Portrait of the USA
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Chapter
Eight
SEPARATING CHURCH AND STATE
Freedom of Religion
Early in their history, Americans rejected the concept of the
established or government-favored religion that had dominated --
and divided -- so many European countries. Separation of church
and state was ordained by the First Amendment to the U.S.
Constitution, which provides in part that "Congress shall make no
law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof...."
The First Amendment sounds straightforward, but at times it
is difficult even for American constitutional scholars to draw a
distinct line between government and religion in the United
States. Students in public schools may not pray publicly as part
of the school day, yet sessions of the U.S. Congress regularly
begin with a prayer by a minister. Cities may not display a
Christmas créche on public property, but the slogan "In God
We Trust" appears on U.S. currency, and money given to religious
institutions can be deducted from one's income for tax purposes.
Students who attend church-affiliated colleges may receive
federal loans like other students, but their younger siblings may
not receive federal monies specifically to attend religious
elementary or secondary schools.
It may never be possible to resolve these apparent
inconsistencies. They derive, in fact, from a tension built into
the First Amendment itself, which tells Congress neither to
establish nor to interfere with religion. Trying to steer a clear
course between those two dictates is one of the most delicate
exercises required of American public officials.
INTERPRETING THE FIRST AMENDMENT
One of the first permanent settlements in what became the
North American colonies was founded by English Puritans,
Calvinists who had been outsiders in their homeland, where the
Church of England was established. The Puritans settled in
Massachusetts, where they grew and prospered. They considered
their success to be a sign that God was pleased with them, and
they assumed that those who disagreed with their religious ideas
should not be tolerated.
When the colony's leaders forced out one of their members,
Roger Williams, for disagreeing with the clergy, Williams
responded by founding a separate colony, which became the state
of Rhode Island, where everyone enjoyed religious freedom. Two
other states originated as havens for people being persecuted for
their religious beliefs: Maryland as a refuge for Catholics and
Pennsylvania for the Society of Friends (Quakers), a Protestant
group whose members espouse plain living and pacifism.
Even after the adoption of the Constitution in 1787 and the
Bill of Rights (which includes the First Amendment) in 1791,
Protestantism continued to enjoy a favored status in some states.
Massachusetts, for example, did not cut its last ties between
church and state until 1833. (As written, the First Amendment
applies only to the federal government, not to the states. The
Fourteenth Amendment, ratified in 1868, forbids states to
"deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due
process of law." This clause has been interpreted to mean that
the states must protect the rights -- including freedom of
religion -- that are guaranteed by the Bill of Rights.)
In the 20th century, the relationship between church and
state reached a new stage of conflict -- that between civic duty
and individual conscience. The broad outlines of an approach to
that conflict took shape in a number of Supreme Court rulings.
Perhaps the most noteworthy of these was West Virginia State
Board of Education v. Barnette (1943). The suit stemmed from
the refusal of certain members of the Jehovah's Witness religion to
salute the American flag during the school day, as commanded by
state law. Because their creed forbade such pledges of loyalty,
the Witnesses argued, they were being forced to violate their
consciences. Three years earlier, the Supreme Court had upheld a
nearly identical law -- a decision that had been roundly
criticized. In the 1943 case, the Court in effect overruled
itself by invoking a different clause in the First Amendment, the
one guaranteeing freedom of speech. Saluting the flag was held to
be a form of speech, which the state could not force its citizens
to perform.
Since then the Supreme Court has carved out other exceptions
to laws on behalf of certain religious groups. There remains,
however, a distinction between matters of private conscience and
actions that adversely affect other people. Thus, members of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormons) were jailed
in the 19th century for practicing polygamy (subsequently the
Mormon Church withdrew its sanction of polygamy). More recently,
parents have been convicted of criminal negligence for refusing
to obtain medical help for their ailing children, who went on to
die, even though the parents' religious beliefs dictated that
they refuse treatment because faith would provide a cure.
PROTESTANTS -- LIBERAL AND CONSERVATIVE
Americans have been swept up in many waves of religious
excitement. One that occurred in the 1740s, called the Great
Awakening, united several Protestant denominations in an effort
to overcome a sense of complacency that had afflicted organized
religion. A second Great Awakening swept through New England in
the early 19th century.
