Declaration
The most important line in the U.S. Declaration of Independence was not the first line of the preamble that most of us know, nor was it any of the points outlined throughout. No. The most important line was the last one:
"And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor."
Those men who signed that document knew that their very lives would be in danger and they would be branded traitors to the crown by doing so. Nevertheless, they pledged their lives for what they knew in their souls was the right thing. While some accounts of what happened to them seem to have been embellished, the truth is that they each did suffer in various ways for this pledge. They honored their pledge whatever came.
Could you do the same?
It's easy to think so when the threats are imagined. It is something else once they become real.
So could you? What does it take for someone to do so?
It takes several things:
- A belief that some things are more important than life itself
- A belief that any material thing, including family and friends, can and should be sacrificed for some causes
- A belief that the course plotted out is for the good of those you would leave behind, were you to die
- A strength to put aside personal wants and needs for the good of others
I'm sure other aspects could be added to the list, but that will do to make the point.
For more on the Declaration and the Constitution, please see the free courses available from Hillsdale College, like this one: