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American history is kind of like the Bible. I'll say this again, American
history and U.S. history, western civilization
is kind of like the Bible. People have a preconceived idea
of what the Bible teaches, so they will read the Bible and
study the Bible and interpret it the way they want the Bible
to teach. If you study the Bible, who's
speaking, who's he speaking to and what's the subject, you will
learn the Bible. You can read the Bible, you can
memorize the Bible all you want to. But if you don't let the
Bible speak to you, instead of you speaking to the Bible, you're
going to be crosswise with God. Romans the 13th chapter tells
us, according to the Bible, let every person be subject to the
governing authority, for there is no authority except from God.
And those which exist are established by God. Therefore he who resists
authority has opposed the ordinance of God, They who have opposed
will receive condemnation upon themselves. For rulers are not
a cause for fear of good behavior, but for evil. Do you want to
have no fear of authority? Do what is good and you will
have praise for the same. Now we could go on a few more
verses. But way back over here, After the flood, God established
human government. And human government was supposed
to do basically two things. To protect good people from bad
people, and the people from the government. One of the statutes of all legitimate
governments is capital punishment for those who deserve that crime. The Bible has some very plain
instructions on how a person can be convicted of capital punishment. There has to be at least two
or three witnesses. A lot of people have gone to
the gas chamber, to the gallows, to the electric chair before
firing squads, beheaded in the world that were innocent. Now American history and Western
civilization is how you interpret it. In our schools in America for
about the last 50 years people have been brainwashed. Before that they were In Russia and Germany and China,
et cetera, et cetera, et cetera, people are taught what they and
who they are. And every country is always the
shining star in the world. Well, I'm going to tell you what
really happened. America was founded upon democratic
a Democratic Republic. America had some great leaders
in the beginning. And we've studied ten of them
so far. Now we're going to come to another one. James Knox Polk. He was the 11th President of
the United States of America. The real dividing line of whether
he is a good president or a bad president is one thing, me. When he was president, did he
think about the future of his country and building up America
and making America great so America could defend itself against all
enemies, inside or outside? That is the real definition of
a successful president. A president that will defend
America and build up America. That is the dividing line right
there between a no-good president and a president. A president to be a leader has to put the United States
above himself. A president to be a real hero
has to serve America and try to put America first in all of
his endeavors. And a real president does not
line his pockets with politicians, etc. A real president does not get
rich in the presidency or in the vice presidency, nor does
his family get rich because of who he is. A real president isn't
there for pride and honor of his own self, but it is for the
pride and honor of the country that he's representing. And we have a dark horse president
here. A dark horse president. He's
our first dark horse president. Nobody knew who he was. He had been in politics. He was a 13th Speaker of the
House. He was a 9th Governor of Tennessee.
He was the chair of the House Ways and Means Committee. He
was a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from
Tennessee. A little bit about this man. He was raised in hard times. He was a wealthy man, he was
raised. But he was sickly when he was young. Now his family
were slave-owning families. And his mother and father both
were from what we call American heroes. He was born November 2, 1795.
He died June 15, 1849. He was a very young man when he died. He served America from 1845 to
1849 as President. He was a protege of Andrew Jackson. He was a member of the Democratic
Party and an advocate of Jacksonian democracy. He was a citizen's man, so to
speak. He built a successful law practice
in Tennessee. He was elected to the state legislature
in 1823, then to the United States House of Representatives in 1825. He was the sole supporter of
Andrew Jackson and his ideals all the time. He became Speaker
of the House in 1835. And at this time, when he became
President, he was the only former Speaker of the House that had
become President. Polk left Congress to run for
the Governor of Tennessee. He won in 1839, but he lost in
1841. And in 1843. He was a dark horse candidate for the Democratic
Party. He actually wanted to become
Vice President. That was his goal. But they cast
ballots over and over and over again. Henry Clay, Martin Van
Buren, he was going to run again and all of this was going on.
And this group didn't like that, that group didn't like that. Now James Polk had nicknames. One of his nicknames was Little
Hickory. Big Hickory, of course, was Andrew
Jackson. They called him Old Hickory.
This is Young Hickory. And they also called him the
Napoleon of the stump. He was a great debater. I mentioned
before that he was sickly when he was young. A lot of times he read and studied
because he couldn't get out and work like others. But he tried
to exercise his mind. He tried athletically to do what
he could. He had an appendicitis attack
when he was young. And they didn't have any anesthesia.
