Yes—America is a Christian Nation
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Whenever Americans are ready to celebrate, we can count on the trolls at the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) to show up in the sunlight and throw their ice water on what are normally happy occasions, be they Thanksgiving, Christmas, or high school graduations. In 2010, the ACLU fog settled on Enfield, Connecticut to intimidate parents and school officials from having a high school graduation in a local megachurch. Once again, its graduation time which means it’s time for Americans to be reminded of the ACLU’s take on their past constitutional sins and surrender to the ACLU’s threats of lawsuits on the unsuspecting.
This year, the ACLU’s target-of-choice is Neptune High School of Ocean Grove, NJ which has held their high school graduation for about seventy years in the Great Auditorium of Ocean Grove, NJ, a civic building that was built in 1894 by the Ocean Grove Camp Meeting Organization. This organization is Methodist in orientation and arose out of the camp meeting movement in the nineteenth century. Neptune High School finds themselves in the sights of the ACLU because the civic building in which they will be holding graduation exercises has a twenty-foot cross on the outside and religious displays inside.
Once Neptune High School received word that they were on the ACLU’s hit list for graduation, they caved on some of their demands, including the removal of the singing of two hymns (one of which was "Onward Christian Soldiers") and a student-led prayer. However, the ACLU wants that twenty-foot cross covered up (or taken down) and the same for religious paraphernalia inside the civic center. “It’s unconstitutional” they say, a “violation of the wall of separation between church and state.” So far (and to their credit), local officials have not caved on these demands.
Then there's the city of Republic, MO who had on their official seal, a fish. Well, the fish was an early symbol of Christianity and the ACLU said that it was unconstitutional, that it violated the separation of church and state. The ACLU won on this one and the city had to spend thousands of dollars to remove the fish from their city’s seal.
We may laugh at some of the silliness, but the ACLU is laughing too—all the way to the bank. They stand to make money when they bring some of these lawsuits. For example, a Georgia ACLU affiliate received $150,000 dollars in court fees after suing a Georgia county to remove a copy of the 10 Commandments from the county courthouse. It's an irony that the ACLU made $150,000 off the command, "thou shalt not covet."
The ACLU takes actions like these, claiming that America is not a Christian nation, but a secular one. According to them, America’s founding fathers were deists who tried to create a pluralist nation where Christianity held no special status. Their removal of religious symbols, they say, is compatible with America’s identity as a religiously pluralistic and secular nation.
The American Identity: Conflict & Confusion
We don’t have to go any further than the 2008 election to see this conflict over America's national identity in play. In 2007 Candidate Obama told David Brody of CBN news that “Whatever we once were, we're no longer just a Christian nation; we are also a Jewish nation, a Muslim nation, a Buddhist nation, a Hindu nation, and a nation of nonbelievers.” [1]
Now, enter candidate McCain on the other side; McCain said “I would probably have to say yes, that the Constitution established the United States of America as a Christian nation."[2]
I'm not sure how much John McCain understands about American history when he says that America is Christian. However, it's obvious that Candidate Obama neither understands American history nor the question he was asked. When we say that America is a Christian nation, we're not saying that everyone is Christian, no more than if I say “America is a nation of immigrants” does that mean that everyone is an immigrant. Such statements are what are true characteristically. Christianity is the most important dynamic in explaining why America is the unique nation that it is.
It was Winston Churchill that said that the further we look back the further we can look forward. With that in mind, let’s look as some of America’s history that points to a Christian heritage. In giving these evidences, I've tried to pick ones that are most familiar to you and me. These evidences are not what make America Christian. Christianity is many things, primarily a faith and a way in which to view the world. Rather, these examples that I give below are residuals or outputs from a Christian society.
Debate on Whether or Not America is a Christian Nation
Our national motto—“In God we Trust” has been the national motto since 1956 and was on our nation's coins as early as 1864. This was instigated by Salmon P. Chase, an Ohio lawyer whom Lincoln appointed his Secretary of the Treasury in 1861. In his instructions to the Director of the Bureau of the Mint, Chase stated
Dear Sir: No nation can be strong except in the strength of God, or safe except in His defense. The trust of our people in God should be declared on our national coins....You will cause a device to be prepared without unnecessary delay with a motto expressing in the fewest and tersest words possible this national recognition.
