There
are certain occasions when events on the secular calendar give us the
opportunity to pause and reflect on religion in America. The Fourth of July is
an obvious occasion. I want to take this day to reflect on the religious
underpinnings of our country and explain why I believe there is an actual
theology of America and what it means.
I think
that the theology of America was best summarized by Thomas Jefferson in his
1774 essay, "A Summary View of the Rights of British America." There
he stated, "The God who gave us life gave us liberty at the same time. The
hand of force may destroy but cannot disjoin them."
Editorialist
James Freeman wrote that based on the standards of our day, “Thomas Jefferson
was a religious nut.”
Jefferson was a big believer in religious
liberty, but he certainly wasn't shy about mentioning God in official
proceedings. In the final paragraph of the Declaration of Independence,
Jefferson asks twice for God's help in creating the country. And the
Declaration was not the only work of Jefferson's in which he gave credit to a
higher power. . . .
In his Notes on Virginia of 1782, Jefferson
writes: "Can the liberties of a nation be thought secure when we have
removed their only firm basis, a conviction in the minds of the people that
these liberties are of the gift of God?"
If we
disregard the Founders’ religious faith, we have no answer to the question, Where
do our rights come from? Jefferson's religious ideas, shared by representatives
from the thirteen colonies, are the reason we have a United States and the
reason that We the People are in charge.
However
much it is claimed that Jefferson and most of the other Founders were more
secular than religious, there is no escaping that Jefferson's writings are
permeated with God consciousness. It's true that Christ does not figure into
his political writings, but God does, and frequently. What gave Jefferson and
his fellow revolutionaries the right to be so, well, revolutionary? Whence came
their idea that the people should rule instead of a king or a parliament of
nobles? How could they claim that the right to life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness was "unalienable," meaning beyond the rightful power of any
government either to grant or deny? Why did they talk about human rights to
begin with and where do rights come from?
According
to Thomas Jefferson and his fellows, the ultimate answer to all those questions
was simple: God. Only cynics say that the religious convictions of the Founders
were not central to their determination to risk their lives, their fortunes and
their sacred honor for a single claim: that all human beings are created equal
and that they are endowed by their Creator with certain rights that may not be
rightfully denied them. And yes, the Founders did exclude African-Americans
from this claim, but let us also acknowledge that Jefferson, among others, said
explicitly that God's righteous day of reckoning and judgment upon slave-owning
America would come. And it did.
The
whole justification for the American revolution was that the divine rights of
the people trumped the divine rights of kings that European monarchs claimed to
have. Human rights come from God, not government. When the British government
usurped them, it was the God‑given right of the people of America to cast off
the that government and form their own. That is what the Declaration of
Independence says, and that is what the Founders did. Freeman wrote, "If
you could sum up Jefferson's political views in one sentence, you would say: He
believed that God and reason allow people to rule themselves."
One of
the genius things our Founders did was create a civil society in which enormous
numbers of different Christian denominations and nowadays, different religions,
find a home. Our history has seen times of sectarian strife, but it never
descended to open combat as it has in, say, Northern Ireland. A lot of
Protestants were suspicious of whether Catholic John F. Kennedy would cleave to
the Vatican rather than the Constitution, but their fears were unfounded. In
2004, orthodox Jew Joe Lieberman ran for president and then was the nominated
candidate for vice president and no one worried whether he would cleave to
Jerusalem rather than the Constitution.
The
American ideas of freedom and liberty are drawn from religion. Jefferson was
saying that human liberty is inherent in the creative acts of God in bringing
forth humankind to begin with. Creation was not a static event, it is a dynamic
process of bringing forth the image of God in humankind and the world at large.
The creation stories in the book of Genesis show that the realms of the divine
and creation overlap. God is powerful, but creation has power too; a certain
degree of independence and freedom is built into creation by God's very acts of
creating.
In the
original paradise, the Garden of Eden, Adam and Eve were given the run of the
garden and meaningful work to do. They were free agents of their own will. Yet
there were limits. God commanded them that they could eat the fruit of any tree
except one. Their freedom had its limits. When they crossed that limit, they
were less free, and Genesis relates that as generations passed, humankind
became steadily even less free.
Eventually
the story leads to Egypt, where the Hebrews found themselves in chattel slavery
to Pharaoh. They had no freedom at all.
The twin
images of slavery and freedom shape the entire theology of both Jews and
Christians. Always God is a liberator. The central story of the Jews is that of
Moses leading the children of Israel from slavery in Egypt to freedom in the
Promised Land. At their start, slavery. At their ending, freedom. But neither
the slavery nor their freedom is the high point of the story. The high point is
what happened at Sinai. The high point, the defining moment, was when God gave
them the Law.
The Law
of Moses defined freedom in two ways. On the one hand, the law defined what was
forbidden. On the other, it stated what was obligatory.
There is
always a tension between the forbidden and the mandatory. But the Bible seems
clear that human freedom is found somewhere between the limits of what may not
be done and what must be done. With no limits there is no freedom because there
is no orientation on God. Without obligations there is no justice, without prohibitions
there is no community. The surest way for persons or societies to fall into
bondage is to ignore prohibitions and obligations. Falling into slavery is
easy, staying free is hard.
