Britain Spites History and Signs Away Its Sovereignty

Artville

Britain Spites History and Signs Away Its Sovereignty

Britain’s history of miracles made it great. The Lisbon Treaty represents the shameful end to that history.

No nation outside of ancient Israel has experienced more cases of divine intervention than that of Great Britain. I challenge you to find one!

And not just little everyday miracles either—although there have been plenty of those too—but national life-saving, history-altering events. Events that have no explanation but that of divine intervention. Miracles without which the nation would have ceased to exist.

Britain is turning its back on those miracles. Its people have forgotten, and its politicians are endeavoring to sign away the independence of a nation that is only independent and free today because of those many miracles.

Wake up, Britain! The Lisbon Treaty is an attempt to end your national sovereignty.

Remember the “Invincible Armada.” 1588: Only England stood in the way of Philip of Spain and his domination of Europe and the New World. The Spanish Armada was termed “invincible” for a reason: It was the most powerful military force in the world. Philip had 149 ships of the line. Britain had 80 ships total, of which 50 were volunteer vessels and not much bigger than yachts. Even of the Queen’s 30 warships, only four were equal in tonnage to the smallest Spanish galleons.

With these overwhelming odds, the British fleet desperately engaged the Spaniards in an attempt to prevent a landing on the English coast. During the first major engagement at Calais, with the tide and wind with them, the British fleet performed amazingly. Three Spanish galleons sunk and three others helplessly grounded on the French coast. But the victory came at a cost: The bulk of the Spanish fleet remained intact and the British were out of ammunition. The British fleet had to return home for reinforcements; the Channel was clear for the Spanish attack.

But the Channel crossing and attack did not come. Just six measly kilometers separated Britain from the Spanish invasion, but a work of Spanish destruction came from a force far greater than Britain’s navy could provide.

Severe wind and storm suddenly materialized to save Britain, scattering and wrecking the Spanish ships. By the time the retreating Spaniards made it back to Spain, only 50 ships carrying a few thousand sick and disease-stricken men remained. The Spanish threat to Britain was over, and so was Spain’s time as a global power.

Remember Quiberon Bay. 1759: The French fleet was marshaled to invade England and the British fleet again was forced to sail to its defense. The battle began and again a “heavy gale” erupted. The French ships were driven onto the shoals, others were sunk and captured, and the French Navy was massively defeated. Britain was saved once more.

Remember Napoleon. “Fifteen million [Britons] must give way to 40 millions,” Napoleon uttered in frustration. He assembled a massive fleet of transports and an army of 100,000 soldiers at Boulogne. Over 100,000 troops were readied elsewhere. “Let us be masters of the Channel for six hours and we are masters of the world,” he declared.

But the date of invasion was delayed by the death of the admiral chosen to lead it, delaying departure just enough so that on Oct. 21, 1805, Nelson gained his astounding naval victory at Trafalgar against overwhelming odds—utterly shattering Napoleon’s plans for invasion.

Remember Waterloo. Author Victor Hugo observed that “the shadow of a mighty right hand is cast over Waterloo; it is the day of destiny, and the force which is above man produced that day.”

“If it had not rained the night between the 17th and 18th of June,” noted Hugo, “the future of Europe would have been changed.” A little rain, during a time when rain was not expected, and an empire was overthrown.

Remember the miraculous appearance of the “White Cavalry” at Mons in 1918 that turned a rout into a victory.

Remember the national days of prayer on Aug. 4, 1918, and May 26, 1940, during the times of Britain’s greatest need.

Remember the miracle at Dunkirk and how after a national day of prayer invoked by King George vi, the impossible happened. Surrounded and trapped between the Channel and German troops, the retreating Allies prepared to be slaughtered; meanwhile, Hitler commanded his Panzer tank divisions to hold off so that the Luftwaffe could have the honor of attacking the retreating Brits. But again, intervening weather including violent rain and wind grounded the German air force while wondrously leaving the ocean calm until the evacuation was complete. The Channel, uncannily smooth, allowed even small motor boats to rescue stranded soldiers. In Winston Churchill’s words, 335,000 British troops were delivered “out of the jaws of death and shame.”

Remember Operation Sea Lion and how when Britain had an army without arms it was protected.