The Christian religion was a vital element in Chase's life, especially after his wife died in 1835. He became actively involved in the Sunday School Union and the abolition movement. It was Chase that coined the phrase for the Free Soil Party which was "Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men." Later, Lincoln appointed him to be Chief Justice of the United States in 1864. While on the Court, he admitted John Rock to the Supreme Court bar, the first black attorney to argue before the Court.
Patriotic Songs—Most of our historical patriotic songs that have resonated within the heart of patriotic Americans—The Star Spangled Banner, America the Beautiful, God Bless America, America: My Country Tis Of Thee—have common themes: love of country, the land, its principles of freedom and liberty and the acknowledgment that we are a nation blessed by God and that our trust is in God.
Pledge of Allegiance—Our pledge to the flag contains the phrase “one nation under God.” Some, like the atheist Michael Newdow, have tried to make much of the fact that the phrase “under God” was not added until the 1950s. However, adding the phrase simply reflected what we were historically, that is, “one nation under God.” The American Congress was not inventing a new idea when it added that phrase to the pledge.
Oaths on the Bible—Today our president is sworn in using a Bible and witnesses are sworn into court using a Bible. Every president since George Washington has added the words to the oath, “so help me God” when being sworn into office.
Our Dates—Consider our system of dating things by BC and AD. You may think it’s been around forever. In fact, the current calendar was adopted by England and the American colonies in 1752. Only 24 years before the Declaration and 35 years before the adopting of the Constitution. We abandoned using the old Roman and pagan Julian calendar for the Christian calendar. We have to ask ourselves: “would a non-Christian people do this”?
Sunday—And then there’s Sunday. Sunday is still treated as a unique day of the week. Sunday is a Christian holy day. This is fading and was more prevalent in earlier times. Blue laws were more prevalent. The federal election has been held on Tuesday since 1842. Congress ruled out Monday as election day because it would force some people to travel on Sunday in order to vote. Today, industries like Chick-Fil-A are only practicing what has been a traditional practice in American history: Sunday is a day to close shop, go to church, and spend time with family.
Additional Links on America's Christian Heritage
- Is President Obama Correct: Is America No Longer a Christian Nation?
An article examining quotes, statistics, court cases, etc about America being a Christian nation. - Did America Have a Christian Founding? | The Heritage Foundation
This common question, simple as it seems, does not admit of a simple answer. In fact, as Dr. Mark David Hall shows based on a careful survey of Founding Era documents, it necessarily gives rise to several other - History of 'In God We Trust' from the Department of the Treasury
Our national holidays—Probably our most important one is
Christmas, the celebration of the Savior’s birth. It is a government
holiday. Then there’s Easter. Memorial Day observances make regular and
continual references to God and prayers to Him to bless our nation.
Government Leaders Claim Christianity as their Own Religion—Every
American president has claimed Christianity as his religion.
Overwhelmingly most members of Congress and the Supreme Court, our
governors, our mayors, our state reps., our judges claim the Christian
religion as their faith.
Chaplains—There are chaplains in the House, Senate, and military. Paid for by tax dollars. The chaplains of the House, with the exception of a few Unitarians and one universalist have been of the Christian faith.
Historical Movements—Many
historical movements in the United States were rooted and pushed
forward in the name of Christ and the Christian faith: the Revolution
itself, the Great Awakenings, the Abolition Movement, the Comstock Laws,
the Temperance Movement (and eventually Prohibition itself) all reflect
vital Christian dynamics that are propelling these movements. More
recently, Civil Rights, Pro-Life, and the movement to defend marriage
(with laws like the Defense of Marriage Act, for example) are modern
examples of some of the same dynamics that have driven people to act
from a Christian worldview.
All these current things that I
mentioned—the songs, the professions of our government leaders, the
pledge, the dating system—they didn’t just start today; they have a
historical tie to them, some older than others. These things that I
mentioned and many more provide at least prima facie evidence that
America is and was a Christian nation.
