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(An exclusive transcription of a presentation by Dr. Daniel L. Dreisbach
to the members of the Wilberforce Forum.)
I want to pose the question of the role of religion and the place of religion
in the U.S. Constitution. Now, it is not real popular in this day and age to
talk about this actual document. We talk about the Constitution as a sense, as
an idea, but we have really gotten away from talking about the Constitution as a
document, as actual words on a piece of paper. But that is what I want to
consider.
Whenever I talk about history and the Constitution and the role of religion
in American public life, I am reminded of a cartoon that was in the New
Yorker. It showed two Pilgrim fathers standing on the deck of the Mayflower.
Behind them (metaphorically) was the old world of religious persecution and all
that. In front of them lay the great shining city on the hill. One Pilgrim
father was saying to the other, “You know religious liberty is my short-term
interest, but in the long run I want to get into real estate.”
I like this cartoon for a couple of reasons: It encapsulates much of our
country’s early history, and it reminds us that this is a very complicated
story. It is a story of mixed motives and mixed results. I think there is a
problem within the evangelical Christian community in sticking to a simple story
line, especially when it suits certain polemical interests and discounts some of
the baser, uglier sides of the story that may not fit.
The cartoon reminds me, in particular, that the pursuit of mammon as well as
the pursuit of religious liberty played a role in the founding of our country. I
think we are dishonest if we don’t acknowledge that fact. I think as
Christians we have a special and awesome responsibility to try to pursue the
truth and stick to it in our telling of history. Who tells the story and how one
tells the story is obviously very important.
Is the United States Constitution a godless document? Is it a godless text?
Does it evince a "political atheism," to use a very popular Nineteenth
Century phrase? Is it insufficiently attentive to the vital role of religion in
American public life? This may be a question that surprises you. If it does, it
will surprise you to know that this is a question that has been asked from very
credible sources since 1787, and I will hopefully give you a flavor of that. But
this is a question that has been asked by pious citizens and by very serious and
sober citizens since the text emanated from the Philadelphia Convention in 1787.
Now, it is indeed striking that when one looks at the Constitution there is
an absence of an implicit acknowledgment of the Deity or the Christian religion.
Invocation of the Deity to attest to or authenticate a document has been a
tradition that predates the Christian era, especially for a framing document
like a constitution -- it was certainly part of the American tradition. If you
look at any of our basic founding documents -- for example, the
"Declaration of the Cost, Causes, and Necessity of Taking up Arms" in
1775 (which in some respects is a rough draft of the Declaration of
Independence) -- they make reference to the Deity. The Declaration of
Independence, the Articles of Confederation, they all make reference to the fact
that they are operating from a theistic sort of foundation. Virtually all state
constitutions and other official documents are replete with claims of Christian
devotion and supplication to the Supreme Being. So I think this omission of
reference to God from the U.S. Constitution is rather interesting.
Now there are some arguably slight references to the Deity and Christian
custom in the Constitution. Nonetheless, there is no clear affirmation of the
existence of a superintendent, transcendent Being, and no acknowledgement that
society and civil government are dependent on and governed by God. Members of
the Constitutional Convention noted this omission both when they were trying to
sell the document and when they were opposing the document. Similarly, critics
in the state ratifying conventions noted what they called a “defect” in this
proposed national charter.
During the ratification debates (and well into the nineteenth century), there
were persistent and vocal critics of the document who protested its failure to
mention God. For example, William Williams (a signer of the Declaration of
Independence), had this to say in February of 1788. He would have required “an
explicit acknowledgment of a Being, of a God, His Perfections, and His
Providence, and to have prefixed to it and stand as the first introductory words
of the Constitution.” And then he launched into what he would have had as the
Preamble -- think how this contrasts with the Preamble that we ended up getting.
This will give you a flavor. He wrote:
Benjamin Rush, another signer of the Declaration of Independence (and one of
the framers who was most interested in theologically concerned issues),
similarly complained: “Many pious people wished the name of the Supreme Being
had been introduced somewhere in the new Constitution, perhaps an acknowledgment
may be made of His Goodness or His Providence in the proposed amendments to the
document.”
In 1789, a Presbyterian wrote to George Washington and made a similar
complaint: “We should not have been alone in rejoicing to have seen some
explicit acknowledgment of the only true God and Jesus Christ whom He has sent,
inserted somewhere in the Magna Carta of our country, the Constitution.”
