Yesterday marked a departure in my annual Constitution Day festivities. For the last 3 years I’ve gone to one of my kids’ elementary school classrooms and thrown a birthday party for the Constitution complete with cookie cake, candles, patriotic plates and napkins, party favors and a brief presentation about the honoree. Kids know birthday parties so it’s fun way to highlight and celebrate the Constitution while piquing their interest in the subject. I always leave feeling renewed and excited about the possibility and potential of helping our kids – “Liberty’s kids” – to learn to love these things. And seeing their faces light up does a mom’s heart “good”. All is not lost if we look for fun and innovative ways to celebrate our country’s unique and exceptional heritage. I believe there’s a document that reminds us we have a duty to do these things but it’s birthday is in July!
Declaration of Independence
By Design: Why Natural Law Matters
Cicero, a favorite political philosopher of the Founding Fathers, was the first to speak of Natural Law as a moral or political law. In his books on the Republic and the Laws, he projected the grandeur and promise of a future society based on Natural Law. The American Founders had a profound appreciation for Cicero because they shared his vision of a commonwealth of prosperity and justice for themselves and their posterity. In his writings the Founders recognized the necessary ingredients for the model society they hoped to build. According to Cicero, true law is “right reason.” Constant and eternal, it is in accordance with nature. He characterized the universal law this way:
“There will not be one law at Rome and another at Athens, one now and another later; but all nations at all times will be bound by this one eternal and unchangeable law, and the god will be the one common master and general of all people. He is the author, expounder, and mover of this law; and the person who does not obey it will be in exile from himself. Insofar as he scorns his nature as a human being, by this very fact he will pay the greatest penalty, even if he escapes all the other things that are generally recognized as punishments . . .”
Belief in the moral truth of Natural Law inspired the Founders and spurred their quest for independence. In fact, The Declaration is “an act of obedience to a law that persists beyond the English law and beyond any law that the Founders themselves might make, notes Dr. Arynn, President of Hillsdale College. It is an act of obedience to the ‘Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God,’ and to certain self-evident truths,” primarily the equal and unalienable Rights of all human beings. To live in ignorance and disregard for the moral principles of Natural Law is to risk exile from life’s ultimate goods like the inestimable blessings of civil and religious liberty.
By Design: Aiming at the Heart of Natural Law

Just government is an ultimate good and the aim of the constitutional ordering of separate and arranged powers
Identify target, take aim, fire! Archery has as its effect the focusing and synchronizing of individual efforts into a common aim at a desired target of highest value. Even when the mark (bullseye) is missed, the presence of the target produces the likelihood of better outcomes than those that exist in the absence of it. Aristotle used the archer’s example to illustrate Natural Law. His Hierarchy of Goods composes the rings of the target, culminating in the ultimate good. The ordering of goods is as follows:
1. The good is that at which all things aim
2. The good is in each thing
3. The things – and so, the good in each – are arranged in a hierarchy (known as the Creator’s natural order of things)
4. The ultimate goods – highest ordered – are pursued for their own sake
The founders of America believed just government to be an ultimate good. This is the aim of the Constitutional ordering of separate and arranged powers. The Constitution prescribes the optimal arrangement of political power to achieve a government of, by, and for the people.
By Design: Example of Natural Order?
Natural Law interests me as it relates to the founding of America. References to it recur frequently in the founding documents of our country, perhaps most notably in the Declaration of Independence as “the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God.” Cicero, a favorite political philosopher of the founders, was the first to speak of Natural Law as a moral or political law. As such, he believed it to be the only reliable basis for good government and just human relations. Because man shares the gift of reason with his Creator the only rational, common sense approach to governing is through the laws already established by the Creator. The Creator’s order of things is called Natural Law.
So what then is the natural order of things? While I can’t efficiently articulate this yet, I believe I recognized an example of it recently. During a conversation with Aunt Ginger, who recently lost a grown child, she said that of all the people that she’d loved and lost – husband, parents and friends – the loss of her youngest son was the worst. “It is just different than the others” she remarked before tearing up. Confirming what I’ve heard before, the death of a child is the worst loss a human being may experience. This speaks to the natural order of things. Regardless of any moral or religious beliefs, it is unnatural for a child to precede his parent in death. It’s a violation of the Creator’s order of things.
Personal Note: Tax Day 2013 – “The Perfect Storm”
I don’t know when I’ve felt this unnerved about anything in the recent past. For the first time in 20+ years my husband and I filed a tax extension this year. Our tax filing proved especially challenging because we underestimated our withholding and changed an investment strategy from “pre-tax” to “post-tax”. Additionally, the small company another mom and myself started two years ago miraculously turned a “profit”, at least in an accounting sense. These three factors combined to form a staggering tax liability that left me “gasping for air” when I opened my accountant’s email several days ago. I refer to it now as “the perfect storm” both for the shear size of the amount owed and for the way it’s made my stomach churn since learning the news.
I want to cry but I know it’s as useless as “crying over spilt milk”. Plus I don’t want to worry my three kids. Like any kids, they get especially freaked out when mom cries. The thing that bothers me the most is that my kids are the reason I started the company. Several years ago I began worrying – almost to the point of anxiety – over the direction of our country. Deciding that I needed to take action, I started a small company called The Liberty Brand Co. with another concerned mom. We’ve worked tirelessly, without pay, for the last two years because we are devoted to our cause (Liberty’s kids) and convinced of its importance. We’ve funded our enterprise solely through personal savings. Needless to say, due to the ignorance of accounting principles on my part we show a profit, despite the fact that we’ve spent far more than we’ve taken in. The thing that astounds me the most is that it increased my personal income taxes by more than the “profit” we produced! For all that work, I only made matters worse.
I look at my kids and know I won’t give up but I’m discouraged. I answered “the call” and have tried to steward it faithfully and to the best of my ability. To date I’ve fallen short. I just wonder if these are some of the feelings the founding fathers had when they “mutually pledge(d) to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor ” on a hot July day that was the antithesis of today – “Tax Day”?!



