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OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR: One Nation, Under Secularism
NY Times ^ | January 8, 2004 | SUSAN JACOBY

Posted on 01/08/2004 2:59:50 AM PST by Pharmboy

In Campaign 2004, secularism has become a dirty word. Democrats, particularly Howard Dean, are being warned that they do not have a chance of winning the presidential election unless they adopt a posture of religious "me-tooism" in an effort to convince voters that their politics are grounded in values just as sacred as those proclaimed by President Bush.

On one level, the impulse to capitalize on the religiosity of Americans can be seen as transparently, and at times comically, opportunistic. Late last year, Ed Kilgore, policy director of the Democratic Leadership Council, earnestly advised his party's candidates to invoke "God's green earth" in supporting stronger environmental laws. Mr. Dean, the candidate stuck with the label (or libel) of being the most secularist Democratic aspirant, seems to be heeding the advice to get religion. He recently informed an Iowa audience that he prays daily, and in New Hampshire last week, he demonstrated his ecumenism by using the Muslim expression "inshallah," which means God willing.

On a deeper level, the notion that elected officials should employ a religious rationale for policy decisions is rooted in the misconception, promulgated by the Christian right, that the American government was founded on divine authority rather than human reason. When I lecture on college campuses, students frequently express surprise at being told that the framers of the Constitution deliberately omitted any mention of God in order to assign supreme governmental power to "We the People."

Dismissing this inconvenient fact, some on the religious right have suggested that divine omnipotence was considered a given in the 1780's — that the framers had no need to acknowledge God in the Constitution because his dominion was as self-evident as the rising and setting of the sun. Yet isn't it absurd to suppose that men as precise in their use of language as Benjamin Franklin, Alexander Hamilton and James Madison would absentmindedly have failed to insert God into the nation's founding document? In fact, they represented a majority of citizens who wished not only to free religion from government interference but government from religious interference.

This deep sentiment was expressed in letters to newspapers during the debate over ratification of the Constitution. One Massachusetts correspondent, signing himself "Elihu," summed up the secular case by praising the authors of the Constitution as men who "come to us in the plain language of common sense, and propose to our understanding a system of government, as the invention of mere human wisdom; no deity comes down to dictate it, nor even a God in a dream to propose any part of it."

The 18th-century public's understanding of the Constitution as a secular document can perhaps best be gauged by the reaction of religious conservatives at the time. For example, the Rev. John M. Mason, a fire-breathing New York City minister, denounced the absence of God in the preamble as "an omission which no pretext whatever can palliate." He warned that "we will have every reason to tremble, lest the governor of the universe, who will not be treated with indignity by a people more than individuals, overturn from its foundations the fabric we have been rearing and crush us to atoms in the wreck." But unlike many conservatives today, Mason acknowledged — even as he deplored — the Constitution's uncompromising secularism.

Americans tend to minimize not only the secular convictions of the founders, but also the secularist contribution to later social reform movements. One of the most common misconceptions is that organized religion deserves nearly all of the credit for 19th-century abolitionism and the 20th-century civil rights movement. While religion certainly played a role in both, many people fail to distinguish between personal faith and religious institutions.

Abolitionists like William Lloyd Garrison, editor of The Liberator, and the Quaker Lucretia Mott, also a women's rights crusader, denounced the many mainstream Northern religious leaders who, in the 1830's and 40's, refused to condemn slavery.

In return, Garrison and Mott were castigated as infidels and sometimes as atheists — a common tactic used by those who do not recognize any form of faith but their own. Garrison, strongly influenced by his freethinking predecessor Thomas Paine, observed that one need only be a decent human being — not a believer in the Bible or any creed — to discern the evil of slavery.

During the 20th-century civil rights struggle, the movement's strongest moral leaders emerged from Southern black churches. But the moral message of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. obviously ran counter to the religious rationales for segregation preached in many white churches in the south.

In addition, Dr. King welcomed the help of nonreligious allies like Stanley Levison, his friend and lawyer, and the outspoken labor leader A. Philip Randolph. Michael Schwerner and Andrew Goodman, murdered in Mississippi in the summer of 1964, were nonobservant Jews who died not in the name of religion but because of their secular humanist commitment to racial justice.

Many politicians today, including President Bush, use the civil rights leadership of African-American ministers as an argument in favor of "faith-based" government financing. But those ministers were free to pursue their moral vision within American society precisely because they were independent of both government money and government control. Government officials, by contrast, have a very different constitutionally mandated obligation — to devise public policies based not on religious interests but on a secular concept of public good.

When President Lyndon B. Johnson proposed the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and declared, in his memorable Texas twang, "We shall overcome," he was articulating a moral position that could and did command the respect of citizens of any or no religion.

That is real leadership. Not a scintilla of bravery is required for a candidate, whether Democratic or Republican, to take refuge in religion. But it would take genuine courage to stand up and tell voters that elected officials cannot and should not depend on divine instructions to reconcile the competing interests and passions of human beings.

Abraham Lincoln, whose spiritual beliefs were so elusive that both atheists and the devoutly religious have tried to claim him as their own, spoke eloquently on this point during his long period of deliberation before issuing the Emancipation Proclamation.

"I am approached with the most opposite opinions and advice, and that by religious men, who are equally certain that they represent the divine will," he told a group of ministers in September 1862. "I hope it will not be irreverent for me to say that if it is probable that God would reveal his will to others, on a point so connected with my duty, it might be supposed that he would reveal it directly to me. . . . These are not, however, the days of miracles. . . . I must study the plain, physical facts of the case, ascertain what is possible, and learn what appears to be wise and right."

