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Letter: Reader challenges notion
Tuesday, 02 January 2007 13:50
Reader challenges notion
of U.S. as Christian nation

A Republican congressman from Virginia has warned that the election in Minnesota, of the first Muslim who intends to use the Koran in a private swearing-in ceremony in January, is a threat to traditional Christian values.

A conservative radio host condemned the decision "as one that would undermine American civilization" and claimed that "the Bible was the only relevant religious text in the United States."


The Muslim is Keith Ellison, an African-American lawyer, who traces his American ancestors back to 1742. It is gratifying that other members of Congress, and President Bush, have spoken out in support of  religious freedom and free speech.

It is amazing how many people are unaware of our unusual American religious tradition. Ours is unique, since religion is strictly a voluntary affair and a matter of free choice. Although some 80 percent of the population identify themselves as Christians, there are more than 1,500 different religious groups in America and they all flourish without support of the government.

It wasnët that way in the beginning. Early settlers brought traditional attitudes from Europe. Most assumed a single orthodox religious truth and required conformity and exiled dissenters. There were exceptions:  Maryland was tolerant of all Christians; and Pennsylvania, New York and Rhode Island welcomed Christians, Quakers and Jews.


Then, at the time of the American Revolution, the Founding Fathers were impressed by the Enlightenment theories of John Locke and others. Enlightenment thinkers offered intellectual justification for toleration and freedom of consciousness that challenged traditional religious values, and advocated the separation of church and state.


The Founders ÇƒÓ Washington, Franklin, Jefferson, Paine, Adams, Madison and Hamilton were influenced by deism.  This is the theory that accepted the existence of Aristotleës "prime mover" from the order and harmony that exists in the universe. The deists all tended to reject revelation as the test of religious truth, accepting reason instead.


It was the deists who influenced the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. There is no religious qualification for voting or office holding in the federal Constitution. Its preamble does not invoke the blessings of Almighty God. It declares its purpose in keeping with the Enlightened goals of the times ÇƒÓ "to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity."


The Founding Fathers endorsed the Enlightenment idea of opposition to any state involvement in religion, sponsoring the First Amendment to the Constitution as a wall of separation between church and state. In 1947, while I was in law school, Justice Hugo Black in Emerson v. Board of Education, invoked the Foundersë desires in what was the first major statement of the Supreme Court on the "Establishment Clause."


During Washingtonës presidency the United States entered into a treaty with Islamic Tripoli. The treaty stated that "the government of the United States is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion."

 Therefore, it would appear the congressman from Virginia may be confused about the values he criticizes.  An examination of history confirms that Mr. Ellisonës fitness to serve in Congress is a matter the Founding Fathers left to the voters of his district.

Lloyd V. Stover

Tallahassee, Fla.
 



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