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The Atheist Civil-Liberty Union? - Facing the silent artillery of time
NRO ^ | July 12, 2002 | Michael Novak

Posted on 07/12/2002 10:51:03 AM PDT by gubamyster

July 12, 2002 8:45 a.m.

The American Civil Liberties Union has a public agenda, and that agenda appears to be this: to make the United States in all her public manifestations reflect an atheist's view of the nation's Founding and continuing existence. Is it item #84 on the ACLU's published agenda that calls for the elimination of "In God We Trust" from our coins? "Under God" must also be torn from the Pledge of Allegiance. The Commandments given Moses must never appear as public symbols under government auspices. This nation must so thoroughly appear to be atheist in public as to be, in fact, and for all practical purposes, atheist in all public spheres.

The sweet air of liberty must be replaced with an invisible gas that detects, exterminates, and suffocates any breath that would expel a religious word in public life. Publicly, religion must be totally repressed, so that soon only atheists will find the public atmosphere comfortable.

The accommodation this nation long ago reached between believers and nonbelievers must be abandoned. Religion shall be banned from all public appearances under government auspices, until it is totally squeezed down into private life, underground. There, harmless, it can survive as long as it may.

Ideally, some atheists have written and many have heavily implied, religion will perish forever. Its vanishing will free the planet from divisiveness, intolerance, hatred, persecution, and the desire to sweep alternative views from public existence.

Secularism, the world's best hope for tolerance, will then rule triumphant, sweetly, having driven its foes from every inch of public existence.

To save the world from intolerance, the ACLU must be rigorously intolerant.

Public life in the United States must be made religion-free.

Atheism is a long-term project. It is not completed when one ceases believing in God. It is necessary to carry it through until one empties from the world all the conceptual space once filled by God. One must also, for instance, abandon the conviction that the events, phenomena, and laws of the world we live in (those of the whole universe) cohere, belong together, have a unity. What is born from chance may be ruled by chance, quite insanely.

Most atheists one meets, however, take up a position rather less rigorous. To the big question — Did the world of our experience, with all its seeming intelligibility and laws, come into existence by chance, or by the action of an agent that placed that intelligibility there in the first place? — the run-of-the-mill journalistic atheist replies, By chance.

Problem is, such fellows blink at the point grasped so fearlessly by Nietzsche. If the answer to the Big Question is chance, then all the coherence among the little questions may mean nothing at all — is intelligible only in appearances, and is otherwise a big lie. Courage is not really any better than cowardice; that's only a preference. Hate is not really worse than love; to think so is merely a weakling's prejudice. Freedom is no better than slavery; both are equally absurd. Destructiveness is no better and no worse than creativity.

Most atheists, of course, would rather get rid of God, but still keep the rationality in the universe that comes from actually having a God, Who understood all things before they were, and then made them to be. Atheists of that sort would even like to keep the Jewish vision of community, justice, and compassion, as set forth in the Prophets. All this, without keeping the God of Israel.

A nice deal, if you can negotiate it.

Even Jean-Paul Sartre thought being an atheist is a lot harder than that. At a minimum, he thought, one has to be honest, and not steal what one no longer has title to steal.

In America, however, most of our atheists are actually thinly disguised Christians, or sometimes thinly disguised Jews, who want to retain the humanism taught by the Creator, without believing in the Creator. They believe in the image of God, without believing in God. They want the Kingdom of God — the Kingdom of compassion, justice, peace, love, integrity, honesty, and commitment — without God, the King.

A terrific deal, if you can get it. A steal!

What makes the life of the ACLU difficult is that the actual history of the United States has been borne aloft on the wings of Jewish and Christian faith since its very beginning:

-The first act of the First Continental Congress in 1774 was a motion to pause for prayer, for guidance in a sudden extremity (British troops were reported to have landed with flame and violence in Boston). When that motion was carried, the prayer chosen was a Jewish prayer, Psalm 35.

- With American troops suffering terribly at Valley Forge, under the blows of defeat after defeat following July 4, Congress decreed an invitation to the states to celebrate a national day of fasting and humiliation [December 11, 1776], to beg God's pardon for the manifest sins of Americans of all ranks, and to ask for His assistance in the present just and necessary war. [Where was the ACLU that December, when we needed them?]

- Even Tom Paine wrote that he was not so much of an infidel as to believe that Almighty God could abandon a people committed to the liberty to which he had called them.

