The Right Opinion
Christian Conservatives Guard Religious Liberty
The First Amendment to the United States Constitution contains two clauses addressing religious liberty: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof."
It's a shame that in their modern misguided zeal to read the first clause as mandating a complete separation of church and state, liberals do great damage to the second clause and defeat the overarching purpose of both: ensuring religious liberty.
Ever since the so-called Christian right began its organized activism during the 1980s, liberals (and some others) have become increasingly nervous about (and critical of) Christian influence in politics, let alone the public square.
This issue has reared its controversial head during the Republican presidential primary because of candidate Rick Santorum's unashamed and outspoken commitment to his Catholic faith and Christian values. It's not just leftists who are complaining; many on the right are, as well.
For years, there has been an uneasy alliance inside the Republican "big tent," between those who embrace social conservatism and those who would just as soon see it deleted from the party platform. With our anxiety about the national debt, economic issues are naturally at the forefront of people's concerns. Some believe that those who are still articulating social issues in this period of crisis are at least annoying and possibly detrimental to the cause of electing a Republican who can build a wide enough coalition to defeat the primary culprit in America's race to bankruptcy: President Barack Obama.
I think it's a false choice to say that we conservatives must pick between economic issues and social ones. It's also a mistake to believe there is a clear dichotomy between economic conservatives and social conservatives. As I've written before, Reagan conservatism is a three-legged stool -- economic, social and national defense issues -- and the three are compatible and probably embraced by most Republicans.
Our center-right tent is big enough to include libertarians, economic conservatives who either are indifferent to social issues or consider themselves socially liberal, and so-called neoconservatives, who tend to emphasize national defense issues over the other two -- although they might reject that characterization. We all must unite to defeat President Obama.
But with Santorum's rise in the polls, many are expressing their anxiety about his perceived religiosity and are depicting him as a threat to religious liberty.
Some are abuzz about his interview this past weekend with George Stephanopoulos on ABC's "This Week," in which Santorum stated that he does not believe separation of church and state is absolute. He stated that the First Amendment's free exercise clause guarantees that the church and its members have as much right to try to influence policy as anyone else. And he's absolutely correct.
Not only are the words "separation of church and state" not contained in the Constitution but this phrase from Thomas Jefferson's letter to the Danbury Baptists does not mean what many people say it does.
The First Amendment's establishment clause says that Congress shall not establish a national church, because the Framers didn't want the government telling us whom or how to worship. Their overarching concern, then, was protecting religious liberty. The free exercise clause also strengthens the religious freedom guarantee.
The point is that both clauses are dedicated to religious liberty, and neither purports to ban religious expression from the public square or from the mouths of public officials.
No matter how expansively one reads the First Amendment's establishment clause, no one, including Jefferson, would have made the ludicrous argument that presidents (or other public officials) must leave their worldview at the door of the White House and govern apart from it, as if that would be possible. Advocating policy positions based on one's worldview is light-years away from establishing -- or even supporting -- a national religion.
Christian conservatives are not the ones demonstrating intolerance and threatening the freedoms of religion and religious expression. They would never consider being so presumptuous and tyrannical as to try to silence those who disagree with them, ban them from the public square, or advance the spurious argument that they are not entitled to advocate policies based on their worldview.
Ironically, it is probably the secular left that is most responsible for the dramatic rise and persistent influence of the Christian political right in politics, with their gross judicial activism in abortion jurisprudence and their judicial tyranny coercing states to accept same-sex marriage against the will of the people. They are the ones who demonize as "homophobes" and "bigots" those seeking to preserve traditional marriage. Christian conservatives don't try to shut them up, but many are now trying to shut us up -- through the specious application of the First Amendment, no less.
The last people anyone needs to fear on religious liberty are Christian conservatives, who are its strongest guardians. Above all others, they will fight to preserve everyone's right to express and practice his religion or non-religion as he pleases.
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11 Comments
VoR
Tuesday, February 28, 2012 at 12:31 PM
Why are the Christian conservatives then restricting the religious freedom of traditional Mormons to have multiple wives? (I talking here about consenting adults, not those who marry children.) Or the religious use of peyote by certain American Indian tribes? The defense of religious freedom has to include everyone's religious freedom, not just those in the "approved" religions.