The documents of this era are filled with this kind of a concern. Some of it
was the basis of the opposition to the Constitution, but some of it was just
asking why we didn’t at least acknowledge the Supreme Being, which was part of
our tradition.
And so, it is not without cause that we ask, do we have a godless
Constitution?
The Constitution, I think, is a secular text -- if by that term
nothing more or less is signified than the absence of manifest religious content
that used the terminology that we were accustomed to seeing in our public
documents.
But did the framers have something more radical in mind? Did they omit
religious references as a calculated secular design to eliminate religion in a
public sphere in the public institutions of our society? There has always been a
distinct group, a minority, I think it is fair to say, that includes extreme
Deists, liberal religionists, rationalists, free-thinkers, secularists,
agnostics, and even some Calvinists, who have maintained that the
Constitution’s failure to acknowledge God evinced an intent by the framers to
create a wholly secular polity, one that discontinued all connection between
civil government and religion or that indicated official indifference or even
hostility towards religion.
There is a certain irony that there was this subculture within evangelical
society in the early nineteenth century that said that we have a godless
Constitution. In many respects it is their descendants who today have turned the
argument around and said, “No. In fact, what we have is a Christian document
that is being disregarded.” So here is a slight historical contrast of some
interest.
There are two substantive references to religion in the amended federal
Constitution. Both are purely negative or prohibitive in character. The first
and only one in the un-amended text is in Article Six, clause three of the
Constitution, which states: “No religious test shall ever be required as a
qualification to any office or public trust under the United States.” The
second comes in the amended Constitution -– of course, I am referring here to
the First Amendment –- which says: “Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”
I think it is fair to say that, despite these voices I have highlighted, for
much of American history it has been a largely unchallenged assumption that
America was in some sense a Christian, if not a Protestant, society -- not in
any particular denominational sense, but more generally as manifested in
traditions and institutions and values and symbols and the like.
But if you look on the face of it, these two provisions in the Constitution,
Article Six and the First Amendment, can be viewed as somewhat problematic for
religious traditionalists who saw America as a Christian Commonwealth. In what
sense can it be said that a nation is Christian when its fundamental law
explicitly prohibits civil government from administering religious tests for
public office-holders, or establishing religion, or inhibiting its free
exercise? More generally, how can a nation be called “Christian” when its
fundamental charter pledges allegiance to no God, affirms no faith, recognizes
no church, and has placed itself on a non-transcendent foundation?
In answer, I am going to start by talking about these two substantive
provisions in the Constitution: the no-religious test provision of Article Six,
and the First Amendment.
Even at the time, the Article Six religious test ban generated some
controversy. It was a departure from the practices of the time that we were not
to require office holders to affirm belief in the “Deity,” or something of
that nature. Critics said that Article Six suggested an inattentiveness to the
vital requirement of a society to ordain moral rulers, rulers committed to
protecting and assisting religion. There is a kind of underlying assumption that
you can’t have moral rulers who are not, in some sense, informed by religious
principles or a religious ethic. And once it is conceded that not all religions
are conducive to good civil government and social stability, then you open the
door to saying, “Well, you know, maybe we should have some kind of religious
tests.” Then it is hard to find people who say that all religions are
conducive to good civil leadership.
The proponents of the religious test ban framed their support in religious
liberty terms. Oliver Ellsworth of Connecticut said: “The sole purpose and
effect of this test ban is to exclude persecution and to secure to you the
important right of religious liberty. In our country, every man has a right to
worship God in a way which is most agreeable to his conscience. If he be a good
and peaceable person, he is liable to no penalties or incapacities on account of
his religious sentiment.”
In their book, The Godless Constitution: The Case Against Religious
Correctness (W.W. Norton, 1996), Kramnick and Moore make a big deal out of
this religious test ban as the foundation of the secular state. Unfortunately, I
think they misconstrued the historical record. They rest their argument on the
false premise that, in the minds of the framers, support for the Article Six ban
was a repudiation of the concept of religious establishment and a ringing
endorsement of a radically secular polity.
In the vast majority of the numerous state constitutions written between 1776
and 1786 -- the period between the Declaration of Independence and the framing
of the United States Constitution -- there were very interesting religious test
requirements. And these religious test requirements in the state constitutions,
very interestingly, coexisted with religious liberty language and
non-establishment language. That suggests to me, in the view of the founding
generation, that they did not think of religious tests as being either a
violation of one’s religious liberty or an establishment of religion.
Remember, the Article Six ban was only applicable to federal office holders.