The
apostle Paul said that creation itself is in bondage to decay, an amazing
statement for a pre‑scientific man to make. Science today confirms that the
universe is running down and cosmologists now seem convinced that the universe
will keep expanding forever, until the time comes when energy states will be
even, and nothing will ever change.
As for
we men, women and children, we are born slaves to this decay. At the end lies
the grave. We know that. We fear death because our mortality looms over
everything we do. Human customs and culture are shaped by the end of life in
ways we cannot even uncover, to degrees we do not recognize. Such is our
slavery to the fear of death.
Christians
have tended to think of Jesus' gift of life as some sort of afterlife, but
Christ is concerned about far more of our lives than what happens after they
end. Christ frees us not only from the fear of personal death but from our
slavery to a death‑shaped culture. With death overcome, the family of God is
empowered to inaugurate a new order of living and a new kind of life.
Jesus
explained in the Gospel of John (8:34‑36), "Very truly, I tell you,
everyone who commits sin is a slave to sin. 35The slave does not have a
permanent place in the household; the son has a place there forever. 36So if
the Son makes you free, you will be free indeed."
Through
Christ, we are freed from sin and from servitude to the things of this world
which inhibit godly living: greed, jealousy, anger, resentment, racism,
selfishness – all the hundreds of things we put under the general label of sin.
We are freed from sin and the fear of death.
So
liberated, we should be able to live positively in ways not possible before.
Justice, the right ordering of things in human affairs, is the result of this
spiritual freedom. So the fuller Law of the Hebrews recognized this fact.
Deuteronomy 10:12‑13 and 17‑18 says to the nation of Israel:
12 So
now, O Israel, what does the LORD your God require of you? Only to fear the
LORD your God, to walk in all his ways, to love him, to serve the LORD your God
with all your heart and with all your soul, 13and to keep the commandments of
the LORD your God and his decrees that I am commanding you today, for your own
well‑being. 17For the LORD your God is God of God's and Lord of lords, the
great God, mighty and awesome, who is not partial and takes no bribe, 18who
executes justice for the orphan and the widow, and who loves the strangers,
providing them food and clothing.
Those
are some of the divine obligations people have as they live in community. Yet
our nation's founding documents make no mention of the obligations and
responsibilities, they seek to ensure only our rights. In fact, Jefferson wrote
that the whole purpose of government is to secure the rights that God gave us.
He ignored codifying the obligations God lays on us.
I think
that is a good thing. I shudder to think what our civil life would be like if
our Constitution required things of the people rather than limited the power of
government. It is always too easy for the law, whether civil or religious, to
cease being a guide and become a slave-master. George Washington warned that
even democratic "Government is not reason; ... it is force. Like fire, it
is a dangerous servant and a fearful master."
In both
our civil and religious life, we would do well to remember Paul's admonition to
the Corinthians, 1 Cor 10:23: "‘Everything is permissible' – but not
everything is beneficial. ‘Everything is permissible' – but not everything is
constructive.'" The absence of limits in America's founding documents is
not an oversight. The Founders expected the people to understand the limits of
libertine anarchy on the one hand and political slavery on the other.
John
Adams wrote in a letter to his wife, "We have no government armed with the
power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and
religion. . . . Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious
people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other."
Justice
William O. Douglas wrote in a majority opinion of a Supreme Court case,
"We are a religious people whose institutions presuppose a Supreme
Being."
The
Constitution guarantees our rights, but not our liberty. It is our religion
under the providence of the God of the Bible that secures our liberty. Liberty
is maintained by faith in powers greater than government, by living out God’s
call to know the truth of freedom in God’s way of life. When we make government
the object of our faith, when we decide that our liberty depends on government,
we will live under political bondage.
Various
commentators of the American religious scene point out that America is becoming
less and less religious. A lower percentage of Americans regularly attend
church or synagogue than in past times.
But the
fact is that Americans are still just as religious as before, it's just not
Jewish or Christian religion they are practicing. Increasing numbers of people
are turning to forms of spirituality that are private and personal, not public
and social. These forms of religion are, at their base, selfish and self‑centered.
While this is certainly their right, I fear that over time the obligations of
freedom will be ignored, and the justice of our freedom will be degraded. Self‑centered
persons do not prosper, and neither do self‑centered societies or nations. Paul
warned the Galatian Christians (Gal 5:13‑14):
13 For
you were called to freedom, brothers and sisters; only do not use your freedom
as an opportunity for self‑indulgence . . . For the whole law is summed up in a
single commandment, "You shall love your neighbor as yourself."
Freedom
is God's will. Certain rights are God‑given and cannot be rightfully denied by
human authority. God's gift of freedom carries the obligation to live godly
lives under his guidance and to love our neighbor as ourselves. Our rights and
our obligations reinforce one another, guard one another, preserve one another.
Together they comprise our freedom.