The
Wake-up Herald
And
that, knowing the time, that now
it is high time to awake out of
sleep: for now is our salvation
nearer than when we believed. The
night is far spent, the day is at
hand: let us therefore cast off
the works of darkness, and let us
put on the armour of light. Let us
walk honestly, as in the day; not
in rioting and drunkenness, not in
chambering and wantonness, not in
strife and envying. But put ye on
the Lord Jesus Christ, and make
not provision for the flesh, to
fulfill the lusts thereof. Romans
13:11-14
_______________________________________________________________________
Robert
McCurry, Editor & Publisher
April
19, 2012
_______________________________________________________________________
The
Man Who Fired the Shot
Heard
'Round the World
By
Chuck Baldwin
April
19, 1775, should be regarded as
important a date to Americans as
July 4, 1776. It’s a shame that
we don’t celebrate it as
enthusiastically as we do
Independence Day. It’s even more
shameful that many Americans
don’t even remember what
happened on this day back in 1775.
For the record, historians call
this day, “Patriot’s Day.”
More specifically, it was the day
that the shot was fired that was
heard ’round the world. It was
the day America’s War for
Independence began.
Being
warned of approaching British
troops by Dr. James Warren, Pastor
Jonas Clark and his male
congregants of the Church of
Lexington (numbering 60-70) were
the ones that stood with their
muskets in front of the Crown’s
troops (numbering over 800), who
were on orders to seize a cache of
arms which were stored at Concord
and to arrest Sam Adams and John
Hancock (who were known to be in
the area, and who had actually
taken refuge in Pastor Clark’s
home).
According
to eyewitnesses, the king’s
troops opened fire on the
militiamen almost without warning,
immediately killing eight of
Pastor Clark’s parishioners. In
self defense, the Minutemen
returned fire. These were the
first shots of the Revolutionary
War. This took place on Lexington
Green, which was located directly
beside the church-house where
those men worshipped each Sunday.
Adams and Hancock were not taken.
They owed their lives to Pastor
Clark and his brave
Minutemen--albeit eight of those
men gave their lives protecting
Adams and Hancock.
According
to Pastor Clark, these are the
names of the eight men who died on
Lexington Green: Robert Munroe,
Jonas Parker, Samuel Hadley,
Jonathan Harrington, Jr., Isaac
Muzzy, Caleb Harrington, and John
Brown, all of Lexington, and one
Mr. Porter of Woburn.
By
the time the British troops
arrived at the Concord Bridge,
hundreds of colonists had amassed
a defense of the bridge. A
horrific battle took place, and
the British troops were routed and
soon retreated back to Boston.
America’s War for Independence
had begun!
Yes,
ladies and gentlemen, these two
elements of American history are
lost to the vast majority of
historians today: 1) it was
attempted gun confiscation by the
British troops that ignited
America’s War for Independence,
and 2) it was a pastor and his
flock that mostly comprised the
“Minutemen” who fired the
shots that started our great
Revolution.
With
that thought in mind, I want to
devote today’s column to
honoring the brave preachers of
Colonial America--these
“children of the Pilgrims,” as
one Colonial pastor’s descendent
put it.
It
really wasn’t that long ago.
However, with the way America’s
clergymen act today, one would
think that preachers such as James
Caldwell, John Peter Muhlenberg,
Joab Houghton, and Jonas Clark
never existed. But they did exist;
and without them, this country we
call the United States of America
would not exist.
Caldwell
was a Presbyterian; Muhlenberg was
a Lutheran; Houghton was a
Baptist; and no one really seems
to know what denomination (if any)
Jonas Clark claimed, although one
historian referred to Clark as a
Trinitarian and a Calvinist. But
these men had one thing in common
(besides their faith in Jesus
Christ): they were all ardent
patriots who participated in
America’s War for Independence,
and in the case of Jonas Clark,
actually ignited it.
James
Caldwell
James
Caldwell was called “The Rebel
High Priest” or “The Fighting
Chaplain.” Caldwell is most
famous for the “Give ’em
Watts!” story.
During
the Springfield (New Jersey)
engagement, the colonial militia
ran out of wadding for their
muskets. Quickly, Caldwell
galloped to the Presbyterian
church, and returning with an
armload of hymnals, threw them to
the ground, and hollered, “Now,
boys, give ’em Watts!” He was
referring to the famous hymn
writer, Isaac Watts, of course.
The
British hated Caldwell so much,
they murdered his wife, Hannah, in
her own home, as she sat with her
children on her bed. Later, a
fellow American was bribed by the
British to assassinate Pastor
Caldwell--which is exactly what he
did. Americans loyal to the Crown
burned both his house and church.
No less than three cities and two
public schools in the State of New
Jersey bear his name.
John
Peter Muhlenberg
John
Peter Muhlenberg was pastor of a
Lutheran church in Woodstock,
Virginia, when hostilities erupted
between Great Britain and the
American colonies. When news of
Bunker Hill reached Virginia,
Muhlenberg preached a sermon from
Ecclesiastes 3 to his congregation
He reminded his parishioners that
there was a time to preach and a
time to fight. He said that, for
him, the time to preach was past
and it was time to fight. He then
threw off his vestments and stood
before his congregants in the
uniform of a Virginia colonel.
Muhlenberg
later was promoted to
brigadier-general in the
Continental Army, and later, major
general. He participated in the
battles of Brandywine, Germantown,
Monmouth, and Yorktown. He went on
to serve in both the US House of
Representatives and US Senate.
