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The Genius and Divine Inspiration of the United States Constitution (Part
Five): The Bill of Rights
Steven Montgomery
June 5, 2003
What is so important about the Bill of Rights? Furthermore, why have a
written Bill of Rights? Is the Bill of Rights itself inspired? This
article will attempt to answer these questions.
To begin, most people are simply not aware that initial opposition to the
Constitution, one without a Bill of Rights, led eventually to the Constitution's
final ratification. I believe that without this initial opposition it is
doubtful that the Constitution would have been ratified at all. This was the
first miracle.
George Mason began the opposition. George Mason was a delegate to the
Constitutional Convention from Virginia and was highly regarded among his fellow
colleagues. Thomas Jefferson called him "the wisest man of his generation."
George Mason was also author of the Virginia Declaration of Rights, which was
adopted almost word for word by many other states and was the precursor to the
eventual Bill of Rights. Near the end of the Constitutional Convention George
Mason refused to sign the finished Constitution because it lacked a Bill of
Rights.
Those who supported the Constitution--without a Bill of Rights--argued that
it was not needed. The powers granted to the Federal Government to govern were
few and defined and if the power was not granted it simply did not exist. Thus
attempting to restrain the Federal Government by an added Bill of Rights was
unnecessary and superfluous. An argument that is not without merit. Others
worried that certain rights would be left off or neglected if you had a
written Bill of Rights. Mason countered by arguing that if you were going to
increase the power of the Federal Government then you also needed to fortify
individual rights.
Because of Mason's opposition, a great intellectual debate began in the
colonies over whether or not the Constitution should be ratified at
all--especially a Constitution without a Bill of Rights. Small farmers and
others who had fought during the revolution and helped stiffen the backbone of
the Colonialists, thought that freedom and individual rights was what the
revolution was all about. Several key States, New York, Virginia, and North
Carolina, would not ratify the Constitution without a guarantee by the
Federalists of a future promise of a Bill of Rights. Because of that guarantee,
the key States did ratify and a new government was born--the United States of
America.
Was the insertion of the Bill of Rights into the Constitution a miracle?
There are those who believe this is so. At least two constitutional scholars
have affirmed that conviction. For instance, J. Reuben Clark, lawyer and former
undersecretary of State, has stated that the, "Constitution of the United States
as it came from the hands of the framers, with its coterminous [Sharing the same
body or boundary--Author] Bill of Rights," was an integral part of his religious
faith. "It is," he said, "a revelation from the Lord. I believe and reverence
its God inspired provisions." While former law professor, Dallin H. Oaks, has
referred to the rights contained within the Bill of Rights as of "Divine
Origin."
Here are other reasons why I believe the Bill of Rights was a product of both
inspiration and genius:
- The Bill of Rights insures that the power of the Federal Government is
limited--it can only go so far, no further. It is not unlimited.
- Through the Ninth Amendment, the people retain all their rights--even
those not enumerated in the Constitution
- Minority rights are protected.
- It is government which is restrained, not the people. As long as I, as an
individual, don't interfere with any one else's rights I am free to pursue
my own happiness.
- The basic philosophy of the Constitution was preserved by adding the Bill of
Rights to it in the form of amendments.
- The Bill of Rights stands as a bastion against oppression.
- Through the Bill of Rights, the spirit of the Declaration of Independence
was infused into the Constitution.
- The Bill of Rights enshrines the individual against collectivism. The
individual is morally supreme.
Another great constitutionalist, former Secretary of Agriculture, Ezra Taft
Benson, has said regarding the Rights that the Bill of Rights guarantees, that
these "rights are either God-given as part of the Divine plan, or they are
granted by government as part of the political plan." This difference is glaring
and readily apparent if you compare the Magna Carta with the U.S. Bill of
Rights. The Magna Carta is rightly revered as a predecessor to our own U.S. Bill
of Rights. But the Magna Carta was after all simply a bunch of "King Granted
Rights" which was wrested from King John at the point of a sword. The first ten
amendments to the United States Constitution or Bill of Rights on the other hand
contained clear-cut rights of the natural man--originally given to man by God.
As part of that "Divine plan" the Lord established the United States
Constitution along with the Bill of Rights. Here are just a few freedoms we
would lose without the Bill of Rights:
- The right to worship God according to the dictates of our own conscience.
- The right of habeas corpus. Communist dictatorships have none.
- The philosophy of equality before the law, and the dignity of the
individual citizen.
- The right to a speedy public trial in case of accusation of crime, before
an impartial jury at the place of commission of the crime.
- Freedom of press, speech, assembly and petition.
- The right of individual citizens to keep and bear arms.
- The right to have a grand jury indictment before trial for a crime, the
right to obtain witnesses on our behalf, and the assistance of counsel of
our own choosing to establish our innocence.
- Protection against unreasonable seizures and searches.
- Protection against self-incrimination in any trial, or the giving of
testimony where that protection is properly applicable.
- Protection against being twice placed in jeopardy of life and limb for
crime.
- Protection against cruel and unusual punishments, and excessive bail.
- Protection against being deprived of life, liberty, and property without
due process of law.
- The right of trial by jury in civil cases.
- The right to just compensation for property taken for public use.
- The right to face ones accuser.
In conclusion, let me add my firm conviction that Divine Wisdom and
Inspiration lay behind both the events which lay behind getting the Constitution
adopted--with a Bill of Rights and of the actual rights contained in the Bill of
Rights itself. In my mind at least, it is clear that without the Bill of Rights
it is doubtful whether America would still be today, after more than two-hundred
years, the "land of the free."
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