There is no attack on American culture more deadly and more historically
dishonest than the secular Left’s unending war against God in America’s
public life. The decision by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals to rule
unconstitutional the phrase “one nation under God” was the final straw. A
court that would destroy a Pledge of Allegiance adopted by the Congress,
signed by the president (Eisenhower), and supported by 91 percent of the
American people1 is a court that is clearly out of step with an America
that understands that our rights come from God, which is why no
government—or court—can justly take them away from us.
While the Supreme
Court overruled the Ninth Circuit on procedural grounds, it did not affirm
that saying “one nation under God” was constitutional. Only three of the
justices took that position. Five of the justices hid behind procedural
excuses, ruling that the atheist plaintiff did not have legal standing to
file the suit. The ninth justice, Antonin Scalia, had recused himself
because he had made a public speech supporting the Pledge.
Amazingly, in 2004, the Supreme Court likely had a five to four
majority for declaring “one nation under God” unconstitutional. Justice
Sandra Day O’Connor defended the Pledge only by denying it any meaning:
“even if taken literally, the phrase is merely descriptive; it purports
only to identify the United States as a Nation subject to divine
authority. That cannot be seen as a serious invocation of God or as an
expression of individual submission to divine authority....Any religious
freight the words may have been meant to carry has long since been lost.”
The Pledge, she deemed, merely invoked “civic deism.” Yet if pledging
allegiance to one nation under God does not mean we believe the nation
(and therefore ourselves as citizens) is under God, what could it possibly
mean?
When a handful of judges decide they can overrule the culture of 91
percent of America, how can the Court maintain its moral authority? It
¬can’t. The Court itself begins each day with the proclamation, “God save
the United States and this honorable Court.” This phrase has been used for
almost two hundred years. It was not adopted as a ceremonial phrase of no
meaning; it was adopted because justices in the 1820s actually wanted to
call on God to save the United States and the Court.
Similarly, the Pledge of Allegiance does not contain a “ceremonial”
reference to God. The term under God was inserted deliberately by Congress
to draw the distinction between atheistic tyranny (the Soviet Union) and a
free society whose freedoms were based on the God-given rights of each
person. As the report from the House of Representatives accompanying the
law asserted: “From the time of our earliest history, our peoples and our
institutions have reflected the traditional concept that our Nation was
founded on a fundamental belief in God.”
“Fundamental belief” is not “civic deism.”
For most Americans, the blessings of God have been the basis of our
liberty, prosperity, and survival as a unique country.
For most Americans, prayer is real and we subordinate ourselves to a
God on whom we call for wisdom, salvation, and guidance.
For most Americans, an atheistic society that forbids public reference
to God and removes religious symbols is a horrifyingly bad society.
Yet the voice of the overwhelming majority of Americans is repressed by
an elite media that finds religious expression frightening and
threatening, or old-fashioned and unsophisticated. The results of their
opposition are everywhere.
Our schools have been steadily driving God out of American history
(look at your children’s textbooks or at the curriculum guide for your
local school).
Our courts have been literally outlawing references to God, symbols of
God, and stated public appeals to God (prayer).
For two generations we have passively accepted this assault on the
values of the overwhelming majority of Americans. It is time to insist on
judges who understand the history and meaning of America as a country
endowed by God.
The secular Left has been inventing law and grotesquely distorting the
Constitution to achieve a goal that none of the Founding Fathers would
have thought reasonable. History is vividly clear about the importance of
God in the founding of our nation. To prove that our Creator is so central
to understanding America, there is a walking tour of Washington, D.C. that
shows how often the Founding Fathers and other great Americans, and the
institutions they created, refer to God and call upon Him. Indeed, to
study American history is to encounter God again and again. A tour like
this should be part of every school class’s visit to Washington, D.C.