My argument is that the Article Six ban was not (contrary to what the good
professors are arguing) driven by a secular agenda. Nor was it driven by a
renunciation of the concept of religious tests as a matter of principle. Again,
that we find these tests in virtually all the state constitutions suggests that
there was no mood or sentiment in the country opposing the religious tests.
Interestingly, there were delegates at the Constitutional Convention in
Philadelphia who endorsed the Article Six religious test ban but had previously
crafted religious tests for their respective state constitutions. What are we to
make of this? Are they hypocrites, or was there a radical change of heart on
their part? I think the answer is to be found in the framers’ belief in
federalism -- the system of government that separates the power of centralized
government from regional governments. It is a separation of powers construct.
The framers believed as a matter of federalism that the Constitution denied
the national government all jurisdiction over religion, including the authority
to administer religious tests. Many in the founding generation supported a federal
-- and I underscore federal -- test ban because they valued religious tests
required under state laws. Their fear was that if there were a federal religious
test, it would displace the existing religious tests that existed in the state
constitutions. They were not driven by a renunciation of religious tests because
they infringed on religious liberty or established religion; rather, they were
trying to preserve and protect the very concept of a religious test.
For many of the states debating this proposed Constitution, the religious
test ban did not go far enough in terms of guaranteeing religious liberty under
the proposed federal regimes. So a number of states, as you recall, conditioned
their support for the Constitution on amendments being added to the document. Of
course, this led to the debate over what we now call the Bill of Rights. (Which
is a very modern term -- that terminology, “Bill of Rights,” attached to the
first eight or ten amendments, is something that only really comes into general
vocabulary at the end of the nineteenth century.)
We can draw some points that are important and some that are not so important
from the recorded congressional debates concerning the text of the First
Amendment; but there are a couple of things that we can say that are not
terribly controversial, at least initially, about what this language meant.
“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or
prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”
The first thing is that, in contrast to England’s ecclesiastical
establishment, the framers clearly wanted to avoid a national church like the
Church of England. In reality, I think there was a consensus that this was not
likely to happen, that it was rather a favorite kind of polemical scare-tactic
to raise the prospects. But clearly, the establishment of the First Amendment
was not meant to silence religion or to deny it influence in society. It did not
require civil government to hold all religions in indifference or even to divest
public life of religious discourse, values, or symbols.
A second generally shared belief as to what the First Amendment accomplished
was -- and this is a necessary corollary to what I just said -- not only to
prohibit Congress from establishing a national church, but it also to deny
Congress authority to interfere with existing state-level religious
establishments. It was a hands-off policy. The federal government was saying,
“We are just not going to allow our hands to touch general matters of religion
to the extent that government has a role in any way touching, influencing, or
regulating religious exercises or religious faith. That is a state government
matter.”
This is a very important point. Let’s not forget that the Constitution
provided for a national government of limited authority and strictly delegated
powers. Those rights not explicitly entrusted to the federal government were
assumed to be reserved by individuals, or the states, as far as it resided with
any government authority. It was acknowledged that authority over religion was
not extended to the federal regime. The states were free to maintain their own
church-state arrangements and policies.
Neither Article Six nor the First Amendment imposed any restrictions or
restraints upon the individual states. Indeed, some states retained religious
establishments well into the nineteenth century. Each state was free to define
the content and scope of civil and religious liberties and structured
church-state arrangements pursuant to its own constitution, its own laws, its
own declarations of rights, and so forth. In short, the ratification of the Bill
of Rights in 1791 had no immediate legal effect on church-state arrangements in
the country. None at all. It simply made explicit that which was already
implicit, which is that to the extent that government has some connection with
religion or ecclesiastical institutions it is done at the state level -- the
federal government has no say. It merely made explicit the jurisdictional
policies that were already implicit in the constitutional order.
The federal Bill of Rights served a dual purpose: first, to assure the
citizenry that the federal government could not encroach upon civil and
religious liberty, and second, to guarantee the states that the federal
government would not usurp the states’ jurisdiction over civil and religious
liberties.
The Bill of Rights, in other words, embodies a strong affirmation of this
principle of federalism. In many respects it could be viewed as a states’
rights document. Edward Corwin, the famous constitutional scholar who was Dean
of Constitutional Law at Princeton, said this: “The principal importance of
the First Amendment lay in the separation which it effected between the
respective jurisdictions of state and nation regarding religion rather than in
its bearing on the question of the separation of church and state.” Indeed, I
think it fair to say that the federalism of the Bill of Rights at the time was
generally regarded as far more important than anything else that the Bill of
Rights had to say.
