Hi Friend,
What’s Wrong with Being a Christian Nation?
When the founders of America hammered out the
framework for democracy in our country they relied on the ethics of Christian
teachings as a foundation to build upon. There was no equivocation or apology,
just a desire to establish a system of laws that was fair to all people.
Christianity allowed diversity more than any other religious system. And the
founders were predominantly Christian so it was natural they would not choose
another religion as a basis for America.
But what does it mean to be
a Christian nation? It doesn’t mean a compulsory system of beliefs or
attendance at any particular denomination. It doesn’t mean that everybody
believes the same thing about Jesus Christ or even that all citizens believe in
God.
Then what is so important
about whether we are a Christian nation or not? As Constitutional law professor
Edward Mansfield wrote in the 19th century, Religious beliefs
determine both the justice and the “spirit” of the nation. "In every
country, the morals of a people—whatever they may be—take their form and spirit
from their religion.” For example our country prohibits polygamy which is an
acceptable practice in others. This prohibition was rooted in Christian
teaching.
Some cultures require women
to cover their faces, don’t allow them to hold a driver’s license or a passport
or accept their testimony in court. The marriage of brothers and sisters was
permitted among the Egyptians because such had been the precedent set by their
gods, Isis and Osiris. All cultures develop laws based on their religion. Mansfield went on to write, “In the
United States, Christianity is the original, spontaneous, and national
religion.”
Christianity has nothing to
fear from open evaluation. In fact God challenged the people of Israel to look at other
nations and compare blessings. Moses spoke to all Israel saying, "Search
the past, the time before you were born, all the way back to the time when God
created human beings on the earth. Search the entire earth. Has anything as
great as this ever happened before? Has anyone ever heard of anything like
this? Have any people ever lived after hearing a god speak to them from a fire,
as you have? Has any god ever dared to go and take a people from another nation
and make them his own, as the LORD your God did for you in Egypt? Before your very
eyes he used his great power and strength; he brought plagues and war, worked
miracles and wonders, and caused terrifying things to happen. The LORD has
shown you this, to prove to you that he alone is God and that there is no other.”
(Deuteronomy 4:32-35 GNB)
Bert Prelutsky, a Jewish
columnist for the Los Angeles Times wrote an opinion piece about America’s Christian
heritage “[W]ould you deny that India is a Hindu country,
that Turkey is Muslim, that Poland is Catholic? That doesn’t
mean those nations are theocracies. But when the overwhelming majority of a
country’s population is of one religion, and most Americans happen to be one
sort of Christian or another, only a … fool would deny the obvious. . . .This
is a Christian nation my friends. And all of us are fortunate it is one, and
that so many millions of Americans have seen fit to live up to the highest
precepts of their religion. It should never be forgotten that, in the main, it
was Christian soldiers who fought and died to defeat Nazi Germany and who
liberated the concentration camps. Speaking as a member of a minority group—and
one of the smaller ones at that—I say it behooves those of us who don’t accept
Jesus Christ as our savior to show some gratitude to those who do, and to start
respecting the values and traditions of the overwhelming majority of our fellow
citizens, just as we keep insisting that they respect ours.”
Radio personality Dennis
Prager also Jewish, defended the benefit of living in a Christian nation. “Recently,
I spoke to the Jewish community of a small North Carolina city. When some in the
audience mentioned their fear of rising religiosity among Christians, I asked
these audience-members if they loved living in their city. All of them said
they did. Is it a coincidence, I then asked, that the city you so love (for its
wonderful people, its safety for your children, its fine schools, and its
values that enable you to raise your children with confidence) is a highly
Christian city? Too many Americans do not appreciate the connection between
American greatness and American Christianity.”
What can be said but Amen!
Until next time,
Jim O'Brien