Americans Can Sign And Endorse 'One Nation Under God'
America has been adrift for decades, but President Trump seeks to rededicate the nation to God on May 17.
Anna Derbyshire, a prolife advocate who attended the recently concluded 70th Session of the UN Commission on the Status of Women, said that Americans do their part to renew their nation’s covenant with God.
CitizenGO, an international pro-family and pro-life advocacy nonprofit, is calling on Americans to gather at the National Mall in Washington D.C. on May 16 to declare “once again the truth that has guided this nation since its founding: that our freedoms come not from government, but from God.”
Derbyshire took a moment during a busy day working for CitizenGO at UN Headquarters in New York City to say, “When President Trump announced the rededication of the United States of America as one nation under God, I realized, this must be a commitment of “We The People.” From that truth, The American Covenant Project was born.”
“America has been adrift for decades,” Derbyshire said.
Derbyshire observed the 70th Session of the UN Commission on Women, which rejected a resolution offered by the United States to define women and girls according to biological sex rather than subjective definitions based on transgender understandings based on feelings, psychology, and outward appearances. The UN has long utilized ambiguous definitions of women to promote transgenderism throughout the world, as well as so-called sexual health and reproductive care, which in reality means the provision of abortion and contraception. Globalists in government in the US, academics, and public schools refer to UN policies and international law to promote transgenderism and sex education among minors.
She said that CitizenGO is gathering Americans’ signatures to a declaration dubbed One Nation Under God: The American Covenant, which will be handcrafted as a leather-bound volume to be preserved by the Library of Congress as a “permanent record of our national testimony.” Those signing the Covenant will have their signatures preserved forever in the book.
The number of signatures is limited to 25,000 from across all fifty states. Those wishing to sign should access the CitizenGo website here and follow the instructions.
The one-of-a-kind book will be handcrafted and bound by David Hoke of Understanding the Word Ministries. Hoke creates personalized Bibles for American leaders. CitizenGo will hand-deliver the book to the Library of Congress in time for the May 17 National Rededication Day to be solemnized by President Trump in Washington D.C. He announced the event at the the 74th annual National Prayer Breakfast in February,
“This prayer breakfast comes at a special time for our country as we prepare to celebrate the 250th anniversary of American independence,” Trump said at the Prayer Breakfast. Just months away from the celebration of the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, Trump said, “When our founders proclaimed the immortal truths that echoed around the world and down all the way through time, they declared that all of us are made free and equal by the hand of our Creator.” On May 17, he will hold the “Rededicate 250” event on the National Mall to “to rededicate America as one nation under God.”
“We’re inviting Americans from all across the country to come together on our National Mall to pray, to give thanks,” he added.
This year, the president announced the “America Prays” initiative, and asked Americans to pray for their nation and each other. The White House has since published a document that recounts the Christian roots of the United States, which featured prayers, sermons, and presidential proclamations from its history. Trump also announced that the federal Department of Education will seek to protect religious speech and prayer in public schools. As for potential lawsuits against the Trump administration, he said: “We’ll win it.”
Trump expressed his approval of an apparent resurgence of Christian faith in the U.S., especially among young people. Polling data has shown a stabilization in attendance at Christian divine worship after many years of decline. However, there are indications of a resurgence of religious faith among young people, especially Generation Z: those born between 1997 and 2012.
Men of Generation Z show increasing participation in worship, while data suggest they are attending church at higher rates than older generations. The Barna Group reports that 66% of U.S. adults felt a personal commitment to Jesus in 2025, a 12-percentage-point increase since 2021. And in November 2025, NPR reported that Bible sales had boomed.