The same thing could be said of Jefferson’s very famous "wall of
separation" metaphor. Contrary to the conventional wisdom, Jefferson did
not use the wall to articulate some universal general theory of the relationship
between church and state. Jefferson’s wall served primarily to separate the
states and the nation in matters pertaining to religion, not to separate the
ecclesiastical from all governmental authority.
To illustrate, Jefferson’s wall put the federal government on one side by
itself, and the church and state governments together on another side of the
wall -- very different than what we have today. Putting all government --
federal, state, and local -- on one side, and the church (interpreted broadly as
being anything of a religious content or nature or significance) on another is
absolutely contrary to Jefferson’s use of his famous metaphor.
The jurisdictional interpretation I am offering here was virtually
unchallenged in the founding era. Consider Thomas Jefferson’s words in 1808:
“I consider the government of the United States as interdicted by the
Constitution from intermeddling with religious institutions: their doctrines,
disciplines, or exercises. This results not only from the provision that no law
shall be made respecting the establishment of religion (the First Amendment),
but also from that which reserves to the states that power not delegated to the
United States (the Tenth Amendment). Certainly no power to proscribe any
religious exercise or to assume authority in religious discipline has been
delegated to the federal government. It must then rest with the states,
as far as it can be in any human authority.” These are Jefferson's words.
This was the view that was affirmed by the Supreme Court, time and again, in
the early nineteenth century. Chief Justice John Marshall, writing for an
anonymous court . . . in 1833, declared that the liberties (in what we now call
the Bill Rights) “contain no expression indicating an intention to apply them
to the state governments.” Similarly, Justice Story, in his authoritative
commentaries on the Constitution (1883), says “The purpose of the First
Amendment was to exclude from the national government all power to act upon the
subject of religion.” He further opined that “The whole power over the
subject of religion is left exclusively to the state governments to be acted
upon according to their own sense of justice and state constitutions.”
This is not the way we think of the First Amendment today. What we see today
is that the principle they said was the primary purpose of the First Amendment
has been turned right on its head. It couldn’t be more opposite. What do we
have? We have the Supreme Court of the United States telling state and local
governments, on a whole host of issues, but specifically on this issue of
religion, how to govern matters.
Now, I want to make a concluding comment on this principle of federalism --
and I think this is a pretty radical statement. The First Amendment, like
Jefferson’s wall, affirmed this policy of federalism. It emphasized the view
that all government authority over religious matters was allocated to the
states.
Once again, the principal function of the First Amendment was to delineate
the legitimate jurisdictions of state and nation on religious issues, and the
First Amendment was largely devoid of substantive content apart from federalism.
It articulates a hands-off policy. It is the federal government saying that we
are not going to deal with this issue because it is already being dealt with by
another governmental entity.
So today when we think of the First Amendment as being some sweeping,
libertarian, constitutional, prudential sort of doctrine, that is not what was
going on in 1787. It was not going on in the nineteenth century. It was a
jurisdictional statement. It was not a libertarian statement. It is not a
statement about liberty.
This assertion makes a lot of us uncomfortable (wherever we fall on the
political spectrum), but if we look at the text and the context, I think we have
to conclude that it is futile to locate in, or extrapolate from, the religious
meaning of the First Amendment a substantive right or principle of religious
liberty. The First Amendment was not calculated to articulate a principle or a
theory of religious liberty, but merely to specify who or what level or branch
of civil government shall substantially address religious matters.
So is the Constitution in fact, “godless,” or do we find references to
the Deity, to Christian custom, tradition, in the Constitution apart from these
references to religion that we find in Article Six and the First Amendment? What
arguments or explanations were offered in the late eighteenth century for the
absence of references to the Christian religion?
There is an apocryphal story that is told that after the Philadelphia
Convention of a pious citizen who lamented that the Constitution failed to
mention God or the Christian religion and inquired of Alexander Hamilton the
reason for this unfortunate omission. “I declare,” Hamilton is said to have
responded. “We forgot it!”
This is a pretty striking comment. Although it is hard to document, this
story is retold time and time again in the nineteenth century. George
Washington, however, wrote the following: “Here I am persuaded, you will
permit me to observe, that the path of true piety is so plain as to require but
little political direction. To this consideration, we ought to ascribe the
absence of any regulation respecting religion for the Magna Carta of our
country.”
We find a lot of arguments being made in conformity with Washington’s
points here that would suggest that there were considered reasons why the
Constitution does not make more reference to religion and Christianity.
