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City on a Hill: American Exceptionalism and the Elect Nation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

J. R. Oldfield*
Affiliation:
University of Southampton

Extract

Some years ago I was invited to spend a day in an elementary school in Columbia, South Carolina. The day began, as I imagine every day began, with the national anthem and the pledge of allegiance to the American flag. The children then sang a song, a ditty really, which began as it ended with the simple refrain: ‘I am special’. Later I was shown some of the work the class had been doing. Across the back of the room were pinned up the children’s attempts to answer a question that had been exercising me, namely what was special about the United States. Some of the responses were fairly predictable. America was special, one seven-year-old wrote, because it was a democracy. Others singled out freedom or liberty as their country’s unique virtue. One brave soul boldly asserted that America was special because Americans were rich, while another thought the secret had something to do with happiness.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 2000

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References

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22 Quoted in ibid., p. 235. ‘Convinced of the utility and happy consequences of establishing the Oregon colony,’ wrote the New Englander, Hall J. Kelley, in 1830, ‘the American republic will found, protect and cherish it, and thus enlarge the sphere of human felicity, and extend the peculiar blessings of civil polity, and of the Christian religion, to distant and destitute nations.’ See ibid., p. 89.

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