wrote:
PART 4
Generic God?
A more accurate description of the concept might be "ceremonial god
assertion." In other words, references to a generic god are
constitutionally valid so long as they are so trivial as to be
meaningless
in a religious sense. The Pledge of Allegiance, however, does not
refer to
a generic god. Rather, it refers to a very specific God, a god with a
capital "G." Thus, whatever ceremonial god assertion might be, it
certainly
is not represented by the inclusion of the phrase "under God" in a
daily
teacher led recitation of the Pledge of Allegiance by public school
elementary students. Including the phrase "under God" in such a daily
recitation does not qualify as mere ceremonial deism because it
contains
significant religious content, it is unquestionably controversial,
and it
does not have an established history.
Source of Information: Brief of Amici Curiae, Seattle Atheists, (and
others) in support of respondent, Elk Grove Unified School District v.
Newdow, p. 11.
**************************************************************************************
Ceremonial Deism and Public Religion
A body of scholarship exists that is so closely connected to
ceremonial
deism that I would be remiss if I did not at least briefly address it
in
this Article. That scholarship relates to what has been described as
the
American "civil religion" or "Public Religion" Indeed, some courts
have
used this concept to justify the constitutionality of practices I have
included under the rubric of ceremonial deism. . .
Much more has been written about civil religion than ceremonial
deism.
The most widely cited work in the area is Robert Bellah's Beyond
Belief.
Bellah wrote of "certain common elements of religious orientation
that the
great majority of Americans share" which have played a "crucial role"
in
the development of our political institutions and continue to
"provide a
religious dimension for the whole fabric of American life, including
the
political sphere," and which are "expressed in a set of beliefs,
symbols,
and rituals" Bellah labeled "the American civil religion." The tenets
of
this civil religion include "the existence of God, the life to come,
the
reward of virtue and the punishment of vice, and the exclusion of
religious
intolerance." To Bellah, the national motto "In God We Trust," the
inclusion of "under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance, the oath of
office,
and references to the deity in inaugural addresses signify that the
ultimate political sovereignty is attributed not to the people or its
leaders, but to God
A more recent book by Sanford Levinson, entitled Constitutional
Faith,
contemplates a radically different civil religion. Levinson's civil
religion consists of the "web of understandings, myths, symbols, and
documents" that justified the new American nation following the
Revolution.
To Levinson, civil religion is secular, but consists of items of
worship
analogous to traditional religion: the flag, the Declaration of
Independence, and the Constitution. Much as parents teach their
children to
revere the Bible, they teach them to revere the Constitution. The
worship
of the Constitution replaced the need for a national church, an
institution
the Framers had rejected.
Neither Bellah's nor Levinson's definition of civil religion
closely
resembles the definition of ceremonial deism articulated above.
Levinson's
civil religion involves religion metaphorically, not actually. . .
In sharp contrast, Bellah's version of civil religion does involve
core
elements of true sacral religion, though in a watered-down sense. . .
Source of Information: Rethinking the Constitutionality of Ceremonial
Deism, Steven B. Epstein, 96 Colum L. Rev. 2096-97 (1996).
*************************************************************************
Public Religion
Motives
Power, Its about Power
[Emphasis Added]
. . . Wherever one stands with respect to belief in God, it can
hardly
give comfort or satisfaction to have the Deity subjected to empty,
nonreligious uses "of a patriotic or ceremonial character." The bland
amalgamation of God and the state, while it may meet the test of the
Establishment Clause, leads at best to a kind of cant that all of us
may
find embarrassing.
In the same class, though perhaps more debatably, I'd put the
improvement on the Pledge of Allegiance fashioned by Congress in
1954. That
was a year, it will be recalled, when Senator Joseph McCarthy was
still
exploring how low we might be sunk in his ersatz but grimly
destructive
crusade against "subversives." It was also a year McCarthy's
colleagues
found it meet to insert the words "under God" after the reference to
this "one nation" in the pledge. The House Report on the bill that
became this
law said that "it would serve to deny the atheistic and materialistic
concepts of communism with its attendant subservience of the
individual. "17 Some very brief remarks on the floor reaffirmed that
inserting the
words "under God" would "strengthen the national resistance to
communism."18 The only cerebration manifested on the subject of the
bill
had to do with the number and placement of commas in the revised
pledge -i.e., whether it should be simply "one nation under God" or
"one Nation,
under God," as the legislative judgment finally determined. The short
debate on this subject was suitably placid. There was no debate at
all on
the merits of the revision and no vote against it. Who, after all,
would be
caught in the open excluding God?
The uses of God as a "ceremonial and patriotic" implement go
forward
steadily in more obtrusive and questionable forms. The insistent
demand to
have creches and menorahs in public sites continues to present tough
questions leading to the varieties of intricate and disputed answers
mentioned in Chapter i. The legal issues are tricky enough to promise
a
continued supply of test cases. To oversimplify a lot, the hardest
cases -where private groups want to put their creches or menorahs in
the public
park or on City Hall plaza-pit the First Amendment free-speech rights
of
those groups against the claim of the objectors that this placement
of the
symbols indicates government endorsement of the religion symbolized.
Without questioning the difficulty of these cases, it is fair to
conjure
with the question why they keep happening. The answer lies, I think,
in the
very nature of hostile and competitive patriotism out of which one
might
wish that God could have been kept. The creche on the public
square--to "put Christ back into Christmas," as its sponsors
say--plants the religious
flag of the angry nativists winning theirs back from the alien,
infidel
intruders. (Who do they think they are?) The menorah sponsors are a
kindred
but more pathetic story. (If the goyim can do it, so can we.) Both are
joined together as enemies of the mutual forbearance that is at the
heart
of religious freedom in a pluralist society.