Now can you imagine them cutting your abdomen open? That's a very
painful surgery to begin with anyway. All they did was give
this little boy several shots of brandy and began to cut and
hold him down. He was so sick during this time
they didn't know whether he'd live or not, and somehow or another
it probably caused him to become sterile. He never had any children. His father was a deist. You know
what a deist is? It's like Thomas Jefferson. Thomas Jefferson believed in
a deity, but he didn't believe in God. He believed in a God
in such as that there was really a God that created the universe
and set things in order but he definitely didn't become flesh
and die on the cross or any of that. He just didn't believe
in any miracles. He was like a Sadducee. He didn't
believe in any miracles. He wrote Jefferson's Bible and
evidently James Polk, his father, believed
the same thing. He was a great follower of Thomas
Jefferson. James Polk, Bolton's sole slaves
throughout his life. One of the dark shadows upon
his presidency, if you want to say that, was that he owned slaves and
that he didn't have any respect for the Native Americans of this
country. His father was a deist, but his
mother was a stout, God-believing Presbyterian, like John Knox and others in
history. James Polk was born November
2, 1795 in a log cabin in Pineville, North Carolina. He was the first
of ten children born into the family of farmers, and these
farmers became plantation owners. His mother, Jane, named him after
his father, her father, James Knox. His father, Samuel Polk,
was a farmer, a slave owner, and a surveyor of Scots and Irish
descent. The Polks had immigrated into
America in the late 1600s, settling initially in the eastern shore
of Maryland, but later moving to south central Pennsylvania,
then into the Carolina hill country. And by the way, this was the
Wild West, you have to realize. And at this time they were taking
the established farms and plantations from the American Indians, what
we call the five civilized tribes. The land was fertile. The Anglo-Saxons or the Americans,
whatever you want to call them, they came in, they took over
the American Indian farms from the Cherokees, the Chickasaws,
the Hosea, etc. and they had fertile land that
was already cleared. These people, when they came
into those areas, they were already farmed lands. But James Polk
and his family believed in manifest destiny. What does that mean? It means that they believed that
God had brought the Anglo-Saxon people to this country to establish
a government under God that would progress and be a herald and
a beacon unto the world. Even Thomas Jefferson believed
that. Had a little more compassion for the American Indians than
others did. Of course, you know that Thomas Jefferson would have
married Sally Hemings if society would have allowed him to do
that. six children by her. He could not live openly with
her. He could not marry her and take
her to balls and banquets. And she was the first lady of
color in American history even though she was only one quarter
black. Not over one quarter, maybe even
one-eighth. She was a half-sister to Thomas
Jefferson's wife. James Polk's mother was a lifelong Calvinist, and she instilled in James the
rigid orthodoxy of her Calvinist beliefs and also of her lifelong
ideas that God had pre-adorned, pre-ordained, and pre-established
that America would become a country and that her family would have
a lot in building this country into a nation that could protect
itself from within and from without. America has always had a certain
amount of political agitation. Like I said, James Polk suffered
from poor health as a child. especially in the particular
disadvantage of having neighborhood doctors, etc. He had urinary stones. He had a lot of intestinal and
back pain. And like I said, he He had an appendectomy without
anesthesia. His father wanted to bring him
into the business. But James wanted an education. He enrolled in the Presbyterian
Academy in 1813 and became a member of the Zion Church near his home
in 1813. enrolled in the Zion Church Academy. He then entered Bradley Academy
in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, where he proved a promising, what we
like to call brilliant student. In January 1816, Pope was admitted
into the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill as a
second semester sophomore. The Polk family had connections
with that university. It only had about 80 students
at that time. Samuel was a land agent in Tennessee
and his cousin William Polk was a trustee. Polk joined the Dialectic Society
where he took part in debates and this is where he got the
little nickname as Napoleon of the Stump. He graduated with honors in 1818. After his graduation, he returned
to Nashville, Tennessee to study law under the renowned attorney
Felix Grundy, which became his first mentor. He was elected clerk of Tennessee
State Center. He was admitted to the Tennessee
State Bar And his first case was to defend his own father
against public fighting charge. His first case was to defend
his father against a public fighting charge. He secured his release
with a $1 fine. That's a lot of money. He opened an office in Murray
County and was a successful lawyer there. He had many cases, what we call
financial cases, because of the Panic of 1819 and the severe
depression afterwards. His law practice subsidized his
political career. These people didn't become politicians
to make money. It cost them money to be politicians. Why they became politicians is
they wanted to help the country. They wanted to make America great.
