
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
“Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God.” Just after the Declaration of Independence was adopted in 1776, a committee of Jefferson, Adams, and Franklin worked to design a great seal for the United States – and it included that powerful phrase on the reverse. While we don’t know who originally wrote it, we can trace its roots to Jonathan Mayhew’s widely read but mostly forgotten 1750 sermon on resisting tyranny. In it, he laid the moral and philosophical foundation for the Revolution – and in this episode, you’re going to learn all about it.
Path to Liberty: September 25, 2024
Subscribe: Apple | Spotify | Podbean | Youtube Music | Stitcher | TuneIn | RSS | More Platforms Here
SHOW LINKS:
Show Archives
John Adams – Letter to to Hezekiah Niles (13 Feb 1818)
John Adams – Letter to William Tudor, Sr. (5 Apr 1818)
Wiki: Thomas Mayhew
Kegan Foley – West End Museum
Biblia – Romans 13:1-14
Eric Patterson – Providence Mag
Thomas Aquinas – Commentary on the Sentences of Peter Lombard (c. 1254–1256)
Sarah Morgan Smith, Ellen Deitz Tucker, David Tucker – Teaching American History
Full Text – A discourse concerning unlimited submission and non-resistance to the higher powers (1750)
Patrick Henry – Virginia Resolves Against the Stamp Act (1765)
Declaration and Resolves of the First Continental Congress (14 Oct 1774)
Lysander Spooner – No Treason No VI (1870)
Declaration of the Causes and Necessity of Taking Up Arms (6 July 1775)
Lysander Spooner – A Defence for Fugitive Slaves (1850)
Gary Galles – Mises Institute
Declaration of Independence
John Adams – Novanglus III (6 Feb 1775)
MORE VIDEO SOURCES
Watch on Odysee
Watch on X
Watch on Minds
Watch on Facebook
Watch on Bitchute
Watch on TikTok
Watch on Brighteon
FOLLOW and SUPPORT TAC:
Become a Member: http://tenthamendmentcenter.com/members/
4.9
182182 ratings
“Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God.” Just after the Declaration of Independence was adopted in 1776, a committee of Jefferson, Adams, and Franklin worked to design a great seal for the United States – and it included that powerful phrase on the reverse. While we don’t know who originally wrote it, we can trace its roots to Jonathan Mayhew’s widely read but mostly forgotten 1750 sermon on resisting tyranny. In it, he laid the moral and philosophical foundation for the Revolution – and in this episode, you’re going to learn all about it.
Path to Liberty: September 25, 2024
Subscribe: Apple | Spotify | Podbean | Youtube Music | Stitcher | TuneIn | RSS | More Platforms Here
SHOW LINKS:
Show Archives
John Adams – Letter to to Hezekiah Niles (13 Feb 1818)
John Adams – Letter to William Tudor, Sr. (5 Apr 1818)
Wiki: Thomas Mayhew
Kegan Foley – West End Museum
Biblia – Romans 13:1-14
Eric Patterson – Providence Mag
Thomas Aquinas – Commentary on the Sentences of Peter Lombard (c. 1254–1256)
Sarah Morgan Smith, Ellen Deitz Tucker, David Tucker – Teaching American History
Full Text – A discourse concerning unlimited submission and non-resistance to the higher powers (1750)
Patrick Henry – Virginia Resolves Against the Stamp Act (1765)
Declaration and Resolves of the First Continental Congress (14 Oct 1774)
Lysander Spooner – No Treason No VI (1870)
Declaration of the Causes and Necessity of Taking Up Arms (6 July 1775)
Lysander Spooner – A Defence for Fugitive Slaves (1850)
Gary Galles – Mises Institute
Declaration of Independence
John Adams – Novanglus III (6 Feb 1775)
MORE VIDEO SOURCES
Watch on Odysee
Watch on X
Watch on Minds
Watch on Facebook
Watch on Bitchute
Watch on TikTok
Watch on Brighteon
FOLLOW and SUPPORT TAC:
Become a Member: http://tenthamendmentcenter.com/members/
3,925 Listeners
947 Listeners
3,361 Listeners
4,737 Listeners
2,253 Listeners
1,066 Listeners
904 Listeners
757 Listeners
8,042 Listeners
481 Listeners
1,175 Listeners
5,248 Listeners
2,332 Listeners
610 Listeners
8,506 Listeners