Religion is the fulcrum of American history. People came to America’s
shores to be free to practice their religious beliefs. It brought the
Pilgrims with their desire to create a “city on a hill” that would be a
beacon of religious belief and piety. The Pilgrims were but one group that
poured into the new colonies. Quakers in Pennsylvania were another,
Catholics in Maryland yet a third. A religious revival, the Great
Awakening in the 1730s, inspired many Americans to fight the Revolutionary
War to secure their God-given freedoms. Another great religious revival in
the nineteenth century inspired the abolitionists’ campaign against
slavery.
It was no accident that the marching song of the Union Army during the
Civil War included the line “as Christ died to make men holy let us die to
make men free.” That phrase was later changed to “let us live to make men
free.” But for the men in uniform who were literally placing their lives
on the line to end slavery, they knew that the original line was the right
one.
First Principles
For the colonists the argument with the British government was an
argument about first principles. Where did power come from? What defined
loyalty? Who defined rights between king and subject?
It was in this historic context that America proclaimed in the
Declaration of Independence that all people “are endowed by their Creator
with certain inalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and
the pursuit of happiness.” This turned on its head the notion that power
came from God through the monarch to the people.
Beginning with King John in 1215, the English had gradually been
restricting and confining the power of their monarchs. But Americans went
further, asserting that God granted rights directly to everyone. Moreover,
these rights were “inalienable.” The government could not deny man’s
God-given rights.
Those who came aboard the Mayflower in 1620 in search of religious
freedom wrote a compact expressing that,
We whose names are underwritten...by the grace of God...having
undertaken, for the glory of God, and advancement of the Christian
faith...a voyage to plant the first colony in the Northern parts of
Virginia, do by these presents solemnly and mutually in the presence of
God, and one of another, covenant and combine ourselves together into a
civil body politic, for our better ordering and preservation and
furtherance of the ends aforesaid; and by virtue hereof to enact,
constitute, and frame such just and equal laws, ordinances, acts,
constitutions, and offices, from time to time, as shall be thought most
meet and convenient for the general good of the colony, unto which we
promise all due submission and obedience.
At America’s Founding, religion was central. The very first Continental
Congress in 1774 had invited the Reverend Jacob Duché to begin each
session with a prayer. When the war against Britain began, the Continental
Congress provided for chaplains to serve with the military and be paid at
the same rate as majors in the Army.
During the Constitutional Convention of 1787, Benjamin Franklin (often
considered one of the least religious of the Founding Fathers) proposed
that the Convention begin each day with a prayer. As the oldest delegate,
at age eighty-one, Franklin insisted that “the longer I live, the more
convincing proofs I see of this truth—that God governs in the Affairs of
Men.”
Because of their belief that power had come from God to the individual,
they began the Constitution “we the people.” Note that the Founding
Fathers did not write “we the states.” Nor did they write “we the
government.” Nor did they write “we the lawyers and judges.”
These historic facts pose an enormous problem for secular liberals. How
can they explain America without getting into the area of religion? If
they dislike and in many cases fear religion, how then can they
communicate the core nature of the people in America?
The answer is that modern secular liberalism cannot accurately teach or
deal with religion as a central reality of American history, so it simply
ignores the topic. If you ¬don’t teach about the Founding Fathers, you do
not have to teach about our Creator. If you ¬don’t teach about Abraham
Lincoln, you ¬don’t have to deal with fourteen references to God and two
Bible verses in a 732–word second inaugural address. That speech is
actually carved into the wall of the Lincoln Memorial in a permanent
affront to every atheist who visits this public building. You have to
wonder how soon there will be a lawsuit to scrape the references to God
and the Bible off the monument so as not to offend those who hate or
despise religion. This is no idle threat. Dr. Michael Newdow, the atheist
who brought suit to outlaw the motto “one nation under God,” told the New
York Times he intended to “ferret out all insidious uses of religion in
daily life.”
Unlike Dr. Newdow, the Founding Fathers, from the very birth of the
United States, saw God as central to defining America.
