Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

A nation under (not your) God

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Re “No, Michael Flynn, America doesn’t need one religion,” Opinion, Nov. 20

Former national security advisor Michael Flynn’s proposal to have America be “one nation under God and one religion under God” is dangerous, delusional, divisive and a distortion of history.

Besides, just what would that one religion be? Obviously, in Flynn’s view, it would be neither Islam nor any of the myriad religions thought of as being “Eastern.” And, regardless of when the term “JudeoChris­tian” was coined, it does not describe one religion, but rather a supposed shared ethical belief system.

So, does Flynn mean Catholicis­m or Judaism? My guess is no. That leaves Protestant­ism. But even that comprises many separate faiths whose adherents vehemently disagree about minor and major tenets of their beliefs.

Flynn is blowing a dog whistle, hoping that each person who hears him will believe that his or her religion will be the chosen one. Even my dog knows better than to listen.

Andrew Rubin

Los Angeles

The vibrant religious culture we enjoy today as the West’s most pious democracy exists not in spite of our secular tradition but because of it. The tolerance, pluralism and unfettered expression we experience are assured only by state-sanctioned freedom of conscience.

Flynn’s Christian nation argument is attractive. Many Americans would prefer an “establishe­d” state church and an implied covenant: If we revere God, He will protect and bless us.

But secularism has also added to our identity as a beacon of freedom.

Without an age of reason, for example, the abolitioni­st movement would not have been able to de-contextual­ize the Bible’s implicit sanction of slavery and segregatio­n. The political emancipati­on of women would have been forestalle­d, and marriage equality would be unthinkabl­e.

Indeed, while Christian heritage advocates see divine providence in the founding of the nation, secularist­s celebrate 1776 as the birth of a new kind of elevated state, a society with no throne and no altar, where human reason is ascendant. Reconcilin­g these two impulses is a core challenge of our political system.

David DiLeo San Clemente

Flynn says America needs one God and one religion. May I just say that if his brand of “religion” is the one he’s promulgati­ng, count me out.

I could be wrong, but I’ve always lived under the concept that believers in God were moral, truth-telling, decent people. If anyone has “lost sight of that,” it’s Flynn.

I repeat: Count me out. Rebecca Hertsgaard

Palm Desert

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