References
[1] David Brody, “Obama to CBN News: We're no Longer Just a Christian Nation” CBNews.com July 30, 2007 http://www.cbn.com/CBNnews/204016.aspx (accessed 8 February 2009).
[2] Russell Berman, “McCain Campaign Clarifies ‘Christian Nation' Remarks” New York Sun Online http://www.nysun.com/national/mccain-campaign-clarifies-christian-nation-remarks/63666/ (accessed 8 February 2009).
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WOW! This is a remarkable Hub. You have covered all the bases and backed them up so brilliantly. God Bless!
Bibowen-This is an awesome masterpiece of a Hub and I will book mark it! The ACLU won't be happy till Christianity is entirely removed from the public square. They zealously crusade to secularize America and remove all traces of christianity from the public square! The ACLU to me symbolizes the ignorance of America in regards to thier true Christian roots.
Even the US Supreme Court declared America a christian nation in 1892 "Church of the Holy Trinity v. United States", Justice David Brewer stated "this is a christian nation" and in 1952 " Justice William O. Douglas stated “We are a religious people whose institutions presuppose a Supreme Being”. Regards-WBA
You are absolutely right, in my opinion, that the ACLU takes things too far by demanding crosses be removed or covered up. Because the statement is "freedom of religion" OF religion. Not "from religion." We each have the right to practice what we believe. That does not mean practice what you believe and shut down others. That does not mean, avoid all expression of your beliefs in view of others. It means feel free to express and practice so long as that practice does not harm others. I guess it gets sticky when we try to define "harm". It seems everyone wants to define harm to themselves as being offended. But "screw others if they are offended."
Classifying us as a Christian nation is like keeping people who have left your church on the register as members. Do you really want these people to represent your beliefs just to boost your numbers? The nation was founded with Christian ideals to stop religious persecution. Not just so they could believe what they wanted. But because it is "Christ like" to treat others beliefs with dignity, respect, and an open mind. They were not perfect and they knew it. They left it in our hands to continue to grow as a nation and as people in whatever way we chose. While the United States of America was founded and formed by a group that consisted of primarily Christians, I think many of us who battle saying we are a Christian nation are missing the point.
The point being, we are a nation of whatever we want to be. Of the individual. That is why we have "Freedom OF". We can grow and change. Whatever we are, it's up to us.
I think this is a very thorough hub. I appreciate that fact that you point out 'under God' was added to our coins almost 100 years later and added to the presidential oath, pledge of allegiance, etc many years later.
I personally think our founding fathers would be upset at how religion has become entangled into our society. Many of our founding fathers were religious, however, they did make a deliberate attempt to not have a state sponsored religion. The constitution is quite clear and deliberate, if they wanted this country to be a Christian nation, they would have spelled it out in the document.
To your points regarding Christmas, Sunday's, our political leaders religious beliefs (the majority are Christian), I'd have to agree that we are a 'Christian Nation'.
Interesting hub and comments. Alot depends on definitions, and getting definitions right determines whether a discussion is worthy. cooldad displays another facet of worthy dialogues--common sense.
I understand the main point of your hub, but because of the definition of Christianity I disagree that American is a Christian nation. No matter how many people are true Christians, a "country" can't be "Christian." A Christian is a person and Christians are a group of people who believe what God says about His Son Jesus the Christ and repent of what God calls sin in His Word. Christians determine to continually learn more about His Word and live by what it.
Refusing to pick and choose Scripture to suit our moods or circumstances, Christians study the whole counsel of His Word, letting Scripture define Scripture because we heed God's warnings. Both His promises of blessing and His warnings are united to His amazing character of love, mercy, and justice, yet mysteriously, in His omnipotence, omniscience, and omnipresence He has made a way for us to have an individual friendship with Him that grows as we study His Word and humbly pray about it.
