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Today,
I came across a very fitting article from my April News Week magazine called
"God and the Founders"... Fitting because today is the beginning of a very
cermonious Christian and Judaism week of traditions and rituals.
Please read the below article and learn for
yourselve how our Founders in all their wisdom, knew how important it was to
keep STATE AND RELIGION separate.
And then read a conservative viewpoint
(below this article) on this very NEWSWEEK
EXCERPT.
Oh, how The FAR RIGHT CONSERVATIVE FUNDAMENTALISTS
hate any truths concerning their belief system. They seem to always put
their hands over their ears and sing GOD BLESS AMERICA whenever reality tries to
penetrate their closed minds of fantasy.
Also click the picture and hear Jon Meacham's voice
on radio... thinkingblue
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
God and the Founders
Battles over faith and freedom may seem never-ending, but a new book,
'American Gospel,' argues that history illuminates how religion can shape the
nation without dividing it.
By Jon Meacham
Newsweek
Damien Donck for Newsweek
In ‘American Gospel,’ Meacham explores faith, history and freedom
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
April 10, 2006 issue - America's first fight was over faith. As the Founding
Fathers gathered for the inaugural session of the Continental Congress on
Tuesday, September 6, 1774, at Carpenters' Hall in Philadelphia, Thomas Cushing,
a lawyer from Boston, moved that the delegates begin with a prayer. Both John
Jay of New York and John Rutledge, a rich lawyer-planter from South Carolina,
objected. Their reasoning, John Adams wrote his wife, Abigail, was that "because
we were so divided in religious sentiments"—the Congress included Episcopalians,
Congregationalists, Presbyterians, and others—"we could not join in the same act
of worship." The objection had the power to set a secular tone in public life at
the outset of the American political experience.
Things could have gone either way. Samuel Adams of Boston spoke up. "Mr. S.
Adams arose and said he was no bigot, and could hear a prayer from a gentleman
of piety and virtue who was at the same time a friend to his country," wrote
John Adams. "He was a stranger in Philadelphia, but had heard that Mr. Duche (Dushay
they pronounce it) deserved that character, and therefore he moved that Mr.
Duche, an Episcopal clergyman, might be desired to read prayers to the Congress
tomorrow morning." Then, in a declarative nine-word sentence, John Adams
recorded the birth of what Benjamin Franklin called America's public religion:
"The motion was seconded and passed in the affirmative."
The next morning the Reverend Duche appeared, dressed in clerical garb. As it
happened, the psalm assigned to be read that day by Episcopalians was the 35th.
The delegates had heard rumors—later proved to be unfounded—that the British
were storming Boston; everything seemed to be hanging in the balance. In the
hall, with the Continental Army under attack from the world's mightiest empire,
the priest read from the psalm: " 'Plead my cause, O Lord, with them that strive
with me: fight against them that fight against me.'"
Fight against them that fight against me: John Adams was at once stunned and
moved. "I never saw a greater effect upon an audience," he told Abigail. "It
seemed as if Heaven had ordained that Psalm to be read on that morning." Adams
long tingled from the moment—the close quarters of the room, the mental vision
in every delegate's head of the patriots supposedly facing fire to the north,
and, with Duche's words, the summoning of divine blessing and guidance on what
they believed to be the cause of freedom.
As it was in the beginning, so it has been since: an American acknowledgment of
God in the public sphere, with men of good will struggling to be reverent yet
tolerant and ecumenical. That the Founding Fathers debated whether to open the
American saga with prayer is wonderfully fitting, for their conflicts are our
conflicts, their dilemmas our dilemmas. Largely faithful, they knew religious
wars had long been a destructive force in the lives of nations, and they had no
wish to repeat the mistakes of the world they were rebelling against. And yet
they bowed their heads.
More than two centuries on, as millions of Americans observe Passover and
commemorate Easter next week, the role of faith in public life is a subject of
particularly pitched debate. From stem cells and science to the Supreme Court,
from foreign policy and the 2008 presidential campaign to evangelical "Justice
Sundays," the question of God and politics generates much heat but little light.
Some Americans think the country has strayed too far from God; others fear that
religious zealots (from the White House to the school board) are waging holy war
on American liberty; and many, if not most, seem to believe that we are a nation
hopelessly divided between believers and secularists.
Click here to buy 'American Gospel'
History suggests, though, that there is hope, for we have been fighting these
battles from our earliest days and yet the American experiment endures.