Ted R. Weiland
Tuesday, February 28, 2012 at 1:38 PM
David Limbaugh: "The last people anyone needs to fear on religious liberty are Christian conservatives, who are its strongest guardians. Above all others, they will fight to preserve everyone's right to express and practice his religion or non-religion as he pleases."With the exception of the word "conservatives" (anything left of Yahweh's morality as codified in His commandments,statutes and judgments is NOT conservative), how true and how utterly deplorable. The First Amendment's provision for the freedom of religion requires government to look the other way when it comes to violations of the First Commandment, unlike 17th-century Colonial governments, which wrote the First Commandment and its judgment (death) into their constitutions.Christians who promote the First Amendment are committing sedition against Yahweh.For more, see "Amendment 1: Government-Sanctioned Polytheism" at http://www.missiontoisrael.org/biblelaw-constitutionalism-pt11.php.Find out how much you really know about the Constitution as compared to Yahweh's moral law (His commandments, statutes, and judgments). Take our Constitution Survey at http://www.missiontoisrael.org/constitutionsurvey/constitutionsurvey.php and receive a free copy of the "Primer" (an 85 page book, normally $7 plus shipping) of "Bible Law vs. the United States Constitution: The Christian Perspective."
Capt. Call
Tuesday, February 28, 2012 at 4:59 PM
An excellent article, David, and very true.VoR: Mormonism is a cult, and is not Christian by any means, as they Worship an imaginary god from the planet Kolob who is a different Jesus than Christians know and worship. Peyote is a dangerous drug. American Indian Religions are pagan. Would you then support the child sacrifice required by certain other pagan religions? Freedom of Worship does not include the freedom to participate in dangerous practices within one's Worship. The founders of this country came from a Christian background, even though there may have been some deists among them. Thus, most of them knew the Truth of the Christian World-view. That is why you have freedom of Worship here.Wieland: Go peddle your book somewhere else. There will never be a government like the one you are proposing, before Christ returns. The founders did not intend to give us a theocracy. Knowing the sinful, fallen nature of Man, the founders gave us the best government that they could possibly have given. Is it perfect? No. Is it possible for imperfect men to create perfection? No, I doubt it. And they knew that.
ET
Tuesday, February 28, 2012 at 5:23 PM
Except, Capt. Call, those that came here for religious freedom did not extend it to all others. Catholics, Baptists and Quakers were all outsiders and persecuted to various extents by the Congregationalists and Anglicans. There is a history of religious persecution in this "Christian nation" by those that "came here seeking religious freedom".Jefferon's famous (or infamous) note to the Danbury Baptists is a result of Baptist concern over potential persecution from the "favored" denominations of the time.
Sherry
Tuesday, February 28, 2012 at 6:00 PM
The issue is not Santorum's faith. It is his lack of Constitutional integrity. If his faith were grounded in the righteousness of God, he would have voted against everything that breached the limits of authority outlined in the Constitution. He has voted for big government over and over. The Republican elite are trying to rev up his "Christian" credentials in order to see if the "Moral Majority" will take the bait and snap him up. The Constitution says we are not to have a "religious test" in selecting our President. As Christians, we are supposed to have a "character test" when selecting a candidate. The only question that needs to be answered is: Will this candidate uphold his oath of office and support the Constitution on our behalf?Santorum has demonstrated he will not. He will vote for the big government power mongers and he will continue to take us into undeclared, unjust and unlawful wars.Ron Paul is the only candidate with the integrity needed to uphold the Constitution. To all Republican media schills: We do not want your big government illusions any more. We will get off the party train if you continue full speed ahead into the wrong direction.
Ted R. Weiland
Tuesday, February 28, 2012 at 8:00 PM
Capt. Call, what the Puritan Colonialists (America's true founders) established in the 17th century was pretty close to what I'm proposing. Furthermore:"Not all theocracies are Christian. Some are Jewish, Hindu, Islamic, Buddhist, and some are secular. There is no escaping theocracy. A government’s laws reflect its morality, and the source of that morality (or, more often than not, immorality) is its god. It is never a question of theocracy or no theocracy, but whose theocracy. The American people, by way of their elected officials, are the source of the Constitutional Republic’s laws. Therefore, the Constitutional Republic’s god is WE THE PEOPLE."People recoil at the idea of a theocracy’s morality being forced upon them, but because all governments are theocracies, someone’s morality is always being enforced. This is an inevitability of government. The only question is which god, theocracy, laws, and morality will we choose to live under?'The rejection of one god leads inescapably to the choice of another god. If a person, group, court, etc. establishes himself as the final arbiter of right and wrong, then he/they have assumed the attributes of a god. Thus, he/they are theocratic…. Democracy can become theocratic if absolute power is given to the people. …vox populi, vox dei, “the voice of the people is the voice of God.” Those who promote a particular worldview and want to see it implemented socially, educationally, politically, and judicially have elevated the majority to the status of gods….'One assumes the mantle of deity when he sets himself up as the ultimate authority. It’s the attributes of deity that makes someone god-like. In the eighteenth century, the French revolutionaries declared “reason” to be the goddess of their new state religion. Nineteenth century France was spoken of as “goddess France” by patriotic figures like Victor Hugo and Charles Maurras. Hegel, the philosophical patron saint of communism, wrote that “the State is the Divine Idea as it exists on earth…. We must therefore worship the State as the manifestation of the Divine on earth…. The State is the march of God through the world.”' (Gary DeMar, “Defining Terms: Theocracy,” 26 February 2007, .)Excerpted from "The Preamble: WE THE PEOPLE vs. YAHWEH" at http://www.missiontoisrael.org/biblelaw-constitutionalism-pt3.php.