Not all of New England's clergymen, however, were
sympathetic to the call for revival. Some had abandoned the
Calvinist idea of predestination, which holds that God has chosen
those who will be saved -- the "elect" -- leaving humans no
ability to affect their destinies through good works or other
means. Some ministers preached that all men had free will and
could be saved. Others took even more liberal positions, giving
up many traditional Christian beliefs. They were influenced by
the idea of progress that had taken hold in the United States
generally. Just as science adjusted our understanding of the
natural world, they suggested, reason should prompt reassessments
of religious doctrine.
Liberal American Protestantism in the 19th century was
allied with similar trends in Europe, where scholars were reading
and interpreting the Bible in a new way. They questioned the
validity of biblical miracles and traditional beliefs about the
authorship of biblical books. There was also the challenge of
Charles Darwin's theory of evolution to contend with. If human
beings were descended from other animals, as most scientists came
to believe, then the story of Adam and Eve, the biblical first
parents, could not be literally true.
What distinguished 19th-century liberal Protestants from
their 20th-century counterparts was optimism about the human
capacity for improvement. Some of the early ministers believed
that the church could accelerate progress by trying to reform
society. In the spirit of the gospels, they began to work on
behalf of the urban poor. Today's liberal clergymen -- not just
Protestants but Catholics and others, too -- may be less
convinced that progress is inevitable, but many of them have
continued their efforts on behalf of the poor by managing
shelters for homeless people, feeding the hungry, running
day-care centers for children, and speaking out on social issues.
Many are active in the ecumenical movement, which seeks to bring
about the reunion of Christians into one church.
While liberal Protestants sought a relaxation of doctrine,
conservatives believed that departures from the literal truth of
the Bible were unjustified. Their branch of Protestantism is
often called "evangelical," after their enthusiasm for the
gospels of the New Testament.
Evangelical Christians favor an impassioned, participatory
approach to religion, and their services are often highly
charged, with group singing and dramatic sermons that evoke
spirited responses from the congregation. The South, in
particular, became a bastion of this "old-time religion," and the
conservative Baptist church is very influential in that region.
In recent decades some preachers have taken their ministry to
television, preaching as "televangelists" to large audiences.
In 1925 the conflict between conservative faith and modern
science crystallized in what is known as the Scopes trial in
Tennessee. John Scopes, a high school biology teacher, was
indicted for violating a state law that forbade teaching the
theory of evolution in public schools. Scopes was convicted after
a sensational trial that featured America's finest criminal
lawyer of the time, Clarence Darrow, for the defense and the
renowned populist and former presidential candidate, William
Jennings Bryan, for the prosecution.
Since then the Supreme Court has ruled that laws banning the
teaching of evolution violate the First Amendment's prohibition
of establishing religion. Subsequently the state of Louisiana
tried a different approach: It banned the teaching of evolution
unless the biblical doctrine of special creation was taught as an
alternative. This, too, the Court invalidated as an establishment
of religion.
Despite the Supreme Court's clear rulings, this and similar
issues pitting reason versus faith remain alive. Religious
conservatives argue that teaching evolution alone elevates human
reason above revealed truth and thus is antireligious. And even
some thinkers who might otherwise be considered liberals have
argued that the media and other American institutions foster a
climate that tends to slight, if not ridicule, organized
religion. Meanwhile, the trend toward removing religious teaching
and practices from public schools has prompted some parents to
send their children to religious schools and others to educate
their children at home.
CATHOLICS AND RELIGIOUS SCHOOLS
By the time of the Civil War, over one million Irish
Catholics had come to the United States. In a majority Protestant
country, they and Catholics of other backgrounds were subjected
to prejudice. As late as 1960, some Americans opposed Catholic
presidential candidate John F. Kennedy on the grounds that, if
elected, he would do the Pope's bidding. Kennedy confronted the
issue directly, pledging to be an American president, and his
election did much to lessen anti-Catholic prejudice in the United
States.
Although Catholics were never denied access to public
schools or hospitals, beginning in the 19th century they built
institutions of their own, which met accepted standards while
observing the tenets of Catholic belief and morality. On the
other hand, the Catholic Church does not require its members to
go to church-run institutions. Many Catholic students attend
public schools and secular colleges. But Catholic schools still
educate many Catholic young people, as well as a growing number
of non-Catholics, whose parents are attracted by the discipline
and quality of instruction.