However dominant in terms of numbers, Christianity is only a thread in the
American tapestry—it is not the whole tapestry. The God who is spoken of and
called on and prayed to in the public sphere is an essential character in the
American drama, but He is not specifically God the Father or the God of Abraham.
The right's contention that we are a "Christian nation" that has fallen from
pure origins and can achieve redemption by some kind of return to Christian
values is based on wishful thinking, not convincing historical argument. Writing
to the Hebrew Congregation in Newport, Rhode Island, in 1790, George Washington
assured his Jewish countrymen that the American government "gives to bigotry no
sanction." In a treaty with the Muslim nation of Tripoli initiated by
Washington, completed by John Adams, and ratified by the Senate in 1797, we
declared "the Government of the United States is not, in any sense, founded on
the Christian religion. ... " The Founders also knew the nation would grow ever
more diverse; in Virginia, Thomas Jefferson's bill for religious freedom was
"meant to comprehend, within the mantle of its protection, the Jew and the
Gentile, the Christian and the Mahometan, the Hindoo and infidel of every
denomination." And thank God—or, if you choose, thank the Founders—that it did
indeed.
Understanding the past may help us move forward. When the subject is faith in
the public square, secularists reflexively point to the Jeffersonian "wall of
separation between church and state" as though the conversation should end
there; many conservative Christians defend their forays into the political arena
by citing the Founders, as though Washington, Adams, Jefferson, and Franklin
were cheerful Christian soldiers. Yet to claim that religion has only recently
become a political force in the United States is uninformed and unhistorical; in
practice, the "wall" of separation is not a very tall one. Equally wrongheaded
is the tendency of conservative believers to portray the Founding Fathers as
apostles in knee britches.
The great good news about America—the American gospel, if you will—is that
religion shapes the life of the nation without strangling it. Driven by a sense
of providence and an acute appreciation of the fallibility of humankind, the
Founders made a nation in which faith should not be singled out for special help
or particular harm. The balance between the promise of the Declaration of
Independence, with its evocation of divine origins and destiny, and the
practicalities of the Constitution, with its checks on extremism, remains the
most brilliant of American successes.
The Founding Fathers and presidents down the ages have believed in a God who
brought forth the heavens and the earth, and who gave humankind the liberty to
believe in Him or not, to love Him or not, to obey Him or not. God had created
man with free will, for love coerced is no love at all, only submission. That is
why the religious should be on the front lines of defending freedom of religion.
Our finest hours—the Revolutionary War, abolition, the expansion of the rights
of women, hot and cold wars against terror and tyranny, Martin Luther King Jr.'s
battle against Jim Crow—can partly be traced to religious ideas about liberty,
justice, and charity. Yet theology and scripture have also been used to justify
our worst hours—from enslaving people based on the color of their skin to
treating women as second-class citizens.
Still, Jefferson's declaration of independence grounded America's most
fundamental human rights in the divine, as the gift of "Nature's God." The most
unconventional of believers, Jefferson was no conservative Christian; he once
went through the Gospels with a razor to excise the parts he found implausible.
("I am of a sect by myself, as far as I know," he remarked.) And yet he believed
that "the God who gave us life gave us liberty at the same time," and to
Jefferson, the "Creator" invested the individual with rights no human power
could ever take away. The Founders, however, resolutely refused to evoke
sectarian—specifically Christian—imagery: the God of the Declaration is largely
the God of Deism, an Enlightenment-era vision of the divine in which the Lord is
a Creator figure who works in the world through providence. The Founding Fathers
rejected an attempt to rewrite the Preamble of the Constitution to say the
nation was dependent on God, and from the Lincoln administration forward
presidents and Congresses refused to support a "Christian Amendment" that would
have acknowledged Jesus to be the "Ruler among the nations."
At the same time, the early American leaders were not absolute secularists. They
wanted God in American public life, but in a way that was unifying, not
divisive. They were politicians and philosophers, sages and warriors, churchmen
and doubters. While Jefferson edited the Gospels, Franklin rendered the Lord's
Prayer into the 18th-century vernacular, but his piety had its limits: he
recalled falling asleep in a Quaker meeting house on his first day in
Philadelphia. All were devoted to liberty, but most kept slaves. All were
devoted to virtue, but many led complex—the religious would say sinful—private
lives.