Our first President, George Washington, at his first inauguration on
April 30, 1789, “put his right hand on the Bible...[after taking the oath]
adding ‘So help me God.’ He then bent forward and kissed the Bible before
him.” In his inaugural address, Washington remarked that
...it would be peculiarly improper to omit in this first official
act my fervent supplications to that Almighty Being who rules over the
universe, who presides in the councils of nations, and whose
providential aids can supply every human defect, that His benediction
may consecrate to the liberties and happiness of the people of the
United States a Government instituted by themselves for these essential
purposes, and may enable every instrument employed in its administration
to execute with success the functions allotted to his charge....No
people can be bound to acknowledge and adore the Invisible Hand which
conducts the affairs of men more than those of the United States....You
will join with me, I trust, in thinking that there are none under the
influence of which the proceedings of a new and free government can more
auspiciously commence.
Then in the Thanksgiving Proclamation of October 3, 1789, Washington
declared “it is the duty of all Nations to acknowledge the Providence of
Almighty God, to obey His will, to be grateful for His benefits, and
humbly to implore His protection and favor.” Note that Washington was not
just imploring that individuals have an obligation to God, but nations do
as well. The United States government was not yet a year old.
That most astute observer of early America, Alexis de Tocqueville, in
Democracy in America (1835), observed “I do not know whether all Americans
have a sincere faith in their religion, for who can read the human heart?
But I am certain that they hold it to be indispensable to the maintenance
of republican institutions. This opinion is not peculiar to a class of
citizens or to a party, but it belongs to the whole nation and to every
rank of society.”
The secular Left and the Left-liberal elite media would argue that even
if de Tocqueville were right, he is irrelevant because he is writing about
an earlier America. They argue that America has changed profoundly and is
now a very different country. Justice O’Connor herself wrote that the
phrase “one nation under God” was adopted in 1954 when “our national
religious diversity was neither as robust nor as well recognized as it is
now.”
Yet this is a profound misinterpretation of modern America. As Michael
Novak has noted, recognizing “one nation under God” is much more important
in a country as religiously diverse as America because the phrase
transcends any one faith or denomination and is as inclusive as possible.
Harvard professor Samuel Huntington points out that “Americans tend to
have a certain catholicity toward religion: All deserve respect. Given
this tolerance of religious diversity, non-Christian faiths have little
alternative but to recognize and accept America as a Christian society.”
The idea that somehow the phrase “under God” is only a fifty-year-old
tradition is historically inaccurate. In an article in the Weekly Standard
on October 27, 2003, James Piereson wrote that on July 2, 1776, as British
troops were closing in on Staten Island and the Continental Congress was
meeting in Philadelphia to declare independence, George Washington was
gathering his troops in Long Island for battles in and around New York
City. Washington wrote in the General Orders to his men that day, “The
time is now near at hand which must probably determine whether Americans
are to be freemen or slaves....The fate of unborn millions will now
depend, under God, on the courage and conduct of this army.” The very same
week we were declaring our independence, Washington was asserting that we,
as a nation, served under God.
Abraham Lincoln, in his Gettysburg Address, remarked that
It is for us the living, rather, to be dedicated here to the
unfinished work which they who fought here have thus far so nobly
advanced. It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task
remaining before us—that from these honored dead we take increased
devotion to the cause for which they gave the last full measure of
devotion; that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have
died in vain; that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of
freedom; and that government of the people, by the people, for the
people, shall not perish from the earth.
We are, and always have been, a nation “under God,” regardless of our
“robust national religious diversity.”
The two primary battlefields of this cultural struggle are the courts
and the classrooms. Those are the arenas in which the secular Left has
imposed change against the wishes of the overwhelming majority of
Americans. Those are the arenas in which believing in the Founding Fathers
and the classic interpretation of the Constitution can be disastrous to a
career and lead to social ostracism.
If we insist on courts that follow the facts of American history in
interpreting the Constitution, we will reestablish the right that every
American has to acknowledge our Creator as the source of our rights, our
well being, and our wisdom. And if we insist on patriotic education both
for our children and for new immigrants, we will rebuild the cultural bond
of historic memory that has made America the most exceptional nation in
history.
Printed with permission from
www.Newt.org, Winning the Future