Joab
Houghton
Joab
Houghton was in the Hopewell (New
Jersey) Baptist Meeting House at
worship when he received the first
information regarding the battles
at Lexington and Concord. His
great-grandson gives the following
eloquent description of the way he
treated the tidings:
“[M]ounting
the great stone block in front of
the meeting-house, he beckoned the
people to stop. Men and women
paused to hear, curious to know
what so unusual a sequel to the
service of the day could mean. At
the first, words a silence, stern
as death, fell over all. The
Sabbath quiet of the hour and of
the place was deepened into a
terrible solemnity. He told them
all the story of the cowardly
murder at Lexington by the royal
troops; the heroic vengeance
following hard upon it; the
retreat of Percy; the gathering of
the children of the Pilgrims round
the beleaguered hills of Boston;
then pausing, and looking over the
silent throng, he said slowly,
‘Men of New Jersey, the red
coats are murdering our brethren
of New England! Who follows me to
Boston?’ And every man in that
audience stepped out of line, and
answered, ‘I!’ There was not a
coward or a traitor in old
Hopewell Baptist Meeting-House
that day.” (Cathcart,
William. Baptists and the American
Revolution. Philadelphia: S.A.
George, 1876, rev. 1976. Print.)
Jonas
Clark
As
I said at the beginning of this
column, Jonas Clark was pastor of
the Church of Lexington,
Massachusetts, on April 19, 1775,
the day that British troops
marched on Concord with orders to
arrest Sam Adams and John Hancock,
and to seize a cache of firearms.
It was Pastor Clark’s male
congregants who were the first
ones to face-off against the
British troops as they marched
through Lexington. When you hear
the story of the Minutemen at the
Battle of Lexington, remember
those Minutemen were Pastor Jonas
Clark and the men of his
congregation.
On
the One Year Anniversary of the
Battle of Lexington, Clark
preached a sermon based upon his
eyewitness testimony of the event.
He called his sermon, “The Fate
of Blood-Thirsty Oppressors and
God’s Tender Care of His
Distressed People.” His sermon
has been republished by Nordskog
Publishing under the title, “The
Battle of Lexington, A Sermon and
Eyewitness Narrative, Jonas Clark,
Pastor, Church of Lexington.”
Order
the book containing Clark’s
sermon here.
Of
course, these four brave preachers
were not the only ones to
participate in America’s fight
for independence. There were
Episcopalian ministers such as Dr.
Samuel Provost of New York, Dr.
John Croes of New Jersey, and
Robert Smith of South Carolina.
Presbyterian ministers such as
Adam Boyd of North Carolina and
James Armstrong of Maryland, along
with many others, also took part.
So
many Baptist preachers
participated in America’s War
for Independence that, at the
conclusion of the war, President
George Washington wrote a personal
letter to the Baptist people
saying, “I recollect with
satisfaction that the religious
societies of which you are a
member have been, throughout
America, uniformly and almost
unanimously, the firm friends to
civil liberty, and the preserving
promoters of our glorious
Revolution.” It also explains
how Thomas Jefferson could write
to a Baptist congregation and say,
“We have acted together from the
origin to the end of a memorable
Revolution.” (McDaniel,
George White. The People Called
Baptists. The Sunday School Board
of the Southern Baptist
Convention, 1918. Print.)
And
although not every pastor was able
to actively participate in our
fight for independence, so many
pastors throughout colonial
America preached the principles of
liberty and independence from
their pulpits that the Crown
created a moniker for them: The
Black Regiment (referring to the
long, black robes that so many
colonial clergymen wore in the
pulpit). Without question, the
courageous preaching and example
of colonial America’s
patriot-pastors provided the
colonists with the inspiration and
resolve to resist the tyranny of
the Crown and win America’s
freedom and independence.
I
invite readers to visit my Black
Regiment web page to learn more
about my attempt to resurrect
America’s Black-Robed Regiment. Go
here.
This
is the fighting heritage of
America’s pastors and preachers.
So, what has happened? What has
happened to that fighting spirit
that once existed, almost
universally, throughout
America’s Christian
denominations? How have preachers
become so timid, so shy, and so
cowardly that they will stand
apathetic and mute as America
faces the destruction of its
liberties? Where are the preachers
to explain, expound, and
extrapolate the principles of
liberty from Holy Writ? Where are
the pastors to preach the truth
about Romans chapter 13?
Readers
should know that my constitutional
attorney son, Tim, and I have
co-authored a blockbuster book
dealing with Romans 13. The book
is entitled, “Romans 13: The
True Meaning of Submission.” And
it can
be ordered here.
Plus,
I also delivered four messages
dealing with Romans 13. The
message series is entitled, “The
True Meaning of Romans 13.”
These four video messages have
been recorded on one DVD and may
be ordered here.
I
am absolutely convinced that one
of the biggest reasons America is
in the sad condition that it is in
today is because the sermons
Americans frequently hear from
modern
pulpits deal mostly with
prosperity theology, entertainment
evangelism, feelgoodism,
emotionalism, and
Aren’t-I-Wonderful at ear
tickling! This milquetoast
preaching, along with a totally
false
“obey-the-government-no-matter-what”
interpretation of Romans 13, have
made it next to impossible to find
Christian men with the courage and
resolve to stand against the
onslaught of socialism,
corporatism, and, yes, fascism
that is swallowing America whole.
America
cut its spiritual teeth on the
powerful preaching and exemplary
examples of men such as James
Caldwell, John Peter Muhlenberg,
Joab Houghton, and, yes, Jonas
Clark. We need them as much today
as we did then--maybe more!
By
Chuck Baldwin, April 19, 2012,
NewsWithViews.com
2012 Chuck Baldwin - All Rights
Reserved
Wake-up,
Pastors! Wake-up, Christians!
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Wake-Up Herald
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