Preserving American Values

Our nation stands under attack … not from without but from within. American values, our politics, and our culture have been corrupted.

This year, many agency heads in the Trump administration sent out official Christmas messages with explicitly religious as opposed to universal spiritual messages.  So for example, War Secretary Hegseth said, “Today we celebrate the birth of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.”

This is just one more example of the Trump administration’s distortion and perversion of the principles on which America was founded. (See my posts, “The Far Right’s Biggest Lie,” and “The Radical Right/MAGA Perspective Is Not True to the Intent of Our Founding Fathers,” among others.) 

America is not a Christian nation. The majority of the population may be Christian, both now and at the time of the founding, but the Founders made very clear in the Constitution that this was not to be a Christian nation.

First, although the Founders were clearly religious people—note the wording in the Declaration of Independence that we are “endowed by our Creator” with unalienable rights—the Constitution makes absolutely no mention of God.

Second, what the Constitution does say in the 1st Amendment is that Congress shall make “no law respecting the establishment of religion,” or prohibiting the free exercise of one’s religion. 

The Founders were well aware of the suffering that had been caused in Europe over the years because countries had a state religion. That resulted in both people of other religions being persecuted and countries going to war over religious dominance. They were determined that the United States government not do anything that raised one religion to a higher status than the others and that no one be persecuted for or prohibited from practicing his religion.

In numerous ways, however, the Trump administration has embraced Christianity. To please his conservative Evangelical supporters. Trump has created the White House Faith Office that seeks to end the separation of church and state and promotes misleading books such as “The Christian History of the Constitution” to ground its efforts. (See my post, “Trump Violates Freedom of Religion.”) He has also embraced the conservative Christian agenda in many ways, most critically in building a Supreme Court that overruled Roe v Wade.

The reader may ask, “What’s the problem? The religious wars in Europe were centuries ago. And we would still have freedom of religion even if Christianity were made part of the government’s agenda.”

Technically, it is probably true that even if Christianity were made part of the government’s agenda, there would still be freedom of religion under the 1st Amendment. However, if you look at what is labeled “persecution” by Christian media and Trump, you will see that no one has the right to criticize Christians even when they act according to their belief.  

According to MAGA, Christians have the right to do whatever their religion instructs, regardless whether it interferes with another person practicing their religion or their right to “life liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” So for example. a public baker has the right to refuse to make a cake for a gay wedding.  A Christian who is slandered by someone exercising his right to free speech is being persecuted.  And the list goes on.

The point is that with the MAGA perspective that it’s only their rights that matter—they have no concern for the rights of others, no one can unfairly impinge on their rights—if Christian advocacy by government takes root, no one else is safe in their practice of religion or free speech. (See my article, “The Far-Right’s Biggest Lie.”)

But there is another way in which the government’s embrace of Christianity would have a chilling effect on freedom of religion. It is a natural desire of people to get ahead in their business/work/school endeavors. Often this has meant assimilating to become part of the majority; history is filled with businessmen, actors, performers, and others who have changed their names and even converted in order to not be stigmatized because of their religion. The psychological push to take this step is increased when there is a state religion, whether official or not, especially if anti-semitism is active.

For context, I should note that at the time of the revolution, 9 of the 13 colonies had official, established religions, a practice brought with them from the old country. The Founders made very clear, however, the importance they placed on the separation of state and church in the new government.  Thomas Jefferson wrote that the 1st Amendment created a “wall of separation” between church and state.  James Madison wrote that religion was beyond the government’s authority.  John Adams, in signing the Treaty of Tripoli, stated that the United States “is not in any way founded on the Christian Religion.” Ultimately, all of the colonies accepted this new way forward by ratifying the Constitution and the first 10 Amendments.

I am not a “religious” person but a very spiritual person, a practicing Buddhist with a belief that each of us has embedded within us the force of the Universe, the divine essence. As such I feel very strongly that government has no business involving itself in the decision of each individual on what his spiritual beliefs are or aren’t.  And that each individual has the right to practice his religious/spiritual belief in so far as it does not impede the practice by another person of their religions/spiritual belief or any other right that they are guaranteed under our Constitution.

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