By Kevin D. Williamson
Friday, July 04, 2025
The Declaration of Independence is a loaded gun—like
Chekhov’s rifle, you cannot just expect it to hang there on the wall without
anybody ever trying to use it.
But ignore that document was precisely what the founding
generation did—the Declaration looms large in our political imagination today,
but Washington, Jefferson, et al., kept it at arm’s length. They declared their
independence, they won it on the battlefield, and then they … just stopped talking about it. You can see
why: Having established a new republic, they wanted to keep the thing together
as well as they could, and so it would have been no good to go around waving a
manifesto for revolution that many of them had signed. There were more than
enough insurrections as it was.
Ironically, it was Abraham Lincoln who leaned into the
Declaration when confronted with slave-holding Southerners who believed that
the time had come when it was “necessary for one people to dissolve the
political bands which have connected them with another.” What Lincoln derived
from the Declaration was not a writ for secession but a mandate for the
fundamental principles, then as now imperfectly realized, of the American
Revolution itself.
As Union soldiers marching into battle to the tune of “We
Are Coming, Father Abra’am” surely appreciated, the 16th president,
with his presagious Hebrew name, was a kind of patriarch (he dreamed of
visiting Jerusalem in his retirement), and the Declaration of Independence that
he took as his political scripture presents the American proposition as a
theological statement: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men
are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain
unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness.”
We modern rationalists find much in those words that our
secular sensibility can digest easily: legal equality, unalienable rights,
consent. But those were not radical or revolutionary ideas: They were, at most,
extensions of principles of English government that went back at least as far
as the Magna Carta.
But the Declaration of Independence complicates and
enriches—inestimably—those old English notions of equality, fundamental rights,
and consent by associating them with its most radical claim, which is a matter
of supernatural rather than natural law: that we must enjoy the dignity of
citizens, rather than endure the servility of subjects, because we are “endowed
by our Creator” with the capacity for higher things.
The Declaration is clear on the point: Liberty, rights,
dignity, the opportunity to pursue our own happiness and prosperity in our own
way—these are not gifts given by one man to another, no matter how powerful the
one man or how subordinate the other. The king cannot bestow such gifts on us,
because they are not the king’s to give—or to take away. These gifts are given
to us by God, not in His role as Judge or Father or Redeemer (and there is no
mistaking the Anglo-Protestant sensibility here) but in His capacity as
Creator. We are not animals who have been simply given liberty to enjoy the way
a stray dog might (or might not) be given a warm bed and a meal out of
discretionary kindness—we were created for it. The enjoyment of liberty
in which we discover the fullest sense of our humanity is not some happy
addition tacked onto the divine plan–it is the point of the thing.
In an important sense, then, the Declaration of
Independence is not only a brief against arbitrary tyranny—it is, if
only in that one electric sentence, a sermon in minature against idolatry, one
worthy of Jonathan Edwards: “Man will necessarily have something that he
respects as his god. If man does not give his highest respect to the God that
made him, there will be something else that has the possession of it. … Enmity
necessarily follows.” Why must enmity follow? “A man will be the greatest enemy
to him who opposes him in what he chooses for his god: he will look on none as standing
so much in his way as he that would deprive him of his god.”
And so here we are.
At enmity.
Our descent into political idolatry—into the effective if
unacknowledged worship of the state, most often in the personal form of the
president—seems to have been (I hope my Presbyterian friends will forgive me!)
pre-ordained. A very intentional cult of George Washington was cultivated
(cult is the first word in culture) from the beginning, and by the time the
federal decorating committee got around to hiring former Vatican artist
Constantino Brumidi to painting the interior of the Capitol dome in 1865, the
Italian artist’s thoroughly pagan work—The Apotheosis of George Washington—was
entirely of a piece with the regnant American theology. The commander in chief
(the Latin word for the office is imperator, or emperor in
English) of the American continental empire had quickly and quietly displaced
the Creator of the Declaration of Independence—which is to say, the creature
superseded, as a political matter, “the God that made him” at the center of our
national life.
Like the man said: enmity.
Why should this matter to anybody but a few isolated
religious fanatics?
As a former copy editor, I am inclined to check the
markup history. As many of you will know, John Locke’s formula—“life, liberty,
and property”—became the more familiar “life, liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness” by means of Jefferson’s artful condensation of George Mason’s
language: “All men are by nature equally free and independent and have certain
inherent rights, of which, when they enter into a state of society, they
cannot, by any compact, deprive or divest their posterity; namely, the enjoyment
of life and liberty, with the means of acquiring and possessing property, and
pursuing and obtaining happiness and safety.”
Leo Strauss, that great reader between the lines, saw in
this change evidence of an American mission: that these United States should
not form a “mere alliance,” as Aristotle put it, but should instead constitute
a genuine community directed at some higher good. Strauss argued that the
republic announced in the Declaration of Independence was not meant to be
concerned only with “making possible peaceable exchange and preventing
everything which would endanger that peaceable exchange, such as fraud and force,”
but was to be one that “sees its function in making the members virtuous, to
use the old-fashioned expression.”
John Adams famously observed that our Constitution was
fit only for a “moral and religious people,” and he was not being redundant—the
underlying intellectual architecture is not only moral but rooted in a
specifically religious idea about the relationship of man to “the God that made
him.” The theological and specifically Protestant character of the American
proposition need not exclude modern Americans (such as myself) who do not hew
to the Reformation tradition any more than it excluded the religiously unorthodox
Thomas Jefferson, who wrote the very words here at issue. But one cannot honor
the spirit of the document without taking seriously what it actually says and
what it actually means.
And what it means—if we take it seriously—is no less
revolutionary today than it was in 1776. If it is true that we are endowed by
our Creator with the capacity for citizenship Jefferson described, then we are
overdue for an era of penance and reconciliation in our national community
life. This will be painful for Americans, because in our political life we
have—there is no painless way to say it—a great deal of which to be ashamed.
An America in which Americans took the American
proposition seriously would be a very different America, and a better one. Yes,
render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s—of course.
But nothing more. Not one mite. Not without a fight.
“We hold these truths,” the Declaration says. So, let us
hold them tight. And let the demagogues thunder and strut, and let the tanks
roll through the streets of Washington if the idol of the age demands it. We
have a fearsome weapon hanging on the wall, one whose thunder is louder than
that of any artillery, the real and true “shot heard ’round the world.”
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