enemaofthestatistquo
Tuesday, February 28, 2012 at 10:12 PM
Mr. Wieland_ Say What?! Hegel was at the Federal Convention? "The rejection of one god leads inescapably to the choice of another god. If a person, group, court, etc. establishes himself as the final arbiter of right and wrong, then he/they have assumed the attributes of a god." & "One assumes the mantle of deity when he sets himself up as the ultimate authority". No One Else has ever said god is We The People, a possibly Blasphemous statement, but far be it from Me to Judge You. You are continually haranguing Us with your assertion. I am unconvinced. Yahweh Is GOD Most High, and Jesus Christ is His only Son, and my Lord and Saviuor. YAHWEH will Judge Us All.
VoR
Wednesday, February 29, 2012 at 1:40 PM
Capt. Call, who decides what religions deserve Constitutional protection and which do not - the government? You?As to child sacrifice, religious freedom is limited when it endangers innocents - as when I exempted child marriage and as the law applies to Christian Scientists denying medical care to children. In the Bible, it seems that a certain God-fearing fellow would have killed his child if God had commanded it. So should we regard the Bible as the basis of a religion or a sect?As to dangerous practices, could one not argue that denial of contraceptives can be a dangerous practice?
Dave S
Wednesday, February 29, 2012 at 2:43 PM
@VoR God did demand that Abraham sacrifice Isaac, and Abraham was prepared to do so, BUT, God sent a lamb. Just so, God has sent Jesus to be the Lamb for us so living sacrifices are no longer required because Jesus was sacrificed, by God, for ua all. Abraaham was prepared to kill Isaac, as God demanded, but didn't have to because God sent the Lamb. God was testing Abraham's obedience and Abraham passed the test.
Howard Reed
Wednesday, February 29, 2012 at 6:29 PM
Hello America,Once and for all. There is no such thing as a separation between church and state in the Constitution. The word is ESTABLISHMENT. Congress was prohibited in establishing a specific religion in this country. This came of the tyranny created by the English crown and government on the people by making it a punishable law not to belong to the Church of England, hence the exodus of the Christian purists the Puritans and Pilgrims to the New World. Keep in mind the founders were not that far removed from that tyranny. Point made.The Turban Torpedo
Mike Schuerger Sr.
Thursday, March 1, 2012 at 7:48 AM
Well, just about, Howard.Besides the European religious tyranny, ET covers an important point: the religious discrimination that existed =here= at the time the Constitutioin was written, and for that matter still exists. As I have elsewhere mentioned, one of the motives in founding the Knights of Columbus in New Haven, Conn., in 1882 was to fight anti-Catholic discrimination. Anti-Catholic bigotry was referred to as "the last acceptable bigotry in the USA" in the late 20th Century. I don't think it has been eliminated in the 21st yet either.To clarify though, an "Established" religion (more than 1/2 the States had them at the time the Constitution was ratified) was the "official" religion of the State and was supported by taxes levied by the government. "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion" was saying that there would be no official, tax-supported religion in the United State of America. Note well, though, that this did not disestablish the "established" religions of the "Several States." The states did that on their own over time, as the First Ammmendment says, "CONGRESS shall make ...." and the country and the various courts used to recognize the difference between a Federal law and a State or local law as codified by the 10th Ammendment.Of course, many of the courts, at least since WWII if not earlier, don't seem to care WHAT the Constitution says, even if they might know what the Founders meant, which I doubt. There is also a proccupation with "protecting us" with the "Establishment Clause" while ignoring the "Free Exercise" clause.