quote, the states joined in a firm league of friendship
  508. 38:58with each other for their common defense, security of their liberties, and their mutual and general
  509. 39:03welfare and bound themselves to assist one another against all force offered to it against
  510. 39:10all force offered to or attacks made upon them or any of them on account of religion, sovereignty,
  511. 39:18trade or any other pretense, whatever."
  512. 39:21In quote, that's what the introductory paragraph to the Articles of Confederation says.
  513. 39:28Notice that it begins with a reference to the states.
  514. 39:32It doesn't begin with an assertion, we the people.
  515. 39:35It started with a reference to we the states.
  516. 39:40The agreement was among the states, not the people.
  517. 39:43And the safety and liberties to be secured were the safety and liberties of the states
  518. 39:47corporately understood, not the liberties of the individual.
  519. 39:56The very opening words of the Constitution, however, says we the people of the United States.
  520. 40:03It presumes the language of the Declaration of Independence.
  521. 40:07Guys, this is something we have to understand.
  522. 40:10The assertion, we the people assumes the language of the Declaration of Independence.
  523. 40:17The U.S., sorry, the Declaration of Independence, 1776, when the Revolutionary War is taking
  524. 40:25place, the governing authority in America is the Articles of Confederation.
  525. 40:29The U.S. Constitution is not drafted until 1787.
  526. 40:33All right?
  527. 40:34It is ratified thereafter.
  528. 40:40When the Constitution is drafted, when the delegates finish at the Constitution Convention
  529. 40:43in Philadelphia, the states then gather in their ratifying conventions.
  530. 40:48You had an anti-federalist like Edmund Randolph, governor of Virginia and Patrick Henry.
  531. 40:54Give me liberty, give me death, Patrick Henry.
  532. 40:56All right?
  533. 40:57Patrick Henry was concerned as an anti-federalist because he wanted to make sure, he opposed
  534. 41:04the notion of having an outsized and overbearing, overly powerful national government.
  535. 41:10Hint to the description, anti-federalist.
  536. 41:15Patrick Henry made the accusation and asserted as one of the reasons why he was objecting
  537. 41:22initially to the ratification of the US Constitution, that the very words at the beginning
  538. 41:28of the Constitution sought to eviscerate state power, because the very, very words of the
  539. 41:33the U.S. Constitution begins with we, the people of the United States, he saw that as
  540. 41:39a broad side against state power. In fact, Patrick Henry charged that the failure to follow
  541. 41:46the usual form, referring to the states, indicated an intention to create a quote, consolidated
  542. 41:54national government instead of the system that James Madison described in the Federalist
  543. 41:58number 39 as being neither a national nor a federal constitution, but a composition of both.
  544. 42:05Now Patrick Henry, the quote, he didn't refer to federalist 39 by number, but his argument
  545. 42:13was that the verbiage we the people is an indication, is evidence that the intention of
  546. 42:19the framers was to create a consolidated national government to eviscerate state power.
  547. 42:28Patrick Henry's assertion, and he made this argument
  548. 42:30doing a ratifying convention, okay?
  549. 42:32When Virginia was considering whether or not
  550. 42:33they were ratifying the U.S. Constitution.
  551. 42:37Patrick Henry's assertion was challenged
  552. 42:39by Virginia Governor Edmund Randolph,
  553. 42:43in which Governor Randolph responded to Patrick Henry
  554. 42:46by saying, quote, the government is for the people,
  555. 42:50and the misfortune was that the people had no agency
  556. 42:53in the government before,
  557. 42:55under the Articles of Confederation, back to the quote.
  558. 42:57If the government is to be binding on the people
  559. 43:00are not the people, the proper persons
  560. 43:03to examine its merits or defects,
  561. 43:06that's what Governor Emmon Randolph said, in quote,
  562. 43:09Randolph, in his rebuttal to Patrick Henry,
  563. 43:12made it clear, guys, listen up here,
  564. 43:15Randolph, in his rebuttal to Patrick Henry,
  565. 43:17made it clear that it is the people individually
  566. 43:23and not the states acting through their established
  567. 43:27governments that were the appropriate ratifying authority.
  568. 43:33This was a deliberate move on the part
  569. 43:35of the drafters of the Constitution.
  570. 43:37In other words, what Governor Evan Randolph argued
  571. 43:40is that this is not an attempt to eviscerate state power.
  572. 43:44This is an attempt to properly elevate the potency
  573. 43:47of the individual, the potency of the image bearer.
  574. 43:52That though people gather in their respective states,
  575. 43:55it is the people who have the authority
  576. 43:57to determine whether or not this constitution
  577. 43:59should be ratified.
