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Florida Per­son­hood: Jus­tice for All Human Beings Can­not Wait

“I have come to give you Life and that more abun­dantly.” ~Jesus

God is the author of human rights – mine, yours — every human being from their very begin­ning. First among these on which all oth­ers stand is our right to be rec­og­nized as per­sons – as chil­dren of God, made in His image and likeness.

As the hands and feet of Christ it is up to us to safe­guard this most fun­da­men­tal of these rights – human personhood.

The nation’s found­ing fathers rec­og­nized this all-important respon­si­bil­ity. “We hold these truths to be self-evident …”

Yes, even dur­ing the draft­ing of the Dec­la­ra­tion of Inde­pen­dence in 1776, Thomas Jef­fer­son and many of our found­ing fathers desired to right what was even then viewed as an a grave hypocrisy and injus­tice in our new­born Amer­i­can coun­try. They strug­gled to rec­og­nize the per­son­hood of Africans – both slave and free.

Now was not the time said some. The eco­nomic bur­den on the plan­ta­tion own­ers would be too great. The pub­lic sen­ti­ment was not great enough some offered.

The fer­vent acqui­esced. Laws were pro­posed dur­ing the Con­sti­tu­tional Con­ven­tion to be enacted in 1808 that would out­law slav­ery and set slaves free. But between the Con­sti­tu­tional Con­ven­tion and 1808, the cot­ton gin was invented. Greed set in, hearts grew cold and we com­pro­mised again.

As Lin­coln taught us, when our lib­erty cur­tails the lib­erty of another, we seek not lib­erty but tyranny.

Quot­ing from our Florida state Constitution:

“We, the peo­ple of the State of Florida, being grate­ful to Almighty God for our con­sti­tu­tional lib­erty, in order to secure its ben­e­fits.…. do ordain and estab­lish this con­sti­tu­tion ……All nat­ural per­sons, female and male alike, are equal before the law and have inalien­able rights, among which are the right to enjoy and defend life ….”

Some may be con­cerned that now is not the time for a human per­son­hood amend­ment. Some may say there is a bet­ter way. To this we say, along with Dr. Mar­tin Luther King Jr. in his pas­sion­ate epis­tle from the Birm­ing­ham jail, “Wait” has almost always meant “Never.”

Our Florid­ian Found­ing Fathers laid upon our shoul­ders the right, bet­ter yet the respon­si­bil­ity, to defend life – of every human being.

As we learn the price they paid to rec­og­nize our rights, can we do less to rec­og­nize the per­son­hood of every human being on which all other rights stand?

In 1808 the win­dow of grace slammed shut and it took blood­shed and hun­dreds of thou­sands of lives before Amer­ica finally birthed the Eman­ci­pa­tion Procla­ma­tion and rec­og­nized the per­son­hood of African Americans.

A win­dow of grace is before us again. If we do not whole-heartedly work to estab­lish per­son­hood with all our hearts, our minds, our souls and our strength, our com­pro­mise, like the com­pro­mise of the Con­sti­tu­tional Con­ven­tion, will result not in the pos­si­bil­ity of a wider door in the future, but a slam­ming shut on God’s grace yet again.

Wait means never.

Jus­tice for all human beings can­not wait.

What is the price of keep­ing our lib­erty? Very small com­pared to the price of los­ing it.

Our cause is just and our God is able!

Amend­ment lan­guage:
The words “per­son” and “nat­ural per­son” apply to all human beings, irre­spec­tive of age, race, health, func­tion, con­di­tion of phys­i­cal and/or men­tal depen­dency and/or dis­abil­ity, or method of repro­duc­tion, from the begin­ning of the bio­log­i­cal devel­op­ment of that human being.

For the gen­er­a­tion yet to be born,
Mrs. Brenda Mac­Me­namin Per­son­hoodFL
PersonhoodFL@gmail.com

“…..we will tell the next gen­er­a­tion about the glo­ri­ous deeds of the Lord,.…so the next gen­er­a­tion might know them even the chil­dren not yet born— and they in turn will teach their own chil­dren. So each gen­er­a­tion should set its hope anew on God, not for­get­ting his glo­ri­ous mir­a­cles and obey­ing his com­mands.” Psalm 78: 4, 6–7