Remember the Battle of Britain and how Hitler boasted he would “erase” British cities. More than a thousand German bombers and fighters pounded London during one night alone. The Royal Air Force was outnumbered by more than two to one, yet shot down more German planes.

Remember the sinking of the Bismarck.

Remember how Britain received its most bountiful harvests in 1942, when it faced shortages. R.S. Hudson, minister of agriculture, said, “Some power has wrought a miracle in the English harvest fields this summer, for in this, our year of greatest need, the land has given us bread in greater abundance than we have ever known before.”

Remember the epic defense of Malta, and how that tiny Mediterranean island nation survived 2,000 bombing attacks over two years, held out against all Europe, and saved North Africa in the process.

Remember the miracle at El Alamein in Egypt, a time when, according to historian W.B. Grant, “all Islam and Christendom held its breath.” A time when Churchill said the last-ditch stand at El Alamein was a “moment in the presence of a recession of our hopes and prospects in the Middle East and in the Mediterranean unequaled since the fall of France.”

But Rommel was halted just a few miles from defenseless Alexandria. Why? His water ran out. Had he reached El Alamein two days later, he would have found a completed water pipeline filled with fresh water. Arriving when he did, he found the newly constructed water pipeline being tested with salt water; his men died of thirst. “Before El Alamein we never had a victory,” said Churchill. “After El Alamein we never had a defeat.”

Remember the miracle of D-day and how at the last possible moment during the windiest month in Normandy for 20 years, a break in the weather occurred, which allowed the Allies to launch the invasion of Europe—and how against fierce opposition, General Eisenhower took the risk. Had he delayed, as he was vehemently encouraged to do, the next launch window would have been June 18. June 18 began as a beautiful calm day, but ended in a storm so fierce that the invasion force could easily have been wrecked. Because of the predicted stormy weather on D-day, the Germans were caught off guard.

“This day eight years ago, I made the most agonizing decision of my life,” Eisenhower later recalled. “If there were nothing else in my life to prove the existence of an almighty and merciful God, the events of the next 24 hours did it …. The greatest break in a terrible outlay of weather occurred the next day and allowed that great invasion to proceed, with losses far below those we had anticipated ….”

There is much to remember.

No modern nation has had as many life-preserving miracles as Great Britain. British history is filled with irrefutable examples of God-given deliverance and preservation. It should be so clear that even the blind can’t help but see.

Yet today, British politicians have turned their back on that history and the thousands of miracles that have preserved their nation’s independence.

On December 13, Prime Minister Gordon Brown signed the constitutional Lisbon Treaty—a treaty that, in fact and in law, transfers British sovereignty to the European Union. Contrary to what some British politicians have claimed, many of the British “opt-outs” are little more than footnotes, having little if any legal weight.

All that remains is for the Labor-dominated British Parliament to ratify the treaty. Sadly, in what amounts to a criminal act—at least by the spirit of the law if not the letter—UK politicians plan to sign away British sovereignty without even permitting a national referendum on the issue.

Will Britain remember its history?

The British people are now entering the most critical phase in their history. Stripped of empire, devoid of much of its material power, plagued by economic problems, its place as a great power lost, Britain, instead of looking to the God who miraculously ensured its freedom so many times throughout history, is looking to Europe for safety and security.

Yet if Britain would only look to its history and see the miracles—and then obey the God of those miracles—God would perform great marvels again. Churchill believed that; Montgomery and Eisenhower believed it; the Sunday Times in 1945 believed it, as did the Daily Sketch in 1946, and the Daily Telegraph in 1947; so did untold thousands of British soldiers who experienced the miracles firsthand.

The Telegraph wrote on April 7, 1947: “And miracles happen still. How many of them have we not seen enacted before our very eyes in these past few years. The history of them is now in the writing ….”

Wake up, Britain! Your life, your freedom, is on the line. Remember your history, or British freedom will disappear along with the miracles.

Remember the Battle of Agincourt, when 6,000 defeated 30,000 …. Remember the Battle of Rorke’s Drift, when 200 stood against 5,000 …. Remember the Battle of Assaye and how 6,500 routed 40,000 …. Remember the list that goes on and on.