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Oct 12 11 tweets 3 min read Read on X
Before Jefferson, before Madison, there was Algernon Sidney. A man who bled for liberty, wrote its gospel, and defied a king to his death. His words would become scripture for America’s revolutionaries.

Let’s dive in. 🇺🇸 #AmRev Image
Born in 1623, Sidney was a nobleman turned rebel; a soldier for Parliament in England’s civil wars, then a philosopher in exile. He believed government existed only by the consent of the governed; a truth later written into America’s DNA. Image
Sidney’s masterpiece, Discourses Concerning Government, tore apart the divine right of kings. He argued that tyrants break the covenant of rule, and when they do, the people not only may, but must, resist. Image
For writing such words, Charles II called it treason. When no proof could be found, the crown used his unpublished manuscript as evidence. “Manuscript found in his study”; that was enough to send Sidney to the scaffold in 1683.
Before his death, he declared: “We live in an age that makes truth pass for treason.” Then he placed his faith in God and liberty, dying as calmly as Socrates, convinced that ideas are stronger than swords. Image
A century later, those ideas resurfaced across the Atlantic. Jefferson called Sidney “one of the best elementary books on the principles of government.”
Madison and Adams quoted him often; their revolutions built upon his martyrdom.
Sidney wrote that “Liberty is the gift of God and nature.” That no ruler has claim to rule men against their will, for the right to self-government is older than any throne, and sacred in the eyes of Heaven. Image
He taught that virtue is the lifeblood of a free people; without moral strength, republics rot and tyrants return. This warning burned in the hearts of America’s founders, who knew freedom demands discipline, not decadence.
Sidney’s blood became seed.
His execution shocked England, but inspired generations of liberty-seekers, from John Locke to the Sons of Liberty. His death proved what all tyrants fear: you can kill a man, but not an idea rooted in truth. Image
When the Founders declared independence, they echoed Sidney’s creed: “Resistance to tyranny is obedience to God.” He had written that line long before it adorned Jefferson’s seal; long before it became America’s soul. 🇺🇸 #AmRev Image
Algernon Sidney died for truths we now take for granted: that liberty is sacred, that power must serve virtue, and that no man is born a master. His words lit the torch the Founders carried.

If this stirred your spirit, give back the value: Reshare. Teach. Or subscribe. 🫡🇺🇸

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More from @AmRevResurrect

Oct 9
Before America declared independence, another small nation had already defied a world empire : the Dutch Republic. Its thinkers and warriors built the moral and legal foundations that would later shape the American Revolution.

Let’s dive in. 🇺🇸 #AmRev Image
In the 1500s, Spain ruled the Netherlands with an iron hand, crushing faith, taxing the people, and burning dissenters. From this oppression rose William of Orange, a nobleman turned rebel, who led his people not just in war, but in the pursuit of liberty. Image
In 1581, the Dutch issued the Act of Abjuration, the first true declaration of independence in modern history. They renounced their allegiance to Philip II of Spain, declaring that rulers exist to serve the people, not the other way around. Image
Read 10 tweets
Oct 7
Long before the Revolution, one printer in New York lit the spark of American liberty with ink, not gunpowder.
His name was John Peter Zenger, and his trial in 1735 would define the sacred right to speak truth to power.

Let’s dive in. 🇺🇸 #AmRev Image
The colonies were still under royal rule, with governors appointed by the Crown. New York’s governor, William Cosby, was notorious for corruption and greed. When Zenger’s newspaper dared expose it, he was charged with seditious libel for criticizing authority. Image
At the time, truth wasn’t a defense. If your words offended the powerful, even if true, you were guilty. Zenger sat in jail for months, his press seized. But his wife kept the paper alive, secretly publishing attacks on tyranny from their home. A quiet revolution in ink. Image
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Oct 5
Before Jefferson or Locke echoed across the colonies, there were the Levellers: radical Englishmen who fought tyranny with pen and sword, declaring all men were born with “natural rights.” Their ideas helped ignite the very spirit that birthed America.

Let’s dive in. 🇺🇸 #AmRev Image
The Levellers emerged during England’s Civil War (1640s); a time when kings claimed divine right and Parliament bowed low. But ordinary soldiers and citizens began to ask: by what authority? They believed liberty came not from kings, but from God and nature. Image
Their leaders, John Lilburne, Richard Overton, William Walwyn, wrote pamphlets demanding freedom of conscience, equality before the law, and representative government.
Their rallying cry? “Freeborn Englishmen.” Image
Read 11 tweets
Oct 4
Jonathan Edwards is often remembered for “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God.” But his legacy is much deeper: a visionary theologian, philosopher, and revivalist who helped lay America’s moral and intellectual foundations.

Let’s dive in. 🇺🇸 #AmRev Image
Born in 1703 in colonial Connecticut, Edwards was a prodigy. By 13, he was at Yale, studying not only theology but also science, Newton, and Locke. His mind fused Enlightenment reason with Puritan faith; a rare balance of intellect and piety. Image
As pastor in Northampton, Massachusetts, Edwards became a leading voice of the Great Awakening. His sermons were not emotional spectacles, but carefully reasoned appeals, showing that truth, conscience, and Scripture must awaken the heart. Image
Read 12 tweets
Sep 28
We think life is hard today; housing out of reach, families stretched thin, prices soaring. But early Americans clawed survival from nothing. Indentured, impoverished, exiled, yet they built a Republic through grit, faith, and sacrifice.

Let’s dive in. 🇺🇸 #AmRev Image
Indentured servants, often poor Europeans, signed away years for passage to America. Bound to masters, they toiled in fields, facing abuse, no marriage without permission. This “slavery” of labor built colonies, echoing biblical calls to endure for freedom’s sake. Image
Early arrivals battled starvation, disease; Jamestown lost most to “starving time.” Harsh winters, native conflicts tested souls. Yet, like Proverbs 24:16, the righteous rose again, their faith in Providence fueling unyielding determination. Image
Read 13 tweets
Sep 27
The Founders did not build a nation on comfort. They drew from Aristotle’s pursuit of arete: excellence, and eudaimonia, human flourishing through virtue. America was born to challenge mediocrity and rise to greatness.

Let’s dive in. 🇺🇸 #AmRev Image
For Aristotle, arete meant more than skill. It meant virtue in action: courage, wisdom, temperance. Jefferson and Adams read this not as abstract theory but as the fuel for republican life. Only a virtuous people could remain free. Image
Eudaimonia was the goal: not fleeting pleasure, but lasting human flourishing rooted in reason, virtue, and purpose. The Founders echoed this in the pursuit of happiness; not comfort, but excellence in living. Image
Read 10 tweets

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