Today, many voters, of many religious beliefs, might well be receptive to a candidate who forthrightly declares that his vision of social justice will be determined by the "plain, physical facts of the case" on humanity's green and fragile earth. But that would take an inspirational leader who glories in the nation's secular heritage and is not afraid to say so.

Susan Jacoby, author of the forthcoming "Freethinkers: A History of American Secularism," is director of the Center for Inquiry-Metro New York.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: constitutions; founders; god; secularism
Dismissing this inconvenient fact, some on the religious right have suggested that divine omnipotence was considered a given in the 1780's — that the framers had no need to acknowledge God in the Constitution because his dominion was as self-evident as the rising and setting of the sun.

Hmmm...talk about dismissing inconvenient facts! Ms. Jacoby forgot about the Declaration of Independence which I believe is THE founding doument of this country and IT mentions God 4 times.

1 posted on 01/08/2004 2:59:51 AM PST by Pharmboy
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To: All
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Thanks for donating to Free Republic!

Move your locale up the leaderboard!

2 posted on 01/08/2004 3:00:38 AM PST by Support Free Republic (I'd rather be sleeping. Let's get this over with so I can go back to sleep!)
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To: Pharmboy
Where's the BARF alert?
3 posted on 01/08/2004 3:07:09 AM PST by Neanderthal
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To: Pharmboy
The Founding Fathers didn't want an established religion. Thus, our Constitution carefully avoided the 'G' word. It was planned that way. But on the first session of congress and ever since, our tax money is used to pay a pastor to lead each session in prayer. I bet the ACLU really enjoys being reminded about that.
4 posted on 01/08/2004 3:07:45 AM PST by Arthur Wildfire! March (Carter stumbled into the Truth: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1052288/posts)
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To: Arthur Wildfire! March
Wait a minute! Bill of Rights... "to worship GOD as they so choose..." Uups. God is mentioned, no?
5 posted on 01/08/2004 3:09:20 AM PST by Arthur Wildfire! March (Carter stumbled into the Truth: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1052288/posts)
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To: Pharmboy
To him that's irrelevant, they really didn't mean God they meant government the bigger the better!
6 posted on 01/08/2004 3:10:08 AM PST by gakrak
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To: Pharmboy
Not to forget that the Constitution is dated "in the year of our Lord"
7 posted on 01/08/2004 3:10:47 AM PST by HiTech RedNeck
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To: Pharmboy
Not a scintilla of bravery is required for a candidate, whether Democratic or Republican, to take refuge in religion.

As a mere garb of show, no.

As convictions that may cost him or her popularity or votes, YES.

8 posted on 01/08/2004 3:12:58 AM PST by HiTech RedNeck
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To: HiTech RedNeck
Popularity or votes were not the cost for Chief Justice Roy Moore - he maintained those, not in spite of, but because of his lived-out spiritual convictions of truth. It was his job he lost.

As regards the thrust, subject, and author of the article, opportunism is certainly a secular concept, not a spiritual one.

9 posted on 01/08/2004 3:31:42 AM PST by .30Carbine
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To: Pharmboy
Yet isn't it absurd to suppose that men as precise in their use of language as Benjamin Franklin, Alexander Hamilton and James Madison would absentmindedly have failed to insert God into the nation's founding document?

Hmmm...talk about dismissing inconvenient facts! Ms. Jacoby forgot about the Declaration of Independence which I believe is THE founding doument of this country and IT mentions God 4 times.

Exactly the point I was going to make. Clearly, she's not qualified to lecture in our colleges, especially regarding faith and the founding of our nation. By her own admission she's unfamiliar with the Declaration of Independence, which, having preceded the Constitution IS our founding document.

Typical leftist drivel, repeat a lie often enough and many will believe it as truth...at least those on the left who are ignorant of US history.

10 posted on 01/08/2004 3:51:48 AM PST by highlander_UW
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To: Pharmboy
The RATS have spent decades throwing GOD and JESUS out of the US now that they have found out that the US is 'more' religious than they felt it should be, they are invoking the ALMIGHTY to help them get back into power so they can throw HIM out again. GOD and JESUS are OK when you are campaigning...but just don't invoke him in school, work, or court.
11 posted on 01/08/2004 3:56:02 AM PST by GailA (Millington Rally for America after action http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/872519/posts)
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To: HiTech RedNeck
Not to forget that the Constitution is dated "in the year of our Lord"

And, who might that be?

12 posted on 01/08/2004 4:10:55 AM PST by ppaul
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To: Arthur Wildfire! March
No. The first amendment says, "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."
13 posted on 01/08/2004 5:41:45 AM PST by Sarastro
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To: Pharmboy
Yet isn't it absurd to suppose that men as precise in their use of language as Benjamin Franklin, Alexander Hamilton and James Madison would absentmindedly have failed to insert God into the nation's founding document? In fact, they represented a majority of citizens who wished not only to free religion from government interference but government from religious interference.

Bears repeating. Many Freepers appear to disagree, presumably on the assumption that the religion that "interferes" with the government will be Christianity. But that's not guaranteed for all time.

14 posted on 01/08/2004 5:57:00 AM PST by Sarastro
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To: Sarastro
They do have a tough time keeping the religion of socialism out of government though.
15 posted on 01/08/2004 9:42:32 AM PST by Pharmboy (History's greatest agent for freedom: The US Armed Forces)
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To: Neanderthal
No barf alert since I figgered it would be redundant since it was an OP-ED from the NY Times. But, next time I will do just that so things are more clear.
16 posted on 01/08/2004 9:44:20 AM PST by Pharmboy (History's greatest agent for freedom: The US Armed Forces)
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