Chief Justice Moores Message to America
(Newly Revised Edition)
Arguably the most significant stand for Gods Law in our generation occurred this year when the Chief Justice of the State of Alabama refused to remove the Ten Commandments Monument after a federal judge declared it illegal for the state to acknowledge God. In so doing, Roy Moore proved himself to be the most heroic Christian elected to high office in a century. But his actions also earned him a judicial suspension, the wrath of the ACLU, and the disapprobation of the secular news media.
Now, in The Law of the Land you can travel with Vision Forum to the classrooms of our Witherspoon School of Law and Public Policy, where Chief Justice Moore has served as faculty since 1999, and join us for a behind the scenes look at the stand-off in Montgomery, where thousands gathered by the Ten Commandments Monument in support of the basic proposition that the state must acknowledge God. This film is a collection of great speeches by men like the Chief Justice, Alan Keyes, and Howard Phillips. The Law of the Land is a great resource to educate your local church, to motivate your children to become future leaders, and to receive the encouragement that comes when we are reminded that God is raising a remnant of faithful warriors to stand in the gates of the nation. The revised edition includes new, on-location footage and information about the final trial.
Customer Comments
I received you production, The Law of the Land in the mail today. I am already watching it for the second time. This is a well produced video which every Christian teacher, lawyer and judge should watch over and over.
I am a 33 year old youth pastor, father of three, and a part-time law student who has found in Roy Moore a man I can emulate as a future lawyer. I had been in the midst of an identity crisis as a Christian and a lawyer until I found men like Roy Moore who showed that it was still possible to be a lawyer in the US and stand up for Gods law.
Thank you for producing this video. I hope to buy copies for all my friends in law school eventually.
E.H.