Showing posts with label Christian nationalism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christian nationalism. Show all posts

Saturday, July 11, 2020

Establishment Clause: What's the test -- separation or neutrality?

The Supreme Court's June 30th decision in Espinoza v.Montana Department of Revenue:exposes the weakness of the Bill of Rights, namely, its vagueness. With respect to Espinoza, it's the vagueness of the religion Clauses that allows justices to interpret them according to .their own world views.

In the First Congress -- on June 8, 1789 -- Representative James Madison (Va.) proposed a bill of rights. A House committed on which Madison served considered his proposals, made some changes and the House its version of a bill of rights. The Senate took up the House bill and made some modifications. Madison served on the House-Senate conference committee and insisted on the House's version of the First Amendment. Senate negotiaters accepted the House's version of the First Amendment in exchange for some of its wording in other amendments. The states ratified ten of Congresses twelve proposals on December 15, 1791, including the religion clauses of the First Amendment:

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof ...

Madison promised during the ratification process of the Constitution that he would propose a bill of rights to fill a void that many felt was lacking in the Constitution.

The First Congress was very busy establishing a new form of government, leving little time for lower priority bill of rights. Tho there is little recorded of the committees discussions, one thing is clear that the Establishment Clause meant much more than prohibiting Congress from establishing a national religion. We know this because that proposal was voted down in the House committee.  Similarly, a proposal prohibiting Congress from enacing a law anything "touching religion" was likewise voted down. 

Where does that leave us as to the meaning of the Establishment Clause? Specifically, what does "an establishment of religion mean??

Textualism does not guuide us in interreting the Establiysment Clause because of its vaguendess. Secifically, "an establishment of religion" was not a phrase with establishmed meaning in 1789. What is clear, at least to me, is "an" is broad rather than narrow.

By: Robert V. Ritter, Founder, Jefferson Madison Center for Religious Liberty, July 11, 2020

Tuesday, June 16, 2020

Still not "We The People" for everyone

I'm happy for the LGBTQ community for last Monday's Supreme Court decisions in Bostock v. Clayton County, Ga. and Altitude Express v. Zarda

It's now (actually past time) for the Court to strike down the last major form of discrimination in the United States -- that of Christian privilege of "In G-d We Trust", "under G-d" in the Pledge of Allegiance, oaths with "So Help Me G-d", etc. 

Unless the Court does so, We The People does NOT mean Everyone. 244 years and waiting for America to rid itself of Christian privilege and Christian nationalism.

By: Robert V. Ritter, Founder, Jefferson Madison Center for Religious Liberty, June 16, 2020