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Jul 26 10 tweets 4 min read Read on X
Before the Founders drafted constitutions, they studied Scripture. And no passage shaped the American conscience more than Christ’s Sermon on the Mount. It wasn’t just a spiritual code, It was the soul of the moral law.

Let’s dive in. 🧵🇺🇸 #AmRev Image
The Founders believed liberty required virtue. And virtue required internal self-government. The Sermon on the Mount wasn’t about outward rituals, It was about inward character: humility, mercy, integrity, courage, forgiveness. A republic demands hearts like this. Image
“Blessed are the meek.” “Blessed are the merciful.” “Blessed are the peacemakers.” These weren’t calls for weakness. They were calls for strength through restraint. Washington, Witherspoon, and Adams embodied this moral courage. Image
Where tyrants rule by fear, Christ called for purity of heart. Where power corrupts, He said: “Do not even look at a woman with lust.” Where revenge reigns, He said: “Turn the other cheek.”
He gave the blueprint for inner mastery; a requirement for outer liberty. Image
The Founders didn’t want the State to impose religion, but they did believe religion was essential to civic virtue.
John Adams: “Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.” Image
Jefferson cut up a Bible to get to the moral core. Washington prayed daily.
Franklin urged prayer at the Constitutional Convention. Even the most “enlightened” knew: without personal virtue, freedom fails. The Sermon was the moral compass. Image
When Christ said, “You are the salt of the earth,” He was talking to ordinary people. Preserving the world through goodness. “You are the light of the world.” He gave the citizen a holy calling: to live the kind of life that keeps a Republic alive. Image
The Sermon ends with a warning: build your house on rock, not sand. A Republic built only on laws and courts will fall. But one rooted in virtue, in men and women governed first by God, will weather every storm. Image
The Founders knew liberty starts not with revolutions, but with regeneration. The Sermon on the Mount wasn’t just a doctrine of private piety, it was a manual for self-government. It taught Americans how to be free and good. 🇺🇸 #AmRev Image
If the Sermon on the Mount moved you too, I’m building a whole series on how the Bible and the classics shaped the American mind.

📜 Dive deeper on my Substack:


Let’s reclaim the soul of the Republic. 🇺🇸amrevresurrected.substack.com

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More from @AmRevResurrect

Jul 24
Before the Founders built a republic, Rome taught them how to keep one. It began with 12 bronze tablets. Not myths. Not kings. Just law. Let’s explore how the Twelve Tables ignited the idea that no man is above the law.

Let’s dive in.🧵🇺🇸 #AmRev Image
In 509 BC, the Roman monarchy fell. The Republic was born. But liberty was fragile. Plebeians, Rome’s commoners, demanded written laws to protect them from abuse by patrician elites. What followed was a revolution of ink and bronze. Image
The result: the Twelve Tables, publicly displayed in the Forum on bronze tablets. For the first time in Rome’s history, laws were fixed, knowable, and visible to all citizens. No more rulings by whim or class. Image
Read 10 tweets
Jul 23
Before Jefferson picked up a pen, and Washington a sword, there was Moses; staff in hand, leading his people from bondage. To the Founders, he wasn’t just a prophet; he was the original liberator.

Let’s dive in. 🧵 #AmRev Image
Moses stood at the center of the Founders’ imagination. He was carved into the walls of the Supreme Court.
Featured in political sermons. Painted in revolutionary homes. To them, he symbolized the moral duty to resist tyranny, and the law to govern freedom. Image
The Exodus story was America’s story.
A people, oppressed by a distant ruler, rise up and claim liberty. Washington was compared to Moses. The Red Sea became the Atlantic. Pharaoh became George III. This wasn’t just myth, it was mission. Image
Read 9 tweets
Jul 21
Long before Caesar and empire, Rome had kings. But in 509 BC, the Romans did something radical; they overthrew monarchy and swore never to return to it. The Founders saw this as the original republican revolt. That spirit echoed into Philadelphia in 1776.

Let’s dive in. 🧵#AmRev Image
The final straw was Tarquin the Proud, a cruel, arrogant king whose son raped a noblewoman named Lucretia. Her suicide sparked national outrage. Lucius Junius Brutus led the uprising. The Romans overthrew the Tarquins and founded the Republic. Image
Brutus, the founder of the Republic, put liberty above blood. When his sons joined a plot to restore the monarchy, he had them executed. The message was clear: in a Republic, no one, not even family, is above the law. Image
Read 9 tweets
Jul 20
How did the Founders design a republic to resist tyranny? They studied Polybius, a Greek hostage-turned-Roman historian. His lessons on balance, virtue, and decay helped shape the U.S. Constitution itself.

Let’s dive in. 🧵🇺🇸 #AmRev Image
Polybius was born in 200 BC in Greece. After Rome conquered his homeland, he was taken as a hostage, then embedded in Roman society. He watched the Republic rise to dominance, and sought to explain why it worked. Out came his Histories. Image
Polybius believed Rome thrived because it balanced monarchy (consuls), aristocracy (Senate), and democracy (popular assemblies). No branch had absolute power. This balance, so familiar to us today, was his formula for a stable republic. Image
Read 11 tweets
Jul 18
What lessons shaped the minds of America’s Founders? Many came from Rome, not through war, but through words. Livy wrote history with purpose: to preserve virtue and warn against decline. His legacy shaped the soul of the Revolution.

Let’s dive in. 🧵🇺🇸 #AmRev Image
Titus Livius, Livy, was born in 59 BC in Padua, far from the political chaos of Rome. He grew up during civil wars and the fall of the Republic. He didn’t write to flatter emperors. He wrote to recover mores, the moral character of a nation. Image
Livy’s masterpiece was Ab Urbe Condita, “From the Founding of the City.” 142 volumes tracing Rome’s history from its mythic founding to his own time. Most are lost, but what survives shows his purpose: to remind Romans what made them great. Image
Read 10 tweets
Jul 16
To understand the soul of the American Revolution, you need to understand Cicero. He wasn’t just a Roman statesman, he was a moral compass across the centuries. To the Founders, Cicero embodied liberty, virtue, and the Republic itself.

Let’s dive in. 🧵🇺🇸 #AmRev Image
Born in 106 BC, Marcus Tullius Cicero rose from the equestrian class to become Rome’s greatest orator and a defender of the Republic. His writings on natural law, justice, and liberty would echo through history, and shape the minds of Jefferson, Adams, and Madison. Image
Cicero believed that law wasn’t created by man, it was discovered through reason and aligned with nature and the divine. This idea of natural law would be the cornerstone of the Declaration of Independence. Rights weren’t granted by kings. They were given by God. Image
Read 11 tweets

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