- Commander-in-chief Washington ordered his soldiers to begin each day with public prayer, in ranks, in the presence of their officers.

- During the Jefferson administration, the largest church service in the United States was held in the US Capitol Building, and Jefferson publicly attended, and saw to it that music was supplied at government expense, by the Marine Band. Decades later, a large church service was also held each Sunday in the Supreme Court building.

- The American way was not separation of church and state. It was accommodation. The Americans did not want a national, federally chosen established church, such as the Church of England was in Britain. They insisted that the Congress accommodate itself to existing establishments of religion in the several states, and not prohibit existing exercises of religion, public or private.

- They also wanted unfettered freedom of individual religious conscience, for that is what alone of all world religions, Judaism and Christianity distinctively require.

- The American people, led by the Baptists of James Madison's district in Virginia (who forced Madison to change his intentions on the matter, if he wanted their votes), demanded a constitutional amendment to make freedom of religion explicit in the Constitution. The final amendment prohibited Congress both from any action regarding the establishment of any one national religion, and from any action regarding the disestablishment of any of the existing established churches (in the five states that had such). Congress was to "make no law respecting the establishment of religion," neither for nor against establishment.

In sum, the official actions, decrees, and laws of the Founding generation, and for generations after them asserted or implied that whole peoples and states, as well as individuals, have duties toward their Creator. In fighting for their independence, the American nation had formed a bond with Him to treat liberty as His sacred trust. By giving humans liberty in their natural endowment, liberty above all when face-to-face with Himself, the Creator had led them to believe that "rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God." Setting liberty as a pillar of light advancing before them, He had guided them through the night of war. With His help, they outlasted a far superior power and won their independence. They felt a duty to be grateful, as a nation.

It is hard to imagine American public life over the next four or five score years after independence without the public presence and leavening power of Judaism and Christianity.

Think of the abolition movement, the temperance movement, the Sunday-School movement, the Social Gospel.

The early Protestants were uncommonly attached to the Jewish Testament, as the best practical guide for a new people building a new nation. They saw themselves in a position much like that of the ancient people of Israel, the "First" Israel, to which they imagined themselves the "Second." They were coming out of captivity, crossing through a wilderness, trying to build a city on the hill, trying to establish a new nation, and to find a method of government both successful and pleasing to God. (Many sermons in those days took as their texts the biblical history of the Jewish nation. So, often enough, did John Locke himself.)

Imagine American history once the ACLU gets finished cleansing it from public mention of religion. Consider the plight of Abraham Lincoln. The ACLU will have to ban the public singing of the anthem that more than any other symbolized the crusade against slavery, "The Battle Hymn of the Republic." There's a lot about God in that hymn, and His Truth, and its power to keep marching on, trampling on vineyards, loosing lightning-swift swords. Even the Easter of the Savior Who died to set men free. In other words, quite publicly, quite officially, the armies of this nation sang aloud, over tramping feet, that human freedom is a sacred cause, singled out by Judaism and Christianity as the central historical responsibility of every single woman and man created by God, the author of liberty.

Few other world religions require that their God must be worshiped "in spirit and in truth." It is not clear, for example, that Buddhism is even to be understood as a theistic religion; and probably not Animism, either. For most world religions, such as those of ancient Greece and Rome, all that is required is external observance: bow your head, bend your knee, burn the incense, say the words. There is no personal God to see directly into your heart as in an open book.

Not so, Judaism and Christianity.

Here the appeal is directly to the conscience of each, in that sacred arena in which the Creator and each human creature are present to each other, as Madison's Remonstrance puts it, prior to civil society, and prior to all obligations of any man to either state or civil society.

The Jewish and Christian God, like no other, offers His friendship to each man and woman, and each of them, inalienably, must reply, Yes, or No.

Neither mother nor father, nor brother nor sister, can reply for you. You must reply, as I must reply, alone. Inalienably.

There, for Madison (as for the Virginia Declaration of Rights and Statute of Religious Liberty), on ground that comes not from philosophy but from Judaism and Christianity and them alone, lies the foundation of natural rights. Arguments from philosophy may complement this religious conviction. But they are not nearly so tight or precise in pinpointing the individual conscience, or the source of its sacred inviolability.