One argument simply says, “Look, we were trying to create a political
document, a document for political objectives, not for religious objectives.
Thus it contains but slight references of religious kind.” I think this is a
plausible argument, but I don’t think it particularly rings true. Of course,
the Constitution was a political, legal document, but other formal legal
documents -- and virtually all the state constitutions, in particular --
included substantive statements reflecting a collective piety of some sort, so
why didn’t the framers of the Constitution do so?
Madison suggests another argument. At one point there was a concern that
using language of a religious nature would raise divisiveness within the
Constitutional Convention. There was great diversity in the denominations at the
Constitutional Convention. In fact, virtually every major Protestant
denomination was represented. So their arguments oftentimes were made that they
wanted to avoid this divisiveness. Again, there is some plausibility to it, but
this denominational diversity was already in place earlier. We find it in state
constitutions, and yet they found language around which even this diversity of
denominations could coalesce. Again, I don’t find this argument terribly
persuasive.
Another argument was that Christianity was simply assumed by the framers of
the Constitution. Robert Baird, who was really the first great student of
religion in America, writing in the early nineteenth century, said, “The Bible
does not begin with an argument to prove the existence of God, but assumes the
fact as one the truth of which it need not attempt to establish.” And then he
goes on to say:
Significantly, the framers resisted the temptation often encountered by
architects of new revolutionary orders. Indeed, the course adopted by the French
revolutionary constitution was to institute a wholly new calendar that just
ignored the birth of Christ. [You may recall that the French calendar got rid of
Sunday.] The framers did not go down that secular direction, which one imagines
if they were intent on creating a wholly secular order they might have
contemplated.
John Adams makes an interesting point. He says the word, “our,” preceding
“the year of our Lord,” refers back to the commencing words of the
Constitution, to “We the people of the United States.” It might be argued
that the dating of the Constitution, when compared with the commencing clause in
the Preamble, constitutes official recognition of the authority of Christ and
his religion by the people of the United States. A date, of course, does not a
Christian document make. But at the very least, I think we can conclude that the
framers paid tribute (whether inadvertently or not is unclear), to Christianity
and its calendar.
Still another argument suggests that the Constitution references the Deity in
our religious underpinnings. It says that, although the text of the Constitution
makes only slight reference to the Deity, God is invoked in the true, if not
literal, Preamble to the U.S. Constitution -- the Declaration of Independence.
In other words, explicit references to the Deity are found in the Constitution
by way of the Declaration of Independence, which it is argued was incorporated
in the Constitution.
I need not tell you that there is a lot of controversy about what role the
Declaration plays as a part of our organic law. It is officially in the U.S.
statutes identified as part of the organic law. The courts have certainly
recognized that the Declaration has some relevance in our interpretation of the
Constitution. John Quincy Adams, for example, in his very famous address on the
Jubilee of the Constitution, makes a couple of points that I think are relevant
here. He says,
This notion that the Declaration is organically linked to the Constitution
has certainly been around for a long time. At least, eight of the state
constitutions of the states and their constitutions following independence
incorporated in all or part the Declaration of Independence as their Preamble.
For example, the New York Constitution of 1777 says, “Its Preamble is the
Declaration of Independence.” So this was not an uncommon phenomenon.
Another set of arguments sometimes made is that one finds implicit
acknowledgment of Christian custom in the Constitution. Again, one of the
sources oftentimes mentioned here is Article One, Section Seven, the veto
provision of the Constitution, which references Sunday, the Christian Sabbath.
The debate around the question of what significance we attach to the mention of
Sunday was played out in the early part of the nineteenth century.
The veto provision says that when a President vetoes a law, he has to do it
within ten days, but Sunday excepted. This debate about the significance of
Sunday in the Constitution was probably the most defining church debate in the
nineteenth century. That was the “Sunday mail controversy.” In 1810 Congress
passed legislation and, almost as a throw-away line, said the Post Office has to
be open seven days a week for people who want to pick up their mail. Well, the
evangelicals (and I emphasize the word, evangelical -- this is in the
early days of the Second Great Awakening) really coalesced around this issue.
They said, “This is the first time in the history of the Republic that our
National legislature has passed a law disrespectful in any sense to a
fundamental Christian institution, Sunday.”
Powerful political coalitions formed around this issue. In fact, I think you
could say that what we might call the “religious right” today really has its
origins in the early nineteenth century over this very issue. When Congress
re-authorized this statute in 1825, the issue exploded again. It became the hot
topic of the day. In fact, Congress was forced to issue a report on the issue.
