Answer:
Citizenship in the United States.
Explanation:
The excerpt belongs to the text of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, where the requirements to be considered a citizen of the United States and the rights that these have within the nation and in each of the states that the make up. Thus, it defines the citizen as any person born in the United States (without making any distinction regarding race or sexuality, thus guaranteeing the right to equality of persons) or naturalized in the country. The historical significance of this amendment was that it guaranteed citizenship for African American people.
I think it is
D)The Alliance of 1778 between the U.S. and France ended
Explanation:
There is no chart posted. Look at each choice and check the graph to see which one has both true statements
Tim Keller on Dr. King’s rejection of relativism:
When Martin Luther King Jr. confronted racism in the white church in the South, he did not call on Southern churches to become more secular. Read his sermons and “Letter from the Birmingham Jail” and see how he argued. He invoked God’s moral law and the Scripture. He called white Christians to be more true to their own beliefs and to realize what the Bible really teaches. He did not say, “Truth is relative and everyone is free to determine what is right or wrong for them.” If everything is relative, there would have been no incentive for white people in the south to give up their power. Rather, Dr. King invoked the prophet Amos, who said, “Let justice roll down like waters, and righteousness as a mighty stream.” The greatest champion of justice in our era knew the antidote to racism was not less Christianity, but a deeper and truer Christianity.
(Reason for God, pp.64-65)