Catholics have long recognized that the separation of church
and state protects them, like members of other religions, in the
exercise of their faith. But as the costs of maintaining a
separate educational system mounted, Catholics began to question
one application of that principle. Catholic parents reasoned that
the taxes they pay support public schools, but they save the
government money by sending their children to private schools,
for which they also pay tuition. They sought a way in which they
might obtain public funds to defray their educational expenses.
Parents who sent their children to other private schools, not
necessarily religious, joined in this effort.
The legislatures of many states were sympathetic, but the
Supreme Court ruled unconstitutional most attempts to aid
religious schools. In 2002, however, the Court upheld one city's voucher program, which gives financial aid to students who attend private -- not necessarily religious -- schools, ruling that the program assists families and does not sanction religious education.
LAND OF MANY FAITHS
Like Catholics, Jews were a small minority in the first
years of the American republic. Until the late 19th century, most
Jews in America were of German origin. Many of them belonged to
the Reform movement, a liberal branch of Judaism that had made
many adjustments to modern life. Anti-Semitism, or anti-Jewish
prejudice, was not a big problem before the Civil War. But when
Jews began coming to America in great numbers, anti-Semitism
appeared. Jews from Russia and Poland, who as Orthodox Jews
strictly observed the traditions and dietary laws of Judaism,
clustered in city neighborhoods when they first arrived in the
United States.
Usually, Jewish children attended public schools and took
religious instruction in special Hebrew schools. The children of
Jewish immigrants moved rapidly into the professions and into
American universities, where many became intellectual leaders.
Many remained religiously observant, while others continued to
think of themselves as ethnically Jewish, but adopted a secular,
nonreligious outlook.
To combat prejudice and discrimination, Jews formed the
B'nai Brith Anti-Defamation League, which has played a major role
in educating Americans about the injustice of prejudice and
making them aware of the rights, not only of Jews, but of all
minorities.
By the 1950s a three-faith model had taken root: Americans
were described as coming in three basic varieties -- Protestant,
Catholic, and Jew. The order reflects the numerical strength of
each group: In 2000 Protestants of all denominations comprised about 56 percent of the population; Catholics, 27 percent; and Jews, 2 percent.
Today the three-faith formula is obsolete. According to the 2000 Yearbook of American and Canadian Churches, U.S. Muslims account for approximately 1.5 percent of the population. It is estimated that the number of mosques in the United States -- today, about 1,200 -- has doubled in the last 20 years. Buddhism and Hinduism are growing with the arrival of immigrants from countries where these are the majority religions. In some cases, inner-city Christian churches whose congregations have moved to the suburbs have sold their buildings to Buddhists, who have refitted them to suit their practices.
PRINCIPLES OF TOLERANCE
America has been a fertile ground for new religions. The
Mormon and Christian Science Churches are perhaps the best-known
of the faiths that have sprung up on American soil. Because of
its tradition of noninterference in religious matters, the United
States has also provided a comfortable home for many small sects
from overseas. The Amish, for example, descendants of German
immigrants who reside mostly in Pennsylvania and neighboring
states, have lived simple lives, wearing plain clothes and
shunning modern technology, for generations.
Some small groups are considered to be religious cults
because they profess extremist beliefs and tend to glorify a
founding figure. As long as cults and their members abide by the
law, they are generally left alone. Religious prejudice is rare
in America, and interfaith meetings and cooperation are
commonplace.
The most controversial aspect of religion in the United
States today is probably its role in politics. In recent decades
some Americans have come to believe that separation of church and
state has been interpreted in ways hostile to religion. Religious
conservatives and fundamentalists have joined forces to become a
powerful political movement known as the Christian right. Among
their goals is to overturn, by law or constitutional amendment,
Supreme Court decisions allowing abortion and banning prayer in
public schools.
While some groups openly demonstrate their religious
convictions, for most Americans religion is a personal matter not
usually discussed in everyday conversation. The vast majority
practice their faith quietly in whatever manner they choose -- as
members of one of the traditional religious denominations, as
participants in nondenominational congregations, or as
individuals who join no organized group. However Americans choose
to exercise their faith, they are a spiritual people. Nine out of
ten Americans express some religious preference, and
approximately 70 percent are members of religious congregations.