They wanted to make America to where it could defend itself
from any other foes around it. Even though Polk was a teetotaler,
he didn't drink. He provided alcoholic refreshments
for his voters. Whatever he was doing. Polk courted and married. Sarah
Childress. And they were married January
the 1st, 1824 in Murfreesboro. She was educated far better than
most women. And she stood by his side as
a mentor, also, and as a political guide and supporter. Every man
needs a woman. A woman can either do one of
two things, can break you or make you. And this woman did
her best to support her husband. He was very enamored with this
military hero of the Battle of New Orleans, Andrew Jackson,
in 1850. Jackson was a family friend of
both the Polks and the Childresses. And it's much evidence that they
called Andrew Jackson Uncle Andrew. James Polk supported his presidential
ambitions in 1824. And if you remember, Van Buren was elected instead. In 1824, the United States presidential
election, Jackson got the most electoral votes, as he also led
in the popular vote. But as he did not receive a majority
of the Electoral College, the election was sold into the U.S.
House of Representatives where they and the Secretary of State,
John Quincy Adams, rather than Andrew Jackson which won the
election. Andrew Jackson was mad from then on. He went about
to destroy John Quincy Adams' presidency and not only that
but he used James Calhoun also. James Polk was very upset over
this and never forgot it. He believed in right and wrong.
Even though he didn't believe any rights for Indians and didn't
believe any rights for the black people, he believed that slavery
would finally vanish and go away, but he was going to use them
for his own purposes. Like I said, he didn't get rich
in politics. He got rich building plantations. And plantations, the staple of
plantation was slavery. One thing about Jackson and one
thing about Polk is they were anti-infrastructure, which to
me today is insane. But they looked at it as each
state opted Every state ought to take care of itself, not the
taxes go to the United States government and then they reallocate
the taxes to the states as they saw fit. Both of them thought
that there would be too much corruption and too much loss
of funds in between, which many times is true, but a nation must
have an infrastructure. If you're going to be a strong
nation, you have to have an infrastructure, you have to You have to have
canals, you have to have railroads, you have to have schools, and
libraries, and post office. Jackson hated the banks. The
Bank of the United States. He said there was too much corruption
in it, too many people got paid off, too many people got free
loans, etc., etc., etc., which you find. It's rampant today. So he vetoed the bank. And then
also, the funds of the United States
Bank went into local banks. There was a, what they called
a gag rule. You ever hear of a gag rule before
a gag rule? When Polk was the Speaker of
the House, he worked for the policies of Jackson and later
Van Buren. He deported committees under
Democratic chairs, the majorities including New York Radical C.C. Camberling, as the new ways and
means share. He also tried to maintain the
Speaker's traditional non-partisan appearance. But there was one
thing that you couldn't talk about. Today you can't talk about
a rigged re-election. You can't talk about states'
rights today. These are verboten, forbidden
subjects. Well, the forbidden subject of
that day was slavery. And so nobody could debate about
slavery. That's what they called the gag
rule. You couldn't talk about it. You couldn't debate about
it. They were going through a terrible
depression and inflation and etc. Van Buren chose to, there was a great run on land. And they
said that anybody that was going to buy land had to pay in gold
or silver. So that would build up the United
States Treasury. And it would keep land prices
down lower, instead of inflated prices. Which we have again today. We've already had this three
or four different times. When James Polk was governor
of Tennessee, there was no veto power. Tennessee believed that governors
ought to have limited powers. And he went along with that. Like I said, James Polk wanted
to be the next vice president. Except they couldn't agree on least likely candidate was James
Polk. They didn't know exactly what
he believed and they told him not to say too much. If you want to know anything
about James Polk just look at his voting record and what he
had done. Now James Polk wanted to build up America in
mass of property. During Polk's administration,
he added California, New Mexico, Arizona, Oregon, and Texas to
the lands of the United States colonies in America. He added
that? He added that. That's about one-third
of America property from coast to coast. Now America was becoming
a large nation, in mass. Larger
than many European countries, by far. Now, the problem is,
when James Polk became president, the former president, had tried
to annex Texas before he left his office. And he relinquished
to run for president, and Andrew Jackson says, let everybody leave
him alone, and we're going to, the first thing that James Polk
