JoltinJoe wrote:Ibanez wrote:
I agree with everything you wrote, except this. You will strain to find a single reference from any of the founders, anywhere, saying that the United States is to be a "secular" country. Go ahead and see if you can find one.
Now, to be honest, the term "secularism" as pertains to a moral philosophy or a system of government would not even be coined until the mid-19th century -- so its absence in this sense in the writings of the founders is entirely predictable.
The question is: Did the founders intend a "secular" state as that term is used today?
Well, if you read selectively, you could string together a quote here and there to support that. Take Jefferson's reference to the "wall between Church and state." That quotation has to be measured against the historical background of the era during which Jefferson wrote, and in the greater context of his writings. We revolted against a nation whose king was also the head of its national church. Jefferson's writings teem with hostile references to the concept of the "divine right" of kings, by which kings claimed, and priests ratified, that the king ruled through a direct delegation from God. Jefferson repeatedly wrote that such an understanding by which kings claimed the right to rule, both politically and theologically, twisted and distorted not only the proper role of the sovereign, but the proper role of the priest.
But here is where the case for a "secular" Jefferson is undermined: he declared the authority of the sovereign resulted from a delegation by the "people" and only with their consent. He proclaimed a system of government founded on "natural law" by which every person "is endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights ..."
So, in Jefferson's estimation, rather than a delegation from the Creator to the king, the delegation from the Creator runs directly to each individual, which then delegates authority to the sovereign -- the sovereign being, thus, subordinate to the individual.
My point is simply this: Jefferson's reference to a Creator negates any legitimate argument that this a "secular" nation so long as our founding documents remain the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. Our nation may be neutral on the matter of religion, but it is not neutral on the role of the Creator. Ultimately, this is why generic expressions of faith in God have always been allowed in the public forum: the Creator is a founding force in all our governing documents.
If you were to ask genuine secularists whether we really are "endowed by our Creator with certain unalienable rights," they would say no, and that this was just a figure of speech employed by Jefferson. But that is not correct. If you read Jefferson, you cannot avoid concluding that Jefferson believed in a real God -- although he did not adhere to any of the faith systems popular in his day.
Jefferson was a "Christian Deist" who believed in natural law. He would have rejected secularism.
I didn't say TJ didn't believe in God and I know he was a Deist (as were many in that time, as well as a few founding fathers).
Secularism, thought not "coined" until the 19th Century, has its roots going back to the Greeks. Voltaire. John Locke. Thomas Jefferson. So the idea wasn't foreign.
To me - looking at our country's history, the ideals of the Founding Fathers, the establishment and free exercise clause - I come to the conclusion that our Government is not to be run by religious leaders, make religion a requirement for service, vote, etc... will not make religious based laws, etc.. Based on that, it is my opinion that our government was set up so that religion will not influence the elected officials and their governmental duties. Secularism is, according to Merriam-Webster, is
indifference to or rejection or exclusion of religion and religious considerations
. That's not to say you a politician can't be guided by religious principles (would would surely influence any laws he creates, votes for or against.) But that religion as a whole will not be used.
I guess if our Republic desired - the people could elect people that would make us more of a theocracy. I don't know.
I'll end with this, and I realize i'm debating a lawyer (that's a compliment, btw). You stated,
If you were to ask genuine secularists whether we really are "endowed by our Creator with certain unalienable rights," they would say no, and that this was just a figure of speech employed by Jefferson. But that is not correct. If you read Jefferson, you cannot avoid concluding that Jefferson believed in a real God -- although he did not adhere to any of the faith systems popular in his day.
That's from the
Declaration of Independence, not our
Constitution. One being a formal letter of secession and grievances, the other being the basis for our Laws. Regardless of the author - I think the lack of " Natural Law" or "Divine Providence" or "Creator" from the Constitution points to the fact that the framers of the Constitution, especially the Bill of Rights (Madison) intended to divorce religion from the government.
The
DoI is a lovely document with enlightened ideas. But it isn't the rule of the law. But I can see why you married the two.