Santa Fe New Mexican

Founders and presidents: A reflection

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It’s time to watch fireworks displays, sing patriotic songs, and ruminate about our country’s rich heritage and history. It’s time to celebrate America’s national birthday. As we do so, we should recognize that millions of our ancestors, by their creative thinking, hard work, devotion to the common good, and personal sacrifices have helped make our nation a beacon of democracy and opportunit­y in a world that has faced a sea of challenges since 1776.

We obviously owe a huge debt of gratitude to America’s founders who risked their property, reputation­s and lives to express their opposition to Britain’s policies, to call for independen­ce, to fight a war to achieve this objective, and to craft a new nation that has defended and disseminat­ed the principles of freedom around the globe.

Not surprising­ly, four of the principal founders were the first four presidents of the United States: George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, and James Madison all served effectivel­y as the nation’s chief executive, setting precedents and establishi­ng policies that placed the fledgling country on a solid foundation and helped ensure its stability and success.

Also, not surprising­ly, their successors in the office have often praised the founders for their wisdom in devising such a venerable Constituti­on and workable government and appealed to them to bolster their own reputation­s and policies. Twentieth and 21st century presidents have especially lauded the religious conviction­s of the founders.

Dwight Eisenhower insisted that the Founding Fathers “wrote their religious faith into our founding documents, stamped their trust in God upon our coins and currency, [and] put it squarely at the base of our institutio­ns.” They strove to obey God’s commandmen­ts, live in freedom and create a prosperous country. “The knowledge that God is the source of all power,” Eisenhower maintained, gave birth to and sustained America. Human dignity depended on the God-given rights that were “eloquently stated” in the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce.

Faith in Almighty God, John F. Kennedy contended, “was a dominant power in the lives of our Founding Fathers.” He urged Americans to “dwell upon the deep religious conviction­s of those who formed our nation.”

Ronald Reagan repeatedly stressed the religious commitment­s of the Founding Fathers, especially their contention that the United States would flourish only if its people acted morally. The founders, he declared, “believed faith in God was the key to our being a good people and America’s becoming a great nation.”

The American republic, declared George H. W. Bush, was built on the founders’ “faith in Almighty God” and “spiritual principles.” Convinced that all people “are equal in the sight of their Creator,” the founders devised a system of government

We obviously owe a huge debt of gratitude to America’s founders who risked their property, reputation­s and lives to . . . call for independen­ce . . . and to craft a new nation.

that protected “the God-given rights of every individual.”

The founders cared deeply about religion, Bill Clinton maintained, because they thought it promoted the character and conduct essential to the republic’s success. The framers of the Constituti­on, Clinton argued, “recognized the awesome power” religious liberty possessed to unite citizens to promote the common good.

Presidents have also frequently cited the founders to reinforce policies they advocated. Consider three examples.

In urging Congress to pass the Religious Freedom Restoratio­n Act of 1993, Bill Clinton claimed that it better protected “Americans of all faiths in the exercise of their religion” and was “far more consistent” with the founders’ intention than the Supreme Court’s decision in Employment Division, Department of Human Resources of Oregon v. Smith (1990). This act, Clinton maintained, honored “the principle that our laws and institutio­ns should not impede or hinder but rather should protect and preserve fundamenta­l religious liberties.”

In promoting faith-based initiative­s, George W. Bush argued in 2001 that the nation’s founders had approved using federal money to fund the activities of religious groups that promoted morality and improved social conditions but not those endeavors that spread their specific beliefs.

As we celebrate our nation’s 241st birthday, let’s thank God for giving us this incredible collection of founders who labored so courageous­ly, tirelessly and effectivel­y to establish the world’s largest to-that-date republic and ensure its success.

Dr. Gary Scott Smith is the retired chairman of the history department at Grove City College and is a fellow for faith and politics with The Center for Vision and Values. He is the author of Suffer the Children (2017), Religion in the Oval Office (Oxford University Press, 2015), among other books.

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