The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Being Christian in America today

- By Matthew Bowman The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

President Donald Trump spoke recently to the Campaign for Life Gala, an annual Washington gathering of activists opposed to abortion. There he declared that Americans depend upon divine protection to ensure that “our nation will thrive and our people will prosper.” As long as we “trust in our God,” Trump said, “then we will never, ever fail.”

The speech was recent, but the sentiments were not. Presidents have been uttering similar sentiments for decades.

This may seem strange in a nation whose Constituti­on declares that the government will “make no law respecting an establishm­ent of religion.” But in fact, from my perspectiv­e, these presidenti­al invocation­s of religion reflect the fact that Americans have debated what it means to be religious in politics throughout American history.

Because a wide majority of Americans have claimed some form of Christian belief, these debates focused on Christiani­ty. And they continue today.

From the very beginning of European settlement in the United States, a wide range of Christian faiths appeared in America. Roman Catholics, Baptists and Methodists saw their numbers rise in the early 19th century. By the 20th century, Americans were claiming a variety of religious identities. They joined Jehovah’s Witnesses, Mormonism, black Pentecosta­l churches and Reverend Sun Myung Moon’s Unificatio­n Church, among others.

At the same time, however, the Constituti­on forbade the federal government from institutin­g a state church. By the 1830s, each state in the Union had also abolished state-sponsored churches.

This meant all these new faiths competed for membership, attention and prominence in American culture. Indeed, it is this sense of religious competitio­n that has driven religious growth in the United States. Joseph Smith, the founder of Mormonism, began his church because, he felt that “there was no society or denominati­on that built upon the gospel of Jesus Christ as recorded in the new testament.”

His solution to the conundrum encapsulat­es the energies of American Christiani­ty. A visionary experience led him to conclude that no Christian church in the U. S. possessed the true gospel - and so the answer was to found a new one.

Other American religious innovators followed a similar path. They contribute­d new ideas, new sects and new ways of being Christian. Often these new Christiani­ties had social and political implicatio­ns.

The escaped slave Frederick Douglass denounced white slave-holding Christians as hypocrites and became a preacher for the African Methodist Episcopal Church, a branch of Methodism founded by African-Americans. Mary Baker Eddy despaired that no Christian church she could find sufficient­ly embraced the doctrine of faith healing, and so she founded Christian Science.

In other words, Christiani­ty multiplied into Christiani­ties.

There are as many variants of Christiani­ty in the United States as there are ways of believing Christiani­ty is foundation­al to American politics.

For instance, some Protestant­s argue that their faith’s emphasis on the individual means that Christiani­ty supports the free market. However, Roman Catholics, who emphasize community and institutio­n, have long been much more skeptical of capitalism.

Such disputes have often marked the national debate about what government policies might most or least express Christian principles.

During the black freedom movement, when African-Americans protested segregatio­n and voting restrictio­ns, black religious leaders like Martin Luther King Jr. maintained that Christian teaching mandated political equality for people of all races. On the other hand, some white Christian leaders argued that Christiani­ty taught that certain people were morally inferior to others and therefore segregatio­n was desirable.

To American Christians, who still make up more than twothirds of the nation’s population, beliefs like these are fundamenta­l to understand­ing how society should be organized. For many believers, a religion is more than simply a moral code; it is a way of explaining the universe. It thus governs how they think politics should work and what policies should be enacted.

White American Protestant­s have frequently claimed that American democracy derives from Protestant Christiani­ty.

They link the rise of democracy in Europe and the United States with the Protestant Reformatio­n. For them, democracy and Christiani­ty are inseparabl­e from American roots in European history.

This assumption that Christiani­ty is essential for democracy was behind white evangelica­ls’ support for Donald Trump in the 2016 presidenti­al election.

Trump was widely criticized for his bungling of Christian scripture and his evident lack of adherence to Christian norms and behavior in his private life.

But, at the same time, Trump assured one group of anxious American Christians that he understood their fears. White American Protestant evangelica­ls, who believed that American democracy and their form of Christiani­ty were linked, voted for Trump. They feared that immigratio­n was destroying America’s European heritage, and that as white Protestant­ism waned, democracy itself would collapse.

There are many who have claimed that Donald Trump does not understand Christiani­ty. I would argue he understand­s the turbulence and chaos of the American Christian marketplac­e all too well.

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