Pa lawmakers mark Bible Day to rekindle America's spiritual roots
Pennsylvania legislators are turning back to the nation’s spiritual bedrock—officially declaring September 12th as the “Day of the Bible, as CBN reports.
Led by Reps. Stephanie Borowicz and Doug Mastriano, the initiative is drawing national traction after gaining formal recognition in Pennsylvania, and is now being proposed in the halls of Congress.
This spiritual realignment effort began in the Keystone State at none other than historic Congress Hall in Philadelphia, the very place where the first U.S. Congress met between 1790 and 1800—a symbolic location for a country in search of its moral compass.
Legislation Rooted in American History and Faith
The selected date, September 12th, is no coincidence. It commemorates the 1782 Congressional approval to print the Aitken Bible—the first full English-language Bible published in what would become the United States. Known as the “Bible of the Revolution,” it served not just as spiritual nourishment but as an emblem of American resolve and identity.
In a time where progressive ideologies increasingly dominate public institutions, Borowicz and Mastriano are making a bold claim: America must recover what anchored her soul. “We’re restoring the Bible,” said Borowicz. “This is a battle of good versus evil... We don’t fight flesh and blood.”
This isn’t just about symbolism—it’s about action. A group of believers gathers at the Pennsylvania State Capitol every year to read through the entire Bible in just seven days. According to Borowicz, the practice isn’t just spiritually meaningful; it’s correlated with measurable declines in crime wherever it’s done.
Pennsylvania as a National Model for Renewal
The momentum isn’t staying contained. A corresponding resolution introduced in Congress aims to take the “Day of the Bible” nationwide. It’s less about partisanship and more about principles—a re-centering of the American experiment around timeless values instead of fleeting cultural trends.
In remarks that stirred attendees, Mastriano reinforced the deeply transformative role Scripture plays. “Study it, read it, read it to your children at night,” he said. “Do something with it, because our foundation, our virtue, our nation, our republic can only be sustained with it.”
It's a message hitting a nerve in today’s restless America, where news cycles blur, institutions wobble, and truth seems more curated than discovered. Perhaps it's no surprise that Congress Hall, once home to the foundational debates of liberty, now echoes with calls to rediscover the voice of Scripture.
Public Scripture Reading Seen as Driving Positive Change
Borowicz isn’t backing down either. “I can’t think of anything more important than to put and restore the Bible back before (America’s) 250th anniversary,” she said, signaling that this resolution has staying power beyond symbolic gestures.
The lawmakers argue this isn’t legislating religion—it’s pointing back to a framework that informed the Constitution, guided the Founders, and nourished American civil life for generations. In their view, it's about courage more than controversy.
They’re not calling for mandatory observance. But they are inviting the country to remember what once shaped its ethics, family life, and public discourse—and perhaps, what could do so again.
Faith, Not Force: A Call To Rediscover Truth
What differentiates this initiative from the usual campaign-season virtue signaling is its grounding in observable effect. Yearly Scriptural readings in the Capitol aren’t just exercises in devotion—they're described as catalysts for healing and lower crime rates—without any taxpayer burden or political resentment.
Critics may dismiss it as nostalgia, but initiatives like this tap into a growing public hunger for moral clarity. The cultural pendulum doesn't just swing—it also swings back. And the "Day of the Bible" may be just the beginning of a more widespread renewal.
As the nation approaches its 250th birthday, perhaps reexamining its source code isn't regressive—it’s redemptive. For Borowicz and Mastriano, the Bible isn’t a relic—it’s a roadmap. If nothing else, they've sparked a conversation Americans desperately need to have.





