The topic of discussion for this Constitution Monday is the need for Americans to love America. The education system in America is responsible for the decline in love of nation, according to Reagan Campbell, an intern for The Daily Signal.
Americans
are losing love for their country. The education system is taking our young
in a different direction by dismissing our
nation’s past and introducing ideologies contradicting our founding principles.
Much of our culture seems determined to treat America’s 250th
birthday with condemnation rather than celebration.
Yet
in this age of pessimism toward our nation’s past, Matthew Spalding offered a
new invitation: to fall in love with American again – by rediscovering the
story and principles of the Declaration of Independence.
The
Hillsdale College professor introduced his new book, “The Making of the
American Mind: The Story of Our Declaration of Independence,” this week at the
Washington, D.C., campus of Hillsdale College.
Spalding’s
introductory speech highlighted the beauty of the declaration, its founding
truths, the role of prudence, and the use of theology.
America
is beautiful not only because of its land, but because of its story, he
explained. “We have this wonderful document, like a symphony; has different
tones, different speeds, moments. It all comes together.”
Spalding
underscored that the declaration invokes prudence as a governing standard. He
argued that this principle is the document’s hinge point, the mechanism that
allows leaders to navigate between reality and abstract truth. He noted, “Politics
requires us sometimes to make compromises. To do things that are imperfect,
because we’re imperfect.”
Spalding
emphasizes the fact that “God appears five times in the declaration … notice
how those references to God become more personal and intimate as God proceeds?
Such that by the end, this creator, God, now sees into our hearts.”
History,
he shared, has pointed back to the references to God in the decades following
the declaration. The uprising and resistance of America’s Founding Fathers
against the British reminds us of our defensiveness and freedom we have in our
Creator. Abraham Lincoln’s first speech in Chicago reminds the audience to
remember our Creator.
Our
country’s independence story is a testament about our patriotism. It is “what
makes America exceptional.”
In
answer to a question post-speech about how to convince middle school students
to love America, Spalding said to capture the imagination – capture the excitement
“about the American Revolution, which is a wonderful story,” the story about
what happened. Spalding has “passion for teaching the next generation” with a
goal to “help them fall in love with their country again.”
He
added that understanding American history can help young people address the
challenges they face. They “are looking for something that’s strong and
sacrificial and manly. Our founding tells that story. And it’s that American
spirit that then creates these great heroes and will hopefully inspire and create
other great Americans in the future going forward.”
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