So also, Tom Paine sailed to France in 1789 to beg the French revolutionaries not to turn to atheism, lest in that way they undercut the ground of their human rights. Paine was no orthodox Christian or Jew of any stripe, but from such sources he had imbibed much about conscience, Final Judgment, and the ground of human rights. He warned the Jacobins that atheism would lead to rivers of blood. He was thrown into jail as many meddlesome preachers before him had been. A great deal of blood flowed, in the name of Reason, as he had feared.

For such reasons, virtually all America's Founders (take the top 100, for instance), believed that religion, at least natural religion, of the Jewish and Christian type, that is, putting individual conscience, human liberty, and the brotherly community at the center of political striving, was indispensable to the thriving of republican government. Without liberty, no republic. Without virtue (sound habits of specific sorts), no liberty. Without religion (at least for most people, and over the long run), no virtue.

A large majority of Americans learn their moral principles in the context of a Judge to Whom they must render an account, and in the form of the Commandments given to Moses (and all civilized peoples) by the Creator. For them, the good civic habits that protect liberty come from religious nurturing. When their religious faith weakens, so does their moral strictness. They loosen up. Moral entropy is a constant theme down the generations. Great Awakenings, followed by lower standards and broader permissiveness.

A few modern Americans may not see the importance of religion to the morals of many others. Recent surveys suggest some 7 to 9 percent count themselves atheists, who seem to find that at least they can have virtue without religion. Could be. Yet as George Washington put it in his Farewell Address: Whatever may be said of persons of a peculiar character [such as Jefferson?], religion and morality are indispensable foundations for republican government. So also said the Congress, in the same year as the drafting of the Constitution, 1787, in the Northwest Ordinance.

One must feel sorry for atheists. They seem so lonely. Alone not only under the vast stars of a summer's night, in all this immense cosmos. And passing through it as we do all, as evanescently as fireflies. But alone also in this religion-drenched country, most of whose public spaces reek of faith in the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.

With great self-restraint on the part of our people, the God who blesses America is seldom referred to as Savior, Redeemer, or Holy Trinity, in the traditional Christian symbols, but rather as Governor of nature's laws, Creator who endowed in us our rights, Judge of our hidden consciences, and Providence in whom we place our trust — all of which are Jewish names for God.

Poor, lonely ACLU. If you have friends with membership cards, give them each a hug. Despite all, they have every right to feel included. We want them to feel included. We do our best to accommodate them, without making over the whole of public life in their image.

For Jews and Christians are obliged to respect liberty of conscience, since, they have been taught, God Himself respects it. They will be trigger-quick to point to eras in which Christians have not respected consciences. We have similar fears about atheist regimes we have known. And this is America, 2002.

Atheists in our midst are proof that all consciences can be accommodated here, even those that have no ground for holding that conscience is sacred, inalienable, and prior to civil society.

So also we accommodate — even give tenure to, in certain privileged universities — those who hold that animals, who are not required to respond to God in spirit and in truth, nonetheless bear the same dignity as humans, and have natural rights just as humans do.

We make this accommodation, even though we see vividly that animals can't have rights in the same sense, exactly, as humans do, not bearing the same relationship to God that God has uniquely established with human beings.

Unless, of course, there is no God. In which case, our own rights are as meaningless as those of animals. Perhaps that is why animals don't respect one another's rights. And why it's a bit odd that we humans do try to respect one another's rights.

At least those try, who live in the civilizations shaped by the beliefs of Judaism and Christianity.

And what will happen to our own civilization, when the full atheistic agenda of the ACLU has finally and completely been accomplished? When there is no one who can speak publicly, under government auspices, about the ground of our rights? When no public symbols or ceremonies remind the young of these sacred sources, from whose depths alone spring their special nobility and unique calling? When the United States of America has thoroughly abandoned in public the faith of our forebears, and only the desolate winds of atheism blow across our monuments? When our rights are reduced to those of a barnyard?

Poor ACLU.

No more than the Jacobins of France in 1789 do they know what they do.

— Michael Novak, the George F. Jewett scholar at the American Enterprise Institute. Mr. Novak is the author, most recently, of On Two Wings: Humble Faith and Common Sense at the American Founding.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: aclu
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1 posted on 07/12/2002 10:51:03 AM PDT by gubamyster
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To: gubamyster
Thought provoking BUMP.
2 posted on 07/12/2002 12:37:03 PM PDT by TightSqueeze
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To: gubamyster
Lets sue the ACLU for religious intolerance and hate speech aimed at religious people.
3 posted on 07/12/2002 12:43:34 PM PDT by Khepera
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To: Khepera
I'm with you. Let's put RICO to work.
4 posted on 07/12/2002 1:35:47 PM PDT by Texas_Jarhead
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To: Khepera
Problem is, such fellows blink at the point grasped so fearlessly by Nietzsche. If the answer to the Big Question is chance, then all the coherence among the little questions may mean nothing at all — is intelligible only in appearances, and is otherwise a big lie. Courage is not really any better than cowardice; that's only a preference. Hate is not really worse than love; to think so is merely a weakling's prejudice. Freedom is no better than slavery; both are equally absurd. Destructiveness is no better and no worse than creativity.

