Liberty
Letters

December 22, 2004
Joseph Story, #14
Religious
'Neutrality' & the Lemon Test
by Steve Farrell
They'd like to say that their approach to
religion in public life is what our Founders gave
us, what the Constitution meant in the Bill of
Rights -- but they'd be lying.
And, well, since they are kind of anti-religious
anyway, they do lie -- seemingly, without
remorse.
But the truth is, the supposed tried and tested
'Lemon Test' (1) that they all stand behind as if
it were the voice of God (okay, NOT the voice of
God!) -- which mandates that government must be
neutral about religion, that is, that government
must force everyone who works in a public place,
teaches or learns in a public classroom, stands
behind a public podium desiring to state his or her
position on this or that point of law or morality,
to SHUT UP about their faith, OR ELSE; -- such a
test is as far from what the Founders gave us, as
far from what the Constitution meant by its Bill of
Rights as one can get.
In 1838, Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story, who
had been, at that juncture, on the Supreme Court
for 25 years, and who was thus a contemporary of
the Founding Fathers, wrote his A Familiar
Exposition of the Constitution of the United
States, which would be incorporated into his
even more widely studied, Commentaries on the
Constitution of the United States (a required
text in every law school for nearly a century, and
for some, still longer), made it crystal clear how
dishonest, how off the beaten trail his
contemporaries in the courts, in the legislative
halls, in the schools are today.
Commenting on the Freedom of Religion clause in
the First Amendment, he informs the modern mind
quite bluntly:
- Indeed, the right of a society or government
to interfere in matters of religion, will hardly
be contested by any persons, who believe that
piety, religion, and morality are intimately
connected with the well being of the state, and
indispensable to the administration of civil
justice. The promulgation of the great doctrines
of religion, the being, and attributes, and
providence of one Almighty God; the
responsibility to Him for all our actions,
founded upon moral accountability; a future
state of rewards and punishments; the
cultivation of all the personal, social, and
benevolent virtues;-- these never can be a
matter of indifference in any well-ordered
community.
-
- It is, indeed, difficult to conceive, how
any civilized society can well exist without
them. And, at all events, it is impossible for
those, who believe in the truth of Christianity,
as a Divine revelation, to doubt, that it is the
especial duty of government to foster, and
encourage it among all the citizens and
subjects.
-
- This is a point wholly distinct from that of
the right of private judgment in matters of
religion, and of the freedom of public worship,
according to the dictates of one's
conscience.
-
-
at the time of the adoption of the
Constitution, and of the amendment to it, now
under consideration, the general, if not the
universal, sentiment in America was, that
Christianity ought to receive encouragement from
the State, so far as such encouragement was not
incompatible with the private rights of
conscience, and the freedom of religious
worship. An attempt to level all religions, and
to make it a matter of state policy to hold all
in utter indifference, would have created
universal disapprobation, if not universal
indignation. (2)
Yes, you heard it right. The purpose of the
freedom of religion clause was to encourage, not be
indifferent to Christianity.
No, this is not about religious tests for
office, not about civil punishments, exclusions, or
favors for one faith over another. Not about
establishing a state church. Not about
compassionate conservatism and its socialist,
Democratic Party mimicking penchant to force you to
love your neighbor as yourself via taxation.
Forget that. Justice Story is simply talking
about letting men speak freely on the subjects of
religion and morality in every forum, public or
private, so that the morality of the people, the
very conscience of the people, will be at a high
enough pitch to sustain liberty.
What does that mean? A scripture informs us, "I
the Lord, make you free, therefore ye are free
indeed; and the law also maketh you free.
Nevertheless, when the wicked rule the people
mourn." (3)
That is, a nation without scruples, call it free
if you will, is a nation in bondage, or on its
way.
How can there be respect for private property
and every other right, how can there be men in
office who restrain themselves from power grabbing
and every other abuse, if there is no solid and
enduring belief in right and wrong?
Thus, religious conviction is vital to the
health of the state.
And so, "The real difficulty" says Justice
Story, "lies in ascertaining the limits, to which
government may rightfully go, in fostering and
encouraging religion."
That's the real test, the only test we ought to
be debating. How to encourage religion and morality
without compelling individuals to be religious.
Footnotes
1. The "Lemon Test" was formulated by Chief
Justice Warren Burger by the majority opinion in
Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971). As articulated by
Chief Justice Burger, the test's first two
requirements are a) that a statute must have a
secular legislative purpose and b) that its
principal or primary effect must be one that
neither advances nor inhibits religion.
2, Story, Joseph. A Familiar Exposition of
the Constitution of the United States, 1840, p.
315 -316.
3. Doctrine and Covenants 98:9, Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Farrell
Archive
Enrich
your life with a book about politics and current
events...
Enrich
your political & social life with a politics or
news magazine...
|