Excerpts from "A Nation of Christians Is
Not a Christian Nation"
New York Times October 7, 2007
By JON MEACHAM
According to Scripture, ...
believers are to be wary of all mortal powers. Their home is the kingdom
of God, which transcends all earthly things, not any particular
nation-state. The Psalmist advises believers to “put not your trust in
princes.” The author of Job says that the Lord “shows no partiality to
princes nor regards the rich above the poor, for they are all the work
of his hands.” Before Pilate, Jesus says, “My kingdom is not of this
world.” And if, as Paul writes in Galatians, “there is neither Jew nor
Greek, there is neither slave nor free man, there is neither male nor
female: for you are all one in Christ Jesus,” then it is difficult to
see how there could be a distinction in God’s eyes between, say, an
American and an Australian. In fact, there is no distinction if you
believe Peter’s words in the Acts of the Apostles: “I most certainly
believe now that God is not one to show partiality, but in every nation
the man who fears him and does what is right is welcome to him.”
The kingdom Jesus preached was
radical. Not only are nations irrelevant, but families are, too: he
instructs those who would be his disciples to give up all they have and
all those they know to follow him.
The only acknowledgment of
religion in the original Constitution is a utilitarian one: the document
is dated “in the year of our Lord 1787.” Even the religion clause of the
First Amendment is framed dryly and without reference to any particular
faith. The Connecticut ratifying convention debated rewriting the
preamble to take note of God’s authority, but the effort failed.
A pseudonymous opponent of the
Connecticut proposal had some fun with the notion of a deity who would,
in a sense, be checking the index for his name: “A low mind may imagine
that God, like a foolish old man, will think himself slighted and
dishonored if he is not complimented with a seat or a prologue of
recognition in the Constitution.” Instead, the framers, the opponent
wrote in The American Mercury, “come to us in the plain language of
common sense and propose to our understanding a system of government as
the invention of mere human wisdom; no deity comes down to dictate it,
not a God appears in a dream to propose any part of it.”
While many states maintained
established churches and religious tests for office — Massachusetts was
the last to disestablish, in 1833 — the federal framers, in their
refusal to link civil rights to religious observance or adherence,
helped create a culture of religious liberty that ultimately carried the
day.
Thomas Jefferson said that his
bill for religious liberty in Virginia was “meant to comprehend, within
the mantle of its protection, the Jew and the Gentile, the Christian and
the Mahometan, the Hindu, and infidel of every denomination.” When
George Washington was inaugurated in New York in April 1789, Gershom
Seixas, the hazan of Shearith Israel, was listed among the city’s
clergymen (there were 14 in New York at the time) — a sign of acceptance
and respect. The next year, Washington wrote the Hebrew Congregation of
Newport, R.I., saying, “happily the government of the United States ...
gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance. ... Everyone
shall sit in safety under his own vine and fig tree, and there shall be
none to make him afraid.”
Andrew Jackson resisted bids in
the 1820s to form a “Christian party in politics.” Abraham Lincoln
buried a proposed “Christian amendment” to the Constitution to declare
the nation’s fealty to Jesus. Theodore Roosevelt defended William Howard
Taft, a Unitarian, from religious attacks by supporters of William
Jennings Bryan.
The founders were not
anti-religion. Many of them were faithful in their personal lives, and
in their public language they evoked God. They grounded the founding
principle of the nation — that all men are created equal — in the
divine. But they wanted faith to be one thread in the country’s
tapestry, not the whole tapestry.
In the 1790s, in the waters off
Tripoli, pirates were making sport of American shipping near the Barbary
Coast. Toward the end of his second term, Washington sent Joel Barlow,
the diplomat-poet, to Tripoli to settle matters, and the resulting
treaty, finished after Washington left office, bought a few years of
peace. Article 11 of this long-ago document says that “as the government
of the United States is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian
religion,” there should be no cause for conflict over differences of
“religious opinion” between countries.
The treaty passed the Senate
unanimously.
Jon Meacham, the editor of Newsweek, is the
author of “American Gospel” and “Franklin and Winston.”
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