is going to do is to annex Texas. And Texas was going to be a slave
state. Now we have the Compromise of
1850 where they allowed Missouri to come in. Tyler had wanted to bring in
Texas as the state into the Union before he left. Andrew Jackson
promised him that if he would not run and split the party ticket
so that Polk could be elected that that was one of the first
things he would do and he said that's okay. I will back off. Now James Polk said he was only
going to run for president and be president one time, one four
year term and that's all. And he set his eyes on one thing
and making America great. acquiring California, New Mexico,
Arizona, Texas, and Oregon. Now we still have problems with
Mexico going. We have illegal immigrants coming
in constantly, and Biden, he said, come on in, come on in,
come on in. And then when they came in and
we have this absolute destruction on the border, well, they blamed
it on Trump. It was under control. It was
building a wall, you know. Well, people say that the reason
why we got problems with Mexico today and people coming up here,
because they say that actually California and Arizona and New
Mexico and Texas is Mexican territory. I might have this to say about
that. It's Native American territory, not Mexican. Nor was it ever. Louisiana, Purchase, Texas, over
the East Coast, all the way to the West Coast is all Native
American country. If anybody's got a right to gripe
about anything, it's us Native Americans. Like I've said many
times, if it would have stayed Native
Americans, we would have never been united and we would have
been taken over by some European entity anyway. And I believe that treaties should
have been in place, and I believe that we should have received
more than what we received, and I think we should still have
some land in this continent. That's Indian land. And my great-great-grandfather,
Samuel I. Paul, tried to do that and circumvent
the Dawes Acts, and he was murdered by his own people because of
it. They called him a traitor. James Polk had more than 30 slaves
and he bought slaves while he was in the White House. He didn't
use any White House and his presidential money to do it. He didn't become
president to become rich. He became president to build
America. For his children and grandchildren,
even though he didn't have any children and grandchildren, he
never had any children, but for you and for me. Polk set forth four clearly defined
goals for his administration while he was president. Re-establish an independent treasury
system. The Whigs had destroyed the one
and abolished the one under Van Buren. He was going to reduce
tariffs. He was going to acquire some
or all of Oregon territory, which is quite a mass up there. He
was going to acquire California all the way from California to
Texas. And he did. He did all of it.
The one thing that he said he would do, he was going to do. did everything he could to try
to get along with the other parties. Now, there were a lot of people
that were complaining about him acquiring and letting Texas become
a state of the Union. Texas was actually a country
in itself. It had declared independence
from Mexico and it had become the Lone Star state, the
Lone Star country itself. Some of the Texans didn't want
to do that. Now James Polk set down some perimeters for them
to come in as a state. They wanted a lot more power
because they were the great state of Texas and Texas is a big country. Thousands of square miles. Polk, when he became President,
he said, I will be President myself. I will be President Polk just
like Tyler and just like Harrison was. They had to fight to become
Presidents. The House of Representatives
tried to run the country. As Harrison said and had to write
on a piece of paper, would you read this to all these people
here? I, William Henry Harrison, a president of the United States
and Tyler had to do the same thing. Now we have a puppet for president. Now Polk's cabinet is right Vice
President was George Dallas. Secretary of State was James
Buchanan. Secretary of Treasury was Robert J. Walker. Secretary of World was
William L. Mace Marcy. His Attorney General
was John Y. Mason, and then Nathan Clifford. His Postmaster was Cabe Johnson. And the Secretary of the Navy
was George Bancroft. And others would come and go. The first thing he did was challenge
the United Kingdom or England or Great Britain over Oregon
Territory. He said, this is going to be
the line or war. This will be the line or war. And America had become stronger,
so Great Britain said okay. And he got Oregon Territory without
a war. But Oregon Territory was really
Native American Territory, wasn't it? What about Washington? Yeah,
and Washington. That's all Oregon Territory. Now Britain derived its claim
on Oregon Territory from the voyages of James Cook and George
Vancouver. James Polk says, it's here, not
there. You can claim all the European
countries, but this is ours. And basically what he was doing
was insuring and advocating the Monroe Doctrine. It's close,
so it's ours. He did the same thing with Texas,
he let them be a state, and then they sent Peter Lebec out to
California to cause an uproar out there. What happened to Peter Lebec, Marilyn?