We agree with Him and arrange ourselves under His Word, even if others don't understand and will not listen to it. Even when they hate us for it, we trust what He says because He has shown us that this life is a vapor and eternity with Him is worth it all. He is the Christian's infinitely personal God. He knows all of our thoughts, intents, and motives, and He wants to help us examine them through the lens of His Word so we can align them and enjoy growing in Christ according to the deep riches of His knowledge.
While many who first came to this land were Christians, then many who established our Republic were Christians, not all were. Still, nearly all did recognize the distinct benefits of Judeo-Christian values for any group of people, as opposed to, for instance, those of a nation that offered human sacrifices in the darkness of their savage lives. Only 50 years ago cannibalism was still openly practiced in PNG. Sections of Africa still sell its own people into slavery.
Why mention these other cultures? To say that America is a Christian nation is a dangerous methodology on several levels. We live in a fallen world that has a predetermined end. For all our technology, supposed progress and education, the human race is not improving. Probing what our nation tolerates in our own culture proves this point.
We should not dismiss the values of our Founders. Not their intent to preserve the right and good teaching that God has for people, nor their warnings about disregarding what God says should be taken lightly. If we as a nation took seriously what our Founders warned us about we would not be facing many of the issues that our society deals with today, but most don't even know that they warned us about our country's future.
very well written and documented hub, i enjoyed it. I'm an atheist and I've always had difficulty with the separation of church and state. But it doesn't bother me if a graduation ceremony is held in a church. I think there is some evidence that some of the founding fathers weren't exactly devout Christians, but people rarely want to acknowledge that. I think religion should be presented in school in the context of a history lesson. I do think all people should be more tolerant when debating about religious topics, regardless of what they believe or don't believe in. Our country is terrible with understanding tolerance and healthy debate.
It is very clear that the founding Fathers wanted a Christian state! Or they would not have added the words to the oath, “so help me God” among other things!
Bibowen, great article! I think the only people who shriek and cry about America not being a "Christian Nation" are those who haven't the strength and peace that true faith gives a person. I believe your point was that much of our history as a nation, not the land itself, but the people and institutions that formed the United States of America, is based on Christian traditions and beliefs. Ok, so some only want to debate the "slaughter" of the Native Americans. This has nothing to do with your point as far as I can see. And I read the article by sembj and did not find it very original.
When I took Constitutional Law in law school there was no emphasis on the so called separation of church and state because, as you said, it doesn't exist. Our founders simply didn't want to follow in the path of their ancestors and create another nation "slave to the church". This nation is no slave to the church, but everyone is allowed to worship any way they like. So the result was what was intended as far as that's concerned.
There are just a lot of people who dislike our whole system, some of them even benefit from it but would never admit it. Let them live in their sheds in the woods and hate. I love this country and it's Christian traditions, and I love the non-Christians too. And I hope that a few of those Christian traditions can be preserved before the ACLU has its way and removes religion from everything.
If you are being told things about the ACLU that are untrue, you might want to reconsider other things that those same sources are telling you. Why would they tell lies about the ACLU?
I commend your efforts to keep your writing intellectually rigorous.
Now, as for the ACLU supporting child porn - that's total BS. The ACLU supports free speech. Sometimes cases come up where there are questions about the boundaries of free speech that involve child porn. That's when the ACLU steps in. Believe me, if your free speech rights were being threatened, legitimately (and that's the key word), the ACLU would be willing to help you. That's why my BS meter went off with the Christ of the Abyss story - what legitimate reason would the ACLU have to go after a statue like that?
James's hub was filled with lies, and a few distorted truths. I wrote a hub on the subject.
Saying that the ACLU is pro-child porn is like saying that all Christians are pro-genocide and racist, since the genocides of the Native Americans were justified by Christian thinkers at the time, and so was slavery.
There is a case to be made that Christianity allows for a kind of binary thinking that encourages atrocities, but it would be a fallacy and absurd to say that all Christians are racist and genocidal.
Likewise with the ACLU. They don't have some agenda to destroy the USA. Their agenda is to protect the very American values of free speech and freedom of worship (or not).
In fact, I have googled for this case you speak of in your opening paragraph and the only evidence I found was a single page titled: THE ACLU – TROJAN HORSE OF THE JEW.