Most atheists, of course, would rather get rid of God, but still keep the rationality in the universe that comes from actually having a God, Who understood all things before they were, and then made them to be.

Brilliant. Not surprised when I reached the end and saw it was written by Michael Novak. If God does not exist, there is no basis for human dignity. Atheistic talk of the "rights of man" is really meaningless, as we are nothing more than a bag of guts and hormones, and my opinion is worth no more than yours. The ACLU wants to remake America in its image, God help us.

5 posted on 07/12/2002 1:46:35 PM PDT by Zack Nguyen
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To: Zack Nguyen
If God does not exist, there is no basis for human dignity.

No, there is just no absolute basis for human dignity. A basis could be formed upon a relative frame of reference.

What does arguing such accomplish anyway? It certainly does not prove that a god exists.
6 posted on 07/12/2002 3:40:44 PM PDT by Dimensio
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To: Dimensio
A relative frame of reference is only a temporary solution. Basing human dignity upon societal values of the day, for instance, just won't work for very long.

Very few people outside of a mental institution really behave as if there is no controlling moral authority. Neitzche saw the consequences of their being no God and went mad.

7 posted on 07/12/2002 5:27:39 PM PDT by Zack Nguyen
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To: Zack Nguyen
If God does not exist, there is no basis for human dignity.

We find these truths to be self evident, - we are born with free will, and the ability to use it to distinguish tween right/wrong.
- Thus, - 'do onto others, as you would have them do onto you', is a golden rule, a fit basis for human dignity.
- Without debating about God.

Atheistic talk of the "rights of man" is really meaningless, as we are nothing more than a bag of guts and hormones, and my opinion is worth no more than yours.

True enough, to a degree, -- but if we ALL agree on some basic 'rights of man' - [as per our constitution]. -
-- Does it make any real difference who believes what with respect to religion?

8 posted on 07/12/2002 6:24:30 PM PDT by tpaine
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To: Dimensio
Gods existance does not need to be proven to those who cannot see the proof.
9 posted on 07/12/2002 7:38:29 PM PDT by Khepera
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To: Zack Nguyen
Neitzche saw the consequences of their being no God and went mad.

Funny, I see the consequences of there being no gods and I'm not yet mad. I also don't see how the consequences of there being no gods have any bearing on whether or not any gods actually exist.
10 posted on 07/12/2002 8:10:25 PM PDT by Dimensio
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To: tpaine
You just quoted the words of Christ, and yet you say that religion doesn't matter. I say that in the end religion is all that matters, otherwise me have only ourselves to look to for what is right and wrong. And in that case what you think is therefore no better than what I think.
11 posted on 07/12/2002 9:25:01 PM PDT by Zack Nguyen
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To: tpaine
but if we ALL agree on some basic 'rights of man'

Ageement is a voluntary act. If one is free to agree, one is just as free to disagree. If morality is a matter of agreement, morality can be made, unmade, and redesigned at will.

The madman Neitzsche was right. Hate is no better than love; slavery is no better than liberty where atheism is followed honestly and consistently. You want the good that comes from worship of God, but with worshipping God. You are a freeloader.

Libertarianism is the freeloaders' ideology.

12 posted on 07/12/2002 9:34:08 PM PDT by Kevin Curry
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To: Zack Nguyen
If God does not exist, there is no basis for human dignity.

We find these truths to be self evident, - we are born with free will, and the ability to use it to distinguish tween right/wrong.
- Thus, - 'do onto others, as you would have them do onto you', is a golden rule, a fit basis for human dignity.
- Without debating about God.

--- if we ALL agree on some basic 'rights of man' - [as per our constitution]. - -- Does it make any real difference who believes what with respect to religion? 8 by tpaine

You just quoted the words of Christ, and yet you say that religion doesn't matter.