Peter Lebec was killed by a bear, squeezed to death against a tree.
Well, that insurrection didn't quite work, but then he had a
few others come out to California. We had the Bear Flag Revolt out
in California. And California was taken over
along with Arizona and New Mexico all the way to Texas. And people
say today, well we still got problems with the Mexicans and
everything else because of what he did. Mexico didn't own those countries.
It was the Native Americans of those countries. That everybody
should have dealt with. Thomas Jefferson shouldn't purchase
the Louisiana Purchase from France. He ought to go in and make the
treaties with the American Indians, which he kind of secondarily
did. He also began to look at Alaska. Now Alaska is separated from
continental United States by another country which is British
Columbia. Like I said, all of James Polk's
life was one thing, manifest destiny. He believed that God
had established this country and that because of God had established
it, like in Romans 13 that I read in the beginning, that we ought
to acquire and control and protect that country as well as we could.
Either America was going to claim Texas or Great Britain would.
Great Britain was trying to make inroads into Texas to allow them
to be a colony. Aren't you glad that James Polk
did what he did in America? Aren't you glad they did that? With the annexation of Texas. Now, poke an 18.45 cent diplomat,
John Slidell, to Mexico to purchase New Mexico and California for
$30 million. as also as well as securing Mexico's
agreement to the Rio Grande border. Slidell arrived in Mexico in
December 1845 and the Mexican President Jose Juan de Herrera
was unwilling to receive him because of the hostility of the
public towards the United States. Slidell's ambassadorial credentials
were refused by the Mexican Council of Government. James Polk wanted to look at
that as a declaration of war. In 1846, May 1846, Slidell went
to Washington and he said that his his opinion that the negotiations
with the Mexican government were unlikely to be successful anyway. So Pope began to look for a way
to get into war. He told them either you give
us these countries and we'll buy them from you. We'll buy
these countries from you, this land, or you're going to go to
war. He even went down into Cuba. Now remember that John C. Fremont had gone into California with
the Bear Flag Revolt in August of 1846. And American forces under Kearney
captured Santa Fe, capital of the province of New Mexico. He proclaimed the capture of
California. They said America put down a
revolt and had effective control of Mexico and California. In
a bad way, part of this was Arizona. Now, they said that Mexico went across
the border into what was Texas and began to kill and start a
war. Now do you remember the military
general of Santa Ana, the Alamo? Well see he was exiled down into
Cuba and into Mesoamerica. And Polk sent an emissary to
him down to Cuba. And Cuba was still a colony of
Spain, which he wanted to buy. Tyler wanted to buy it. Van Buren
wanted to buy it. Everybody wanted Cuba. But Johnson Dale, and another
man named McKenzie, went to meet with Santa Ana. And they told
Santa Ana that Polk wished to see him in power and that if
he came to an agreement with the United States, a naval blockade
would be lifted briefly to allow Santa Ana to return to Mexico
and take over his powers there as President of Mexico. And if he'd do this before a
Mexican treaty would be signed. Now, indeed, they lifted the
blockade. And Santa Anna stabbed a Polk
in the back. He began his revolt. And they began a war. And Santa
Anna laughed at Polk for being so naive. History. Now we know that some of our
great, Zachary Taylor, etc., went down into in New Mexico
at the Battle of Buena Vista, and Santa Ana retreated, and
then Santa Barbara, Veracruz. And then they were instructed
to seek the cessation of Alta California, which was New Mexico,
and Baja California. in recognition of the Rio Grande
and the southern border of Texas. The U.S. access to the Isthmus
of Teotihuacan and Trieste was organized and
authorized to make a payment of up to $30 million in exchange
for these concessions to Mexico. In 1846 or 1847, as he advanced
toward Mexico City, Scott defeated Santa Ana at the Battle of Contreras
and the Battle of Churubusco with the Americans at the gates
of Mexico City. Trist negotiated with commissioners,
but the Mexicans were willing to give up very little. Scott
prepared to take Mexico City, which he did in mid-September.
in the United States heated political debates was over whether to go
down into Mexico or not, and whether to take California and
Texas, period, or New Mexico or Arizona. They said that all they wanted
to do, Henry Clay said, the only thing we want to do is to settle
the border of Texas at the Rio Grande. And you're going down
and taking half of Mexico, all of California. Abraham Lincoln said, will you
tell me when Mexico fired on who and who was killed exactly
and where? He was against this also. A future
president of the United States, Grant, Ulysses S. Grant, said
the reason why we had the Civil War is what we did to Mexico.
