It's lucky we have you to tell us what they really meant then, isn't it? </sarcasm>
Again, look at Abraham Lincoln's opinion on the issue.
You take Lincoln's proclamation on the Sabbath for the Army and project that into meaning that the Founders meant that only Christians, except for Seventh-Day Adventists, could be eligible for office. You do have a vivid imagination.
You generally like his claims regarding what the constitution means. At least you like them when they agree with your own personal preferences.
I don't see where the Constitution entered into what Lincoln wrote.
Given your chidlish level of comprehension, I expect you need a lot of people telling you what things really mean.
You take Lincoln's proclamation on the Sabbath for the Army and project that into meaning that the Founders meant that only Christians, except for Seventh-Day Adventists, could be eligible for office. You do have a vivid imagination.
No, I take Lincolns' blatant statement of this being a "Christian Nation" to mean exactly what he said. That a President could *ORDER* troops under his command to attend Christian services is a complete rejection of the modern theory that the national government was intended to be completely secular and non-biased regarding religion.
That General Order proves this modern understanding to be completely wrong.
I don't see where the Constitution entered into what Lincoln wrote.
This is why I don't like discussing anything with you. You have to be led by the hand, all the while you kick and scream about not wanting to go. You act like a little child.
Yes, I fully believe that you don't have the background in history to understand things such as this. You have no understanding of the "zeitgeist" of any time period but your own, and I shouldn't be surprised if you are even out of touch with your own.