YES—ONCE AND FOR ALL—
AMERICA IS A CHRISTIAN NATION
by Don Feder
Rabbi Shmuley Boteach wrote an
article in the Jerusalem Post (February 10, 2005)
charging that some well-known Jewish conservatives are doing
incalculable harm to their people by affirming that America is a
Christian nation.
In a rather kvetchy column about Jews who defend the public
celebration of Christmas and Mel Gibson's "The Passion of
Christ," the rabbi rhetorically inquires:
"Is it not highly misguided, not to mention erroneous, for
Medved and Lapin to openly speak of America as a 'Christian'
nation, something bound to make Jews feel like they are guests
in someone else's land?" The author here speaks of syndicated
talk-show host Michael Medved and Rabbi Daniel Lapin of Toward
Tradition.
Does Boteach also believe we shouldn't speak of America's
Judeo-Christian heritage, because to do so will make Muslims,
Buddhists and Hindus "feel like they are guests in someone
else's land"?
Does "one nation, under God," in the Pledge of Allegiance (and
"In God We Trust" on our currency) make atheists and agnostics
feel like outsiders? Other than the ACLU, who cares?
Do Israel's Christian and Muslim minorities feel alienated
living in a Jewish state?
Individual comfort-levels aside, is it "erroneous" to say that
America is a Christian nation? That depends on what you mean.
If it's meant to signify a country whose people are
overwhelmingly Christian, the characterization is correct. As a
percentage, America's population is more Christian than India's
is Hindu or Israel's is Jewish.
If by "Christian America," we mean that those who shaped our
national consciousness subscribed to the tenets of Christianity,
that too is true. From the earliest settlements on these shores
until the last few decades, our leaders saw America as a
reflection of a Christian worldview.
The Mayflower Compact (1620), precursor to the Declaration of
Independence and US Constitution, proclaimed that the first
permanent English-speaking settlement in the Americas was
intended for the "advancement of the Christian faith."
In a message to his troops (1778), George Washington observed:
"To the distinguished character of Patriot, it should be our
highest Glory to laud the more distinguished character of
Christian."
The first Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court, John
Jay, wrote in 1816 that it was in the interests of "our
Christian nation to select and prefer Christians for their
rulers."
As late as 1931 (historical revisionism would set in a decade
later), the Supreme Court observed in U.S. v. Macintosh, "We are
a Christian people."
Woodrow Wilson told a campaign rally in 1911, "America was born
a Christian nation. America was born to exemplify that devotion
to the elements of righteousness which are derived from the
revelations of Holy Scripture."
In a 1947 letter, President Harry Truman (who was instrumental
in the establishment of the state of Israel) assured Pope Pius
XII, "This is a Christian nation."
Even William O. Douglas, that most liberal justice of the
liberal Warren Court, was forced to admit that Americans are "a
religious people whose institutions presuppose a Supreme Being."
By a religious people, Douglas did not mean Scientologists.
The foregoing is a very broad overview. Until the secular
revolution of the 1960s, none of this was considered remarkable.
America has never had a state church. (Thank God.) At the
federal level, there has never been a religious requirement for
citizenship or test for public office. (Although the first
Congress hired a chaplain and appropriated sums of money to
support Christian missionaries to the Indian tribes. It was 1860
before a non-Christian clergyman opened a session of Congress.)
Clearly and manifestly, the American ethos is based on the moral
code found in the Torah and New Testament.
Without Sinai there would have been no Philadelphia in 1776 and
1787. Absent Protestantism, there would have been no Pilgrims
and Puritans. Without the evangelical Great Awakening of the
18th century, no Lexington and Concord and no "endowed by their
Creator with certain unalienable rights."
America was founded on the moral patrimony of the West—that
Bible-based code called the Judeo-Christian ethic. Whether they
do so out of malice or ignorance, those who attack the idea of a
Christian America are really attacking this.
Finally, we must ask if America is a Christian nation—in the
sense that our laws still are shaped by Christianity. Alas, no.
A Christian (or Judeo-Christian) America would not have
legalized abortion. It would not be inching toward euthanasia.
It would not be on the verge of homosexual marriage. It would
not have no-fault divorce, rampant promiscuity, state-sponsored
illegitimacy, government-condoned pornography or any of the
other myriad delights of a post-Christian culture.
Everything must be something. As Harvard Professor Samuel P.
Huntington pointed out in his seminal work, "Clash of
Civilizations," all great civilizations are intimately connected
to a religion. Culture is derived from cult.
In his most recent work (Who Are We: The Challenges to
America's National Identity) Huntington writes: "Americans
have been extremely religious and overwhelmingly Christian
throughout their history."
Huntington further observes that America's national identity is
based on Anglo-Protestant culture, including "the English
language; Christianity; religious commitment; English concepts
of the rule of law, the responsibility of rulers, the rights of
the individual; and dissenting Protestant values of
individualism, the work ethic, and the belief that humans have
the ability and the duty to try to create heaven on earth, a
'city on the hill.'"
Those who believe America can turn its back on our heritage and
succeed as a secular civilization are sadly mistaken.
The choice isn't Christian America or nothing, but Christian
America or a neo-pagan, hedonistic,
rights-without-responsibilities, anti-family, culture-of-death
America.
As an American Jew, I never felt like a "guest in someone else's
land." America is a product of a process that began when a
Mesopotamian named Abram (Abraham) left his land at God's
behest.
That launched the Western world on a journey whose footfalls may
still be heard. And here we are, almost 4,000 years later. We
may worship the Master of the Universe differently, but I
identify body and soul with my countrymen who share the lofty
vision of Washington and Adams, Lincoln and Theodore Roosevelt,
Calvin Coolidge and Ronald Reagan.
And so, I feel very much at home here.
For more information on the group Jews Against
Anti-Christian Defamation, contact Don Feder at 508-405-1337
or write to P.O. Box 4751, Framingham, MA 01704.
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