  578. 44:00What I'm saying is that one of the most amazing realities
  579. 44:04of this American experiment in individual liberty
  580. 44:06is just that.
  581. 44:07It is the first time in all of human history
  582. 44:11where it was a proper elevation of the concerns
  583. 44:14and the considerations and a recognition
  584. 44:17of the potency of the individual.
  585. 44:27It doesn't deny that states have powers,
  586. 44:31But we must be consistently mindful of the fact that the powers that the states enjoy,
  587. 44:40it comes from her people.
  588. 44:43The power that the national government enjoys comes from the people.
  589. 44:50If we had this as a consistent front of the mind consideration in our body politic, that
  590. 44:59Chuckie Duck Schumer and occasional core texting and, and, and,
  591. 45:05Howdy Sanders, get off my lawn.
  592. 45:08President Trump, we're consistently reminded
  593. 45:12that you realize you're accountable to the people.
  594. 45:15You realize you're accountable to the people.
  595. 45:19This is why no matter what you say,
  596. 45:21President Trump is doing the very things he campaigned on,
  597. 45:24this is what people elected him to do.
  598. 45:27Many people in America have been frustrated
  599. 45:29because you have candidates who campaign on one thing
  600. 45:31and do the exact opposite.
  601. 45:33Why? Because there's a frustration
  602. 45:36of the potency that provides a source
  603. 45:38but the only legitimate understanding
  604. 45:41of what government should be.
  605. 45:44Now, presenting all of this to you,
  606. 45:46because this should be something that should remain
  607. 45:49a front of the mind concern.
  608. 45:55Because when we consider the potency of the people
  609. 45:57in this American experiment in government,
  610. 45:59we must also remember, well, where does that potency come from?
  611. 46:02Where do men's inalienable rights come from?
  612. 46:06Because remember, a proper rendering,
  613. 46:08a proper understanding, a proper recording of history
  614. 46:11would point us to transcend it the illogical truth.
  615. 46:16It is because man is made in the image of God
  616. 46:21that people enjoy unalienable rights.
  617. 46:24It is because man is made in the image of God
  618. 46:26that the only legitimate source
  619. 46:30for the just exercise of governmental power
  620. 46:32is the consent of the governed.
  621. 46:35It is this fact, this reality, this revelation
  622. 46:38that led to the founding of Western civilization.
  623. 46:40It is why the United States of America
  624. 46:42is not Nicholas Maduro's Venezuela.
  625. 46:44It is why there is an internal cry
  626. 46:51for recalibration of things when government encroaches,
  627. 46:54or should I say exceeds its right boundaries.
  628. 46:57It is also why we as the people having this continuous
  629. 47:02affront of the mind consideration
  630. 47:04that our foremost concern when issues arise around us
  631. 47:07is not to turn and look to see,
  632. 47:08well, what is the government going to do?
  633. 47:11No, what is, what are we going to do?
  634. 47:14because the government's existence at best
  635. 47:18should be to secure to us the blessings of liberty,
  636. 47:20should be to protect our ability to pursue happiness.
  637. 47:23Government is not the source of the happiness,
  638. 47:26it protects our ability to pursue it.
  639. 47:29We need to have a radical recalibration in our nation
  640. 47:32till we once again revisit the potency
  641. 47:35of the individual liberty.
  642. 47:37When you understand what people like Frederick Douglass
  643. 47:41and Booker T. Washington and others attempted
  644. 47:43articulate when you talk about what conservatism is, what it is conservatism, it is a conservation
  645. 47:48of the right of the individual to go make and to do. Which is why our foremost consideration
  646. 47:55is for government to function within the very limited parameters that have been delegated
  647. 48:01to you, that is enumerated to you and let we the people do what we have to do. Without this
  648. 48:10consistent understanding, we won't enjoy what the preambo articulates in order to form a
  649. 48:15more perfect union, right?
  650. 48:17We understood as growing in maturation, becoming being made better and better and better over
  651. 48:24time that will not occur.
  652. 48:27We don't have a proper understanding that it is the people who enjoy in a right government
  653. 48:32and governments enjoy powers that are delegated to them by the people that for our federal
  654. 48:40government, they are enumerated in the US Constitution.
  655. 48:44And for our states, what is not expressly enumerated to the national government is inherently reserved
  656. 48:50to the states and to the people.
  657. 48:55We need a radical recalibration to the potency of the individual because it is the individual
  658. 49:01who is made in the image of God.
  659. 49:10The views and opinions expressed in this broadcast may not necessarily reflect those of the American
  660. 49:15Family Association or American Family Radio.

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