The Founders understood that theocracy was tyranny, but they did not feel they
could—or should—try to banish religion from public life altogether. Washington
improvised "So help me, God" at the conclusion of the first presidential oath
and kissed the Bible on which he had sworn it. Abraham Lincoln issued the
Emancipation Proclamation, he privately told his cabinet, because he had struck
a deal with "my Maker" that he would free the slaves if the Union forces
triumphed at Antietam. The only public statement Franklin D. Roosevelt made on
D-Day 1944 was to read a prayer he had written drawing on the 1928 Episcopal
Book of Common Prayer. John Kennedy said that "on earth, God's work must truly
be our own," and Ronald Reagan was not afraid to say that he saw the world as a
struggle between light and dark, calling the Soviet empire "the focus of evil in
the modern world." George W. Bush credits Billy Graham with saving him from a
life of drift and drink, and once said that Christ was his favorite philosopher.
Sectarian language, however, can be risky. In a sermon preached on the day
George Washington left Philadelphia to take command of the Continental Army, an
Episcopal priest said: "Religion and liberty must flourish or fall together in
America. We pray that both may be perpetual." The battle to preserve faith and
freedom has been a long one, and rages still: keeping religion and politics in
proper balance requires eternal vigilance.
Our best chance of summoning what Lincoln called "the better angels of our
nature" may lie in recovering the true sense and spirit of the Founding era and
its leaders, for they emerged from a time of trial with a moral creed which,
while imperfect, averted the worst experiences of other nations. In that history
lies our hope.
From AMERICAN GOSPEL by Jon Meacham, to be published by Random House on Tuesday,
April 4. © 2006 by Jon Meacham.
For more on "American Gospel," go to JonMeacham.com
© 2006 Newsweek, Inc. | Subscribe to Newsweek
___________________________________________________
By Michael J. Gaynor
Beware the Gospel According to Newsweek's Jon Meachem!
April 04, 2006 08:46 PM EST
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Advertise here
SURPRISE! The April 10, 2006 issue of Newsweek did what the United States
Supreme Court said that government must not do. Instead of maintaining a strict
neutrality between religion and irreligion, as though agnosticism is the correct
view, it put at the top of the front cover, above "Newsweek," the words "GOD AND
THE FOUNDING FATHERS."
There is a reason, of course. Jon Meachem, Newsweek's Managing Editor, wrote a
book titled American Gospel: God, the Founding Fathers, and the Making of a
Nation, published by Random House on April 4, 2006. To promote book sales,
Newsweek published an excerpt from Mr. Meacham's book.
The theme of the book, according to Newsweek: "Battles over faith and freedom
may seem never-ending, but... history illuminates how religion can shape the
nation without dividing it."
The problem: religion is supposed to teach the difference between good and bad,
not shape without dividing. Evil is to be identified and avoided, because it can
contaminate, and eventually the wheat and the chafe will be divided.
Regrettably, although Mr. Meachem does acknowledge God, he extols the importance
of unity over the importance of truth
Mr. Meachem wrote: "America's first fight was over faith. As the Founding
Fathers gathered for the inaugural session of the Continental Congress on
Tuesday, September 6, 1774, at Carpenters' Hall in Philadelphia, Thomas Cushing,
a lawyer from Boston, moved that the delegates begin with a prayer. Both John
Jay of New York and John Rutledge, a rich lawyer-planter from South Carolina,
objected. Their reasoning, John Adams wrote his wife, Abigail, was that 'because
we were so divided in religious sentiments'—the Congress included Episcopalians,
Congregationalists, Presbyterians, and others—'we could not join in the same act
of worship.' The objection had the power to set a secular tone in public life at
the outset of the American political experience.
"Things could have gone either way. Samuel Adams of Boston spoke up. 'Mr. S.
Adams arose and said he was no bigot, and could hear a prayer from a gentleman
of piety and virtue who was at the same time a friend to his country,' wrote
John Adams. 'He was a stranger in Philadelphia, but had heard that Mr. Duche (Dushay
they pronounce it) deserved that character, and therefore he moved that Mr.
Duche, an Episcopal clergyman, might be desired to read prayers to the Congress
tomorrow morning.' Then, in a declarative nine-word sentence, John Adams
recorded the birth of what Benjamin Franklin called America's public religion:
'The motion was seconded and passed in the affirmative.'
To read more of this pathetic conservative inveigh against
religious fact
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