I hope you're not getting your information from those people.
By the way, what are your sources for your accusations against the ACLU? Your "christian" websites might not be telling the whole story. James Watkins wrote a big hub about how the ACLU was all for child pornography and when I researched it I found out how everything he said was full on lies that were being spread by so called Christians. You might want to check your facts.
"In God We Trust" is in the presence of so many occult symbols having to do with the Satanism of Freemasonry and Globalism. . . .that I have to wonder if you are serious.
America, the UNITED STATES OF AMERICA has got to be about the most corrupted global power that does the least amount of good for widows and orphans worldwide. . .it's unimaginable that this nation, by and large, would ever be something that Christ would recognize as having his mark on it.
It's disgusting, really, we have the highest incarceration rate in the world. This is because we have FOR PROFIT private prison industries. People literally get rich off of the misery of their brothers.
But they are their brother's keepers just the same - and will be judged for NEVER caring for their brothers.
The Military Industrial Complex is making fortunes right now off of the death and misery of little brown people far away. . . .but Jesus stated for us that we are to love our neighbors as ourselves.
This nation is not the slightest bit Christian. This nation creates widows and orphans as a measure of business and profit.
I wonder if you are not insane.
Hi Bibowen: I have tried to make a different case to yours in a Hub I have just published called:
US is not a Christian Nation.
I hope you have a chance to look at another viewpoint.
Thanks,
Sem
As an aside, I cannot help noting that some native peoples tended to be rather aggressive but by and large most native peoples either did not have a lot of contact or slaughter great numbers of their enemies. An excellent account of how many, many peoples lived prior to white settlers is given in Claude Levi Strauss`s Man`s Rise to Civilization for instance. Most behaviors of many native tribes and people pale in comparison to the barbarous practices of many of the Christian settlers. It seems that the history of indigenous people is not being properly represented in the comments section.
There are many other ideas in the article itself that I intend challenging in a hub but thought I would warm up with questioning the interpretation of history prior to the European settlers.
Obviously I enjoy tackling the issues raised in your article and look forward to continuing the dialogue in a hub.
Thanks,
Sem
I will simply say...."Bravo!"...
up and awesome!
Whomever the natives were who inhabited the land, they were not the Europeans who came, with disease, indulged in ethnic cleansing and stole their land. The Indians fed the Europeans and taught them how to hunt.
If they did slaughter and consume one another, that was their way of life. That is why America is always at war...because of the superior attitude that we have a right to impose our way on everyone else.
The European settlers who established America were indeed Christian. But the land that was here before them was definitely not Christian, so your argument leaves out the millions of people here who were exterminated, enslaved, and forcibly converted to Christianity. There are also the Africans who were brought here by force and also stripped of their language, culture and religion.
Once the indigenous religions were exterminated, the Christians were indeed the majority. Certainly they didn't behave in a very Christ like manner. But that's beside the point.
The constitution establishes a separation of church and state. There is no official state religion in the US. None. Not Christianity, not Buddhism, not anything. As far as the state is concerned, America is not a religious nation.
The traditions of the white settlers who dominated America for the first few centuries of it's founding were Christian, however. Thus, the use of the bible to swear in officials, etc.
But there is a difference between the traditions of a nation and the Nation's official religion.
I would prefer to see the Pledge completely removed given its dubious origins and socialist under-pinnings. I'm not a fan of Francis Bellamy.
Let us remember too where the word "Holiday" originated. Holiday was originally two words. "Holy day" So if July 4th is not a holiday, then what should it be called? For that matter, should government still work on holidays if we truly separate church and state. Does the ACLU still operate on holidays? Just thinking.
Great hub! It's ashame we can't go back to when things were so simple though! Everyone needs to be reminded of our history, and our constitution, and yes "IN GOD WE TRUST".
Awesome! Good to know that someone cleared that up on here! lol























jjsundar 5 weeks ago
Great Hub!!! I am looking forward to the day on which America declares that it is a Christian nation once again.