The Capital

Claim of US as a Christian nation a complex issue

Priority in founding documents is really on religious freedom

- By Peter Smith

Many Americans believe the United States was founded as a Christian nation, and the idea is energizing some conservati­ve and Republican activists. But the concept means different things to different people, and historians say that while the issue is complex, the founding documents prioritize religious freedom and do not create a Christian nation.

Q: Does the U.S. Constituti­on establish Christiani­ty as an official religion? A: No.

Q: What does the Constituti­on say about religion? A: “(N)o religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualificat­ion to any Office or public Trust under the United States.” (Article VI)

“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishm­ent of religion, or prohibitin­g the free exercise thereof.” (First Amendment)

Q: If it says “Congress,” does the First Amendment apply to the states?

A: It does now. Early in the republic, some states officially sponsored particular churches, such as the Congregati­onal Church in Connecticu­t and Massachuse­tts. Within a few decades, all had removed such support. The post-Civil War 14th Amendment guaranteed all U.S. citizens “equal protection of the laws” and said states couldn’t impede on their “privileges or immunities” without due process. In the 20th century, the Supreme Court applied that to a number of First Amendment cases involving religion, saying states couldn’t forbid public proselytiz­ing, reimburse funding for religious education or sponsor prayer in public

President Joe Biden prays Feb. 1 during the National Prayer Breakfast at the U.S. Capitol.

schools.

Q: What does it mean to say America is a Christian nation?

A: It depends on whom you ask. Some believe God worked to bring European Christians to America in the 1600s and secure their independen­ce in the 1700s. Some take the Puritan settlers at their word that they were forming a covenant with God, similar to the Bible’s descriptio­n of ancient Israel, and see America as still subject to divine blessings or punishment­s depending on how faithful it is. Others contend that some or all the American founders were Christian or that the founding documents were based on Christiani­ty.

Q: What about the colonies?

A: Several had Christian language in their founding documents, such as Massachuse­tts, with establishe­d churches lasting decades after independen­ce. Others, such as Rhode Island, offered broader religious freedom. It’s also arguable whether the colonies’ actions lived up to their words, given their histories of religious intoleranc­e and their beginnings of centuries-long African slavery and wars on Native Americans.

Q: What about the founders?

A: The leaders of the American Revolution and the new republic held a mix of beliefs — some Christian, some Unitarian, some deistic or otherwise theistic. Some key founders, like Benjamin Franklin, admired Jesus as a moral teacher but would fail a test of Christian orthodoxy. Many believed strongly in religious freedom, even as they also believed that religion was essential to maintain a virtuous citizenry.

Q: Were the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce and the Constituti­on based on Christiani­ty and the Ten Commandmen­ts?

A: References to the Creator and Nature’s God in the Declaratio­n reflect a general theism that could be acceptable to Christians, Unitarians, deists and others. Both documents reflect Enlightenm­ent ideas of natural rights and accountabl­e government. Some also see these documents as influenced, or at least compatible, with Protestant emphasis on such ideas as human sin, requiring checks and balances. In fact, believers in a Christian America were some of the strongest opponents of ratifying the Constituti­on because of its omission of God references.

Q: Were most early Americans Christian?

A: Many were and many weren’t. Early church membership was actually quite low, but revivals known as the First and Second Great Awakenings, before and after the Revolution, won a lot of converts. Many scholars see religious freedom as enabling multiple churches to grow and thrive.

Q: Were Catholics considered Christian?

A: Not by many early Americans. Some state constituti­ons barred them from office.

Q: How did that change? A: Gradually, but by the time of the Cold War, many saw Catholics, Protestant­s and Jews as God-believing American patriots, allied in the face-off with the atheistic, communist Soviet Union.

Q: Was it only conservati­ves citing the idea of a Christian nation?

A: No. Many proponents of the early 20th-century social gospel saw their efforts to help the needy as part of building a Christian society. During World War II, President Franklin D. Roosevelt prayed on national radio for God’s blessing “in our united crusade ... over the unholy forces of our enemy.”

The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. wrote that civil rights protesters stood for “the most sacred values in our Judeo-Christian heritage.”

Q: What do progressiv­e Christians say today? A: “Christian nationalis­m has traditiona­lly employed images that advocate an idealized view of the nation’s identity and mission, while deliberate­ly ignoring those persons who have been excluded, exploited, and persecuted,” the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA, an umbrella group that includes multiple progressiv­e denominati­ons, said in a 2021 statement.

Q: What do Americans believe about this?

A: Six in 10 U.S. adults said the founders originally intended America to be a Christian nation, according to a 2022 Pew Research Center survey. Forty-five percent said the U.S. should be a Christian nation, but only a third thought it is one currently.

Among white evangelica­l Protestant­s, 81% said the founders intended a Christian nation, and the same number said the U.S. should be one — but only 23% thought it currently is one, according to Pew.

In a 2021 Pew report, 15% of U.S. adults surveyed said the federal government should declare the U.S. a Christian nation, while 18% said the U.S. Constituti­on was inspired by God.

One-third of U.S. adults surveyed in 2023 said God intended America to be a promised land for European Christians to set an example to the world, according to a Public Religion Research Institute/Brookings survey. Those who embraced this view were also more likely to dismiss the impact of anti-Black discrimina­tion and more likely to say true patriots may need to act violently to save the country, the survey said.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ??
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States