They issued a number of reports. The most famous was in 1829 when Congress said
that no issue in the history of the Repuiblic (now nearly fifty years old) had
generated more mail, more petitions to Congress, than this Sunday mail issue.
I want to make one last point; that is, another argument is made that the
Constitution embraced in its text Christian custom and belief. In some ways, I
think this is the most significant argument. There was a familiar refrain of the
eighteenth century and the nineteenth century that said, “Christianity is the
law of the land.” This proposition was based, in part, on a very familiar
axiom that Christianity was part and parcel of the Common Law -- the Common Law
being the system of jurisprudence that we inherited from the British -- and thus
that Christianity was incorporated into the U.S. Constitution through the common
law.
In other words, in so far as Christianity is part of the Common Law, and the
American people accredited the Common Law in the Constitution, then Christianity
is brought into the bosom of the Constitution. This question about whether
Christianity is part of the common law is, I would say (and I hope this
doesn’t sound like an exaggerated statement) for those of us in the
Anglo-American tradition, the most profound state-church question of the
millennium. “Is Christianity part of our Common Law, the very fabric of our
legal structure?”
Interestingly, this debate played out over the Constitution and throughout
the nineteenth century. In the early nineteenth century, the principle
discussants in this debate were Thomas Jefferson and Joseph Story. Thomas
Jefferson said (with irreverent flourish, I might add) that Christianity neither
is or ever was part of the Common Law, while Story maintained that there never
has been a period in which the Common Law did not recognize Christianity as
lying at its foundation.
Jefferson suggested that perhaps Christianity was not a part of the Common
Law because this was one issue, a sole issue, where he could go after his worst
enemies. He could attack legal authority, the Common Law, of which he was no
great fan, go after Blackstone, of whom he was no great fan, and he could attack
the established political religious authorities -- all with one single issue.
Jefferson’s detractors recognized that his position, which was contrary to
all the established authority of his day, revealed Jefferson’s true colors,
and that is why someone like Story, like most religious traditionalists of the
day, thought it imperative that Jefferson not go un-rebutted on the point that
Christianity was not a part of the Common Law. So Story was a part of a vanguard
that really sort of demolishes Jefferson’s theory. I won’t spin out the
arguments, but it was a very interesting debate.
I want to conclude by offering what I think is going on with the text of the
Constitution. I have indicated that some of the arguments I find more convincing
than others. If it is true that Hamilton reported that the failure to recognize
the Deity in the Constitution was a mere oversight, then I think that is truly
profound. It is truly significant. It says a lot about the mind-set of the
framers. But I don’t think that was probably what was going on. Furthermore, I
don’t think this is what the historical records suggest. I don’t think, as
commentators today would tell us, that this absence of more explicit references
is evidence of a godless Constitution or that the framers set out deliberately
to create a secular state.
I think the most plausible explanation for what is going on here is what I
discussed earlier; that is, the issue of federalism. The framers of the
Constitution did not envision the Constitution being this defining document in
the way that we sometimes think of it today. They still viewed the most vital
political units of their day to be the state and local governments. That is
where the action was. That is where the power was. And that is where the
religious underpinnings of social order and stability were so clearly
articulated and defined. And again, their concern, by and large, was that if we
go out to redefine what those religious underpinnings are, it will only detract
from it. It might even displace these underpinnings, which have already been so
clearly articulated and defined in state and local charters. They recognized
that if they engaged in a new redefinition project, this whole enterprise of
creating a new federal government, which was on shaky political grounds, would
never gain endorsement. Again, at the state and local level the interaction
between the civil order and the religious order was already clearly stated and
they did not want to disrupt that position.
Looking back from the late twentieth century, perhaps they made a mistake.
They didn’t anticipate the emergence of this monolithic federal state. Maybe
they should have taken a different tack, but looking at it from their
perspective -- their world view -- and how they envisioned this new creation of
the federal regime, I think there are plausible explanations for why they chose
not to make the more explicit references that some of their own critics would
have hoped that they would have made. Dr. Daniel Dreisbach is Associate Professor of Justice, Law, and
Society in the School of Public Affairs at American University in Washington,
D.C. An expert in American Church-State relations, his forthcoming book on
Jefferson and the “Wall of Separation” is due to be released on the 200th
anniversary of Jefferson’s 1802 Letter to the Danbury Baptists. Also see the following links:
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