He said that was the most horrible war that America ever brought
on the world. When they took over all this
Mexican territory because we needed, because James Polk wanted
the land. Polk ordered Trist to return
to Washington, but the diplomat, when the notice of recall arrived
in mid-November 1847, ignored the order. deciding to remain
and writing a lengthy letter to Polk the following month to
justify his decision. Polk finally decided to allow
him some time to negotiate the treaty. So then we have the Treaty
of Guadalupe Hidalgo. A small town near Mexico City
and Trist was willing to allow Mexico to keep Baja California. as his instructions allowed,
but successfully haggled for the inclusion of the import harbor
of San Diego. Remember, this was all Mexico,
supposedly. You know, all of this had been
settled by the Mexican priest, by the Spanish priest that went
in there. We have Father Sierra, the butcher of Baja. went in
there and enslaved the American Indians all the way from San
Diego, all up the Mission Road, they were all slave plantations
of American Indians. They didn't own, Mexico didn't
own it. It was still Indian land in all
reality. Now today, What we have gained basically is on this little map
right there. That's what James brought in was all of this
land right here in America. America became a country that
was formable. Polk wanted to buy Cuba because
he wanted to enforce the Monroe Doctrine. But Spain wasn't quite finished
with Cuba because they were making a lot of money on sugar. Sugar
had, you know, and this is another thing in history. They started growing sugar over
here in Cuba and in the South American, and even in the American
colonies. wherever they could grow sugarcane. Now sugarcane came from the Middle
East. They brought it into England
and France and you know in England and France they had very little
food really. They had barley and wheat and milk and butter
and fish. That was about it. There wasn't
much anything else. They had oranges. A few things,
but most of the world's food source today came from America,
developed by American Indians. And they weren't savages either.
They were great farmers. Potatoes, corn, squash, yams,
all of this came from America. Peppers. What would the world
do without peppers? What would they do without peppers
today? What would the Italians do without
tomatoes? James Polk's promises and what
he was going to do to make America a greater country, he did. Now he didn't, he lowered tariffs. He raised American economy greatly
during his administration. He brought in all of this land. He brought in one-third of America's
land that we have today into America during his presidency. They had wall-eyed clips and
fifths because he paid so much for California. The politicians back in Washington
said, California is too far away, too far from tall, and we don't
need it, and we can't afford it. Until the 1849 gold rush. And those that were with Polk
said, look at that. It was good, it was worthwhile
after all. It wasn't too far away, after
all. He left a few justices in power
in the Supreme Court. He did everything that he could
do for America. Of course, during his time, we
have the Dred Scott versus Sanford in 1857. The slaves were property of their
owners. We have all kinds of reasons
why people today don't want to honor James Polk. But I'm going
to tell you something, people. He built America. He was a builder
of America, and he didn't live off of America. The man supported
himself. Mainly by farming. He said, I'm going to do everything
that I can do in four years for this country. And many of the,
you know, Andrew Jackson, he would work all day and party
half the night. James Polk worked all day and
worked half the night. He didn't, there was no, it was
all work and no play. He did it for you and for me. not to line his own pockets or
his family's pockets. Polk's time in the White House
took a terrible toll on him, a toll on himself. And he was going to go back and
be a gentleman farmer again. And on the way home he was exhausted. But everywhere he went people
would try to He had done so much for the American country that
whatever state he went to when he traveled, they wanted to treat
him and they wanted to show how much they appreciated what he
had done. Now you have to realize that
when he was on the way home there was a cholera epidemic in this
country. He got very sick with a cold
and maybe pneumonia and he got over that and they thought they
were so afraid that he would get cholera because his immune
system was not very good ever in his life. He went down into
Mississippi and Louisiana. Now the area was absolutely overwhelmed
with cholera. They just didn't want him to
go. They wanted to show him their
appreciation. And he got sick with cholera.
Three months after he finished his presidency, he was dead.