Didn't say that at all. -- And all religions have some version of the golden rule. - Christs is a fine one.

I say that in the end religion is all that matters, otherwise me have only ourselves to look to for what is right and wrong. And in that case what you think is therefore no better than what I think.

I say that how we actually treat one another is more important than religious opinions. -- I'd bet Christ would also.

13 posted on 07/12/2002 10:02:55 PM PDT by tpaine
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To: Kevin Curry
The madman Neitzsche was right. Hate is no better than love; slavery is no better than liberty where atheism is followed honestly and consistently. You want the good that comes from worship of God, but with worshipping God. You are a freeloader.

So are you saying that we should believe in a god not because a god actually exists but because you personally can't justify having a consistent ethical system without one?

Why can't people behave in a specific ethical framework because they find it the best way to function within a society? Why can't they do it because it is a survival advantage? Why isn't mutual survival desire a good explanation for a common "ethic" against murder? Because you can't fathom as much?
14 posted on 07/12/2002 10:05:15 PM PDT by Dimensio
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To: Kevin Curry
Libertarianism is the freeloaders' ideology.

If you had an intellect worth speaking of, you'd know that "libertarian" and "athiest" are hardly the same thing.

Of course, if you had an intellect worth speaking of, you wouldn't be a party to such a weak, pathetic defense of Christianity as consequentialism. The athiests have already begun pointing out how stupid and irrelevant it is, and you can't answer because it is stupid and irrelevant.

15 posted on 07/12/2002 10:24:30 PM PDT by A.J.Armitage
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To: Kevin Curry
"If God does not exist, there is no basis for human dignity."

We find these truths to be self evident, - we are born with free will, and the ability to use it to distinguish tween right/wrong.
- Thus, - 'do onto others, as you would have them do onto you', is a golden rule, a fit basis for human dignity.
- Without debating about God.

--- if we ALL agree on some basic 'rights of man' - [as per our constitution]. -
-- Does it make any real difference who believes what with respect to religion?

Ageement is a voluntary act. If one is free to agree, one is just as free to disagree.

The constitution is a contract, valid till violated. - As an individual you can disagree with its protected rights, but you violate them at your peril.

If morality is a matter of agreement, morality can be made, unmade, and redesigned at will.

Not so kevin. -- We have recognized inalienable rights in the constitution, among them the rights to life, liberty, and property [14th]. You should learn to live with them.

The madman Neitzsche was right. Hate is no better than love; slavery is no better than liberty where atheism is followed honestly and consistently. You want the good that comes from worship of God, but with worshipping God. You are a freeloader. Libertarianism is the freeloaders' ideology.

Weird kevin. Your own hate twists everything you comment on. - Even your religious claims. You're a sad excuse for a Christian, imo.

16 posted on 07/12/2002 10:29:56 PM PDT by tpaine
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To: Kevin Curry
>>>>>> CRICKETS on #16 <<<<<<


---Or are you too busy, kevin, --- spouting off about posting witless whines, then doing exactly that? ---
17 posted on 07/13/2002 9:29:11 AM PDT by tpaine
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To: tpaine; Kevin Curry
Kevin does that a lot. He comes into a thread, arrogantly asserts his uninformed opinion as though it were well-established fact and then disappears without ever responding to anyone who takes issue with his comments, no matter how well-reasoned their objections. I'm not sure if he's just too prideful to consider that he might not possibly have as much insight on what it is to be a non-believer than an actual non-believer or if he is too much of a coward to defend his baldfaced evidenceless assertions, though I think that it's both: he is an arrogant coward.
18 posted on 07/13/2002 11:14:45 AM PDT by Dimensio
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To: Dimensio; Kevin Curry
Yep, he just played that same silly game on another thread today.

---- Amazing, -- in that he has no honor, - cares less that others know, -- and keeps repeating the same behavior.
19 posted on 07/13/2002 1:19:51 PM PDT by tpaine
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To: Zack Nguyen
Neitzche saw the consequences of their being no God and went mad.

From Nietzche's Aphorisms:
"A soul who knows it is loved but does not love back reveals its sediment; it is turned completely bottom side up."
"Insanity is the exception in individuals. In groups, parties, peoples and times, it is the rule."
(And my favorite) - "Whoever battles with monsters had better see that it does not turn him into a monster. And if you gaze long into an abyss, the abyss will gaze back into you."

20 posted on 08/17/2002 9:43:11 AM PDT by FairWitness
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