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In questi anni abbiamo corso così velocemente che dobbiamo ora fermarci perché la nostra anima possa raggiungerci. (Michael Ende) ---- A chi può procedere malgrado gli enigmi, si apre una via. Sottomettiti agli enigmi e a ciò che è assolutamente incomprensibile. Ci sono ponti da capogiro. Sospesi su abissi di perenne profondità. Ma tu segui gli enigmi. (Carl Gustav Jung)

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563. THE PRESBYTERIAN REBELLION by un'Americana a Venezia



"Taxation without representation":  That was the classic explanation in our US History texts of why the thirteen British colonies in the New World rose up against King George III and started the Revolutionary War (1775-6 to1783).  Tired of paying the Crown's high taxes on imports such as tea, the colonists finally rebelled against their government, especially since they had no voice in Parliament.  Colonists who chose not to rebel, called Loyalists, fled to Canada, while the revolutionaries declared, "Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God!"  Until this past September, I believed that the USA was born out of a protest over taxes and powerlessness.  Americans still won't stand for high taxes.  They tend to regard their money as theirs, not the government's.  Of course, Jesus might remind us to look and see whose image is on a US dollar bill.  We see the face of the nation's first president, General George Washington, who personally fought for independence from George III.  I had always assumed that my country, populated in 1776 by only 3 million souls, most of whom belonged to various Calvinist faiths, including 900,000 Scots-Irish, an ethnic group known for being extremely prudent with money, was the result of a heated battle over unfair prices.  Much to my surprise, I recently discovered another reason for the American Revolution when my elderly American auntie handed me the bulletin from her congregation's annual Scottish Sunday service and I read in an insert talking about the Presbyterian Church that scholars of US history have often referred to the American Revolution as "the Presbyterian Rebellion"!  Being familiar since infancy with that straight-laced Calvinist denomination known as Presbyterianism, a Protestant faith in America with deep Scottish roots thanks to a certain Reformer named John Knox (1513-1572) of Edinburgh, at first I could not fathom the meaning of this revelation.  The Presbyterian Rebellion?  I had always known that at least eight American presidents were Presbyterians, but that fact meant nothing in light of the notion that the USA was the product of a religious war!  Apparently, it was not only King George III but also the Anglican Church against the Calvinist dissenters who were generally lumped together and referred to as "Presbyterians"!  In all fairness, in addition to the 900,000 Scots-Irish, who were easily bonafide Presbyterians or Congregationalists, there were 600,000 Puritan English and 400,000 German or Dutch Reformed along with French Huguenots.  The Episcopalians, in addition, had a Calvinistic confession in their Thirty-Nine Articles.  As far as King George was concerned, however, all of these American revolutionaries were simply "Presbyterians", then a synonym for Calvinists, dissenters and republicans.  Those who remained loyal to the Crown, on the other hand, were commonly referred to as "churchmen", or Anglicans, adherents to the Church of England and her bishops.  Yet a Hessian captain, fighting on behalf of the British, told a German friend in 1778, "Call this war by whatsoever name you may, only call it not an American Revolution, it is nothing more than nor less than an Irish-Scotch Presbyterian Rebellion."  The ground for the American Revolution, or the Presbyterian Rebellion, had been prepared decades before by a widespread movement inside the Colonies known as the Great Awakening, a period when the colonists attended plainspoken, gospel-based revivals en masse, seeking direct experience with God and praying for the hastened arrival of Christ's Second Coming and the establishment of His kingdom on Earth.  At the same time, these largely Protestant colonists were acquiring a new spirit of independence from the very idea of Old World monarchs, authoritarian tyrants, and popes.  The Great Awakening was a religious phenomenon that swept the Colonies throughout the 1700's and surely it prepared the foundation for the ultimate "Presbyterian Rebellion."  The very notion of individual rights and responsibilities before God, and before God alone, was imbedded in their struggle.  Now that I think of it, in a forced search for religious liberty, the first colonists crossed the Atlantic at their own peril in the first place.  I will conclude this post for now with a famous quote by an American patriot, Patrick Henry, pronounced in a speech given by him at Saint John's Church in Richmond, Virginia, in 1775.  These words are still taught in every school in the nation:  "Give me liberty or give me death."  UN'AMERICANA A VENEZIA

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IN QUESTI ANNI ABBIAMO CORSO COSÌ VELOCEMENTE CHE DOBBIAMO ORA FERMARCI PERCHÈ LA NOSTRA ANIMA POSSA RAGGIUNGERCI

(Michael Ende)

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A chi può procedere malgrado gli enigmi, si apre una via. Sottomettiti agli enigmi e a ciò che è assolutamente incomprensibile. Ci sono ponti da capogiro, sospesi su abissi di perenne profondità. Ma tu segui gli enigmi.

(Carl Gustav Jung)