Morning Sun

Politics and religion don’t belong together

- Solomon D. Stevens is the author of “Religion, Politics, and the Law” (co-authored with Peter Schotten) and “Challenges to Peace in the Middle East.” He wrote this for Insidesour­ces. com.

A growing number of people think that America is changing for the worse because it is straying from its Christian roots. As Donald Trump’s former national security adviser Michael Flynn has put it, “If we are going to have one nation under God, which we must, we have to have one religion. One nation under God, and one religion under God.”

The call to “return” to a better time when Christiani­ty defined the country is misleading, and what is even more to the point: It is dishonest. America was never a Christian country, and creating one would be bad for both America and Christiani­ty.

It is true that many of the early colonies were Christian communitie­s. Religious establishm­ents in the colonies often followed one version or another of Christian doctrine, some making heresy a violation of the criminal law and some establishi­ng the death penalty for violation of the sabbath. This integratio­n of Christiani­ty and politics reflected the European tradition of Christian politics, a tradition that was steeped in religious conflict that often defined politics itself. It was this problem of political conflict grounded in religious disagreeme­nt that led the American Founders to introduce a radically new concept: a completely secular government.

This new approach to government is reflected in James Madison’s “Memorial and Remonstran­ce Against Religious Assessment­s,” which was written in 1785 as a response to Patrick Henry’s proposal to levy a tax supporting Christian teachers in the state of Virginia.

Madison argued that it was improper for the state to support Christiani­ty, even in order to promote good morality. The “Memorial and Remonstran­ce” argues that religion is outside the jurisdicti­on of civil society and that even the smallest infringeme­nt of religious liberty could both endanger society and weaken religion.

The effect of religious establishm­ents has sometimes been “to effect a spiritual tyranny on the ruins of civil authority, in many instances they have been seen upholding the thrones of political tyranny; in no instance have they been seen the guardians of the people.”

Madison, who to this day is known as the “Father of the Constituti­on,” wrote in the Federalist Papers that faction — and especially majority faction — was the most dangerous problem for popular government. And religious faction was historical­ly the most important example of this problem.

For centuries religious conflict had destroyed the rights of minorities and undermined government­s’ political stability and tranquilit­y. Madison’s answer is presented in Federalist 51, where he argues that a large, commercial republic would produce a large number of different economic interests and different religious groups that would compete with one another and keep any one from becoming dominant.

In addition, it is clear that our Founding documents are not Christian documents, even though a number of Founders were devout Christians. The original, unamended Constituti­on has only one reference to religion. Article VI says that religious tests cannot be given for public office. It does not mention Jesus or remind us to celebrate the sabbath, attend church or encourage us to pray. It does not even mention Christiani­ty.

And while the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce famously refers to “nature’s God” and says that our unalienabl­e rights are endowed by our creator, one cannot help but notice that the creator of the Declaratio­n only endows us with rights derived from our passion for self-preservati­on; it does not endow us with any religious truths or creeds.

The doctrine of natural rights is a modern doctrine, articulate­d by Thomas Hobbes and John Locke, which posits a

“state of nature” where life is “solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short,” as the original human condition, rather than the Garden of Eden.

It is true that the phrase “separation of church and state” does not appear anywhere in the Constituti­on. The Founders would have been friendly to some general, non-discrimina­tory support of religion, as long as it did not favor one religion over another. But they never would have condoned the establishm­ent of any particular religion or condoned preferenti­al treatment for Christiani­ty by the state.

The American regime was not founded on Christian principles, and claiming that it was is only creating an imaginary past, encouragin­g Christians to long for a mythical time when things were more familiar and simpler.

People like Michael Flynn are dangerous because they are encouragin­g Christians to think of diversity as the enemy and to see non-christians as a threat. This is, of course, not part of traditiona­l Christiani­ty; it represents the political manipulati­on of Christiani­ty. The best way to honor the American Founders is to oppose the movement to politicize religion.

 ?? ?? Solomon D. Stevens
Solomon D. Stevens

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