How Christians relate to the culture, including the
political culture, is a question being raised more in the wake of advances in
LGBT rights, the expansion of government involvement in healthcare, and recent
rulings by the Supreme Court. Some feel the Christian faith is being pushed out
of the public square. Others express fear that the Judeo-Christian values and
traditions so central to American culture are no longer welcomed in our civil
discourse or celebrations because fewer Americans share them.
Opportunists jump
on this fear and declare there is a “war on Christianity.” More thoughtful
observers wonder if we’re seeing an erosion or redefinition of the First
Amendment’s application.
With these questions on my mind, I recommend reading
Michael I. Meyerson’s book, Endowed by
Our Creator: The Birth of Religious Freedom in America (Yale University
Press, 2012). There are many insights from the book worth sharing, but for now
let me just mention one story that may help us reinterpret the apparent
marginalization of Christianity some are decrying.
Meyerson tells a story about the Constitutional
Convention in 1787 that I had not read before. For weeks delegates in
Philadelphia were making little progress. Large and small states argued over
representation in the proposed federal government. Slave and free states argued
over how the census would count slaves. Everyone argued over the authority of
the new executive. The convention was in gridlock.
It was then that Benjamin Franklin, the elder statesman
of the gathering, spoke up. He told about the Continental Congress of 1776
debating the merits of seeking independence from Britain. “When we were in
sensible danger,” he said, “we had daily prayers in this room for divine
protection! Our prayers, sir, were heard and they were graciously answered.”
Franklin went on to say, “I have lived, Sir, a long time. The longer I live,
the more convincing proofs I see of this truth–that God governs the affairs of
men! And if a sparrow cannot fall to the ground without his notice, is it
probable that an empire cannot rise without his aid?”
Then Franklin, who was outspoken about his non-Christian
beliefs, made a surprising proposal. “Henceforth, prayers imploring the
assistance of Heaven–and its blessing on our deliberation–be held in this
Assembly every morning before we proceed to business; and that one or more of
the Clergy of this city be requested to officiate in that service.”
We like to believe that 18th century America was a more
Christian time than our own, and some especially want to view the Founder’s as
devout men of faith eager to discern God’s good and perfect will for their new
country. So it might be surprising to learn that after his proposal for daily
prayer, Franklin wrote in his notes that, “The convention except for 3 or 4
persons, thought prayers unnecessary.”
The moment is rich with irony. Franklin, a confidently
non-Christian man who enjoyed the most carnal of pleasures, proposes to hire a
minister to conduct daily prayers. The Constitutional Convention, comprised of
many devout Christians men, overwhelmingly reject his suggestion. Why were they
opposed? And, unlike the Declaration of Independence drafted by the 1776
congress which prayed daily, why did the new Constitution that emerged from the
1787 convention included no religious language or references to God? The
framers wrote a completely secular document–a fact that caused many clergy at
the time to object to its ratification.
Were the delegates at the Constitutional Convention
closeted secularists, or worse–atheists? Were they merely nominal Christians
with no real heart for God or prayer? Not at all. Many were devoutly religious
men and orthodox in their Christian beliefs, but they were also politicians.
Practical concerns pushed prayer out of the gathering.
Alexander Hamilton, for example, was worried how the
public would view the move to include prayer weeks after the convention had
assembled. He said the sudden invitation of clergy to attend the meetings would
be an “embarrassment” to the convention causing the public to (correctly)
conclude that the delegates were not unified and making no progress.
It was James Madison, however, who recorded the
predominant reason the delegates voted against praying. He said there was a
“discord of religious opinion within the convention.” In other words, the
delegates realized they would never agree on which Christian prayers to use or
which denomination’s clergy to invite because of their own religious diversity,
and the last thing they needed was to add religion to the heap of divisive
issues they were already facing. Ultimately it was politics, not ideology, that
kept faith out of the Constitutional Convention.
I wonder if the same may be happening today. Could the
marginalization of Christian expression in the public square be the result of
pragmatic politics rather than a full-frontal assault on our faith? By any
measure our society has grown incredibly diverse. Many communities include
Muslims, Hindus, Jews, Buddhists, Christians, Atheists, and every other
worldview imaginable. With this diversity comes the challenge to live, work,
educate, and recreate together, and politicians must find a way to fairly
represent increasingly diverse constituencies. In this environment it makes political
sense to dodge unnecessary controversy by avoiding the sectarian expressions of
faith, just as the founders discovered in 1787.
Of course there are some rabid and vocal secularists who
do not want to see any religion in the public square. They hold a radical
reading of the First Amendment that would permit no public expression of faith
of any kind apart from their own. (Don’t be fooled—secular humanism is a faith,
too.) But the United States remains a country where the anti-religious still
find elected office difficult to attain. It’s worth remembering that we live in
a time when most Americans, including most politicians, still consider
themselves religious. So we should not automatically assume that every, or even
most, powerful figures in the media or government are anti-religion or
anti-Christian.
And we should be very slow to throw around the persecution
accusation. Not only does this malign leaders who may carry no malice toward
Christ or his Church, but it’s also an insult to our sisters and brothers
around the world who face genuine persecution for their faith.
Skye Jethani is an author, editor, speaker, consultant
and pastor. He occupies numerous roles at Christianity Today, a leading
communications ministry launched by Billy Graham in 1956. Since 2004 Skye has
served on the editorial team of Leadership Journal and is currently the group’s
Executive Editor. He is also the Senior Producer of This Is Our City, a
multi-year, multi-city project telling the stories of Christians working for the
common good of their communities.
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