He had worked himself to death for you and me. And he died in Nashville, Tennessee at the age of 53. Polk's remains have been buried
two times. Abraham Lincoln's a whole bunch
of times. His last words, he said, I love you, Sarah, for
all eternity, I love you. Spoken to his wife. Polk's funeral was held in McKenzie
Methodist Church in Nashville just before He died, he had himself
baptized into the Methodist Church. I guess he wanted to ensure his
way into heaven. Following his death, Sarah Polk
lived at Polk's Place for 42 years and died August 14, 1891
at the age of 87. Their house, Polk's Place, was
demolished in 1901, a decade after Sarah's death. Polk's remains were moved two
times. After his death he was buried
in what is known as Nashville City Cemetery. Due to legal requirement
later to his infectious disease and death, Polk was then moved
to the tomb on the grounds of Polk's place as specified in
his will to begin with in 1850. In 1893, the bodies of James
and Sarah Polk were relocated in the current resting place
on the grounds of the Tennessee State Capitol in Tennessee. In March 2017, the Tennessee
Senate approved a resolution considering the first step toward
relocating Polk's remains to the family home in Columbia.
But it just died. It never did happen. As you know, Polk had slaves. He bought eight slaves in 1839. He bought seven slaves in 1846,
and then nine slaves. Now, people say also about Polk,
Polk had a lot of taskmasters on his plantation. He had some
severe taskmasters which when he found them out he fired and
replaced them. And then he had some that were
too lenient and he fired them and replaced them with somebody
more exacting. Many times they had bad overseers
and sometimes good ones and tolerant ones. After his death, all his slaves
were supposed to be free. But his wife, Sarah Pope, during
her widowhood became so poor that she sold half interest of
her plantation. And when she did that, if she had died before the Civil
War, those slaves would have still been slaves because of
the legal contract she had. Let me read this to you one more
time. And we need to think about it
a lot. Let every person be subject to
the government authority, for there is no authority except
from God, and those which exist are established by God. That
man believed that. Therefore he who resists authority
has opposed the ordinance of God, and they who oppose will
receive condemnation upon themselves. For rulers are not a cause to
fear for good behavior, but for evil. Do you want to have no
fear of authority? Do you do what is good and you
will be praised of the same? The minister of God to you is
for good, but if you do what is evil, be afraid. For it does
not bear the sword for nothing, capital punishment. Look at the
mess we're in today because we don't have law and order. wrong order. In New York, they had Son of
Sam, and they had a .44 caliber murder. And we know a lot more about
that now. They arrested one man, but there are several involved
in that. But the New York people have always been preyed upon
by what we might call killers and thieves and robbers. There's
a whole lot of people there to rob and steal from. People became
so afraid, they accused the police department of not protecting
them, so they went out and bought guns to protect themselves. If you need protection, you've
got to have something to protect yourself. And that's in the Second
Amendment. And sometimes it's very necessary.
It saved my life many times. James Polk was an American hero. The very standard by which we
estimate an American hero president is what did they do for America.
Did they try to tear America down or did they try to build
America up? Did they try to protect America from foreign foes or
did they give in? Did their families get rich while
they were in politics? Or did they make a living by
the sweat of their brow? Our Father, we send this message
out. Father, we thank you for this man because he did He tried
to build this country up to honor you. He believed that. And Father,
I think that people need to remember how great He was, one of the
greatest Presidents we ever had. Even with His faults. And You said in Your Word, love
covers a multitude of sins. And that's why we have to look
at Him also. Father, please forgive me where I fail you. In Jesus'
name I pray. Amen.
#11 Presidents of America & Their Impact on The World
Series The Presidents & America
#11 Presidents of America & Their Impact on The World James Knox Polk Romans 13:1-7. Dr. Jim Phillips preaches this Series of messages on the mission field. If anyone would like to make a donation , all donations no matter how small will be appreciated. Thank you. Our Address in Fish Lake Valley is POB 121 Dyer, Nevada 89010. You may also make a donation by pushing the support button at the top of this page. You Can make your donation through paypal or any credit card. Thank You IRS EIN # 82-5114777
| Sermon ID | 51221654103586 |
| Duration | 1:05:06 |
| Date | |
| Category | Midweek Service |
| Bible Text | Romans 13:1-7 |
| Language | English |
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