[PP 58-60]
The gist of the demand is that THE MUSCLE OF YOUR RELIGION be
displayed
in the public space. THE SUBJECT as is usual with facile shows of
patriotism, IS POWER. It is put, to be sure, as a matter of free
expression
by the creche and menorah advocates, but that is largely fraud or
self-delusion.. There are ample private spaces in every community,
amply
visible, for displaying religious icons. The insistence on the public
space, the space that belongs to all of us, is to show those others,
the
nonadherents. The distinction is readily, if not always malevolently,
blurred. . .
[P 60]
Whatever misunderstandings may beset a recent refugee from Soviet
atheism, there is no ground for similar confusion, and probably no
similar
confusion, among most people who want their religious symbols
standing on
public property. The symbols make a statement-not of religious faith.
They
are not needed for that. They assert simply and starkly, as I've said,
POWER OVER the nonbelievers. This was underscored for me in a fleeting
moment of a case that ended 4-4 in the Supreme Court, the equal
division (Justice Powell was ill and absent) resulting in a defeat
for the village
of Scarsdale (with me as unsuccessful counsel) when it sought to deny
a
place for a creche in a public circle.20 In the course of that
proceeding,
one of the sponsors of the creche was asked about his interest in
viewing
it while it stood on Scarsdale's Boniface Circle during the Christmas
season. To my surprise as the questioner, it turned out that he never
bothered to go look at the creche at all, let alone to admire or draw
inspiration from it. But on reflection that should not have been so
surprising. The creche was not there for him to see or appreciate for
its
intrinsic spiritual value in his religious universe. It was there for
others, who professed other religions or none, so that the clout of
his
religious group should be made manifest-above all to any in the
sharply
divided village who would have preferred that it not be there: This
is the
low road., followed by at least a good number of those who seek for.
their
religion and its symbols the imprimatur of government. If it is
religious
at all, this stance betokens a weak and self-doubting species of
faith.
[P. 61]
Source of Information: Faith and Freedom, Religiosity in America,
Marvin E.
Frankel (retired U S Federal District Court judge) Hill and Wang, N Y
(1994) pp. 55-64.
*********************************************************************************************
Why the Court Should Reject This Pledge, and Why the Department of
Justice
Is Wrong To Support It
One would have thought that conservatives would have sided with the
parent's right to raise one's child according to one's own religious
beliefs, but as the Framers understood only too well, one should never
underestimate the powerful temptation to extend one's power when one
can.
If anyone thinks that this case is not about the power of the
entrenched religious versus the powerlessness of nonbelievers in this
society, today's oral argument proves them wrong. Chief Justice
Rehnquist
floated several proposals to defend "under God." First, he stated
that the
two words were not really a "prayer," a distinction without a
difference.
. . . The result is a tyranny of principles (including the
emotivist's
principle of deference to "objective expertise"), as well as a
concomitant
response in favor of a tyranny of individuals (anarchy). These twin
aspects
of emotivism are evident, for example, in the rise of efforts, under
the
rubrics of free speech and free exercise, to place formal Christian
prayers
sanctioned by school authority back into the public schools. The free
exercise right is asserted here in terms of anarchical, radical
individual
rights: "my" individual rights, "my" absolute right to free exercise,
without regard to the disestablishment principle or to competing
interests
of the community. Interestingly, where they are able, religious
adherents (also or instead) argue the authoritarian side of
emotivism: They reject
any court's interpretations of the first amendment which recognize
civil
liberties contrary to their beliefs because these interpretations are
based
upon nothing more than the justices' personal opinions and subjective
feelings.13 Their majority status and legislative influence are the
hard
facts which objectively, and thus conclusively, should decide the
issue.
Source of Information: Regulating Religion, The Courts and the Free
Exercise Clause. Catharine Cookson, Oxford University Press, (2001) p
(Preface) IX.
****************************************************************************************
If Alabama's Chief Justice Moore weren't a judicial demagogue and
if he
really wanted to "do it right," he wouldn't have done it the way he
did.
He'd have talked it over with his colleagues, he'd have done some
research,
and he'd have solicited input from legal scholars and historians --
and
there wouldn't be any "Ten Commandments controversy" whatever. Moore
would
have had his Moses, and more.... But, in my opinion, politicians like
Moore
aren't as much about Moses and the great Judeo-Christian tradition as
they
are about using Moses and the great Judeo-Christian tradition to
create
controversy and get votes.(11.04.2001)
Source of Information: BurtLaw's Court Gazing II; BurtLaw.Com --
LawAndEverythingElse.Com; Copyright (c) 2001 Burton Randall Hanson
***********************************************************************************************
[Scroll down to: The "Ten Commandments movement" revisited.
The entire argument rests on wanting the government to acknowledge
God in
various forms and fashions. To create at the very least perceived
unions
between church (religion) and state (government) It's about power, in
some
instances money, politics, and in your face to all non-believers
and/or "incorrect" believers.
Let's look at that word:
Acknowledge: (ak not/ij), vt., -edged -edg-ing.
1. to admit to be real or true; recognize the existence, truth, or
fact
of; confess to: to acknowledge belief in God.
2. to show or express recognition or realization of: to an
acknowledge
an acquaintance by bowing.
3. to recognize the authority, validity, or claims of: The member
nations acknowledged the powers of the President.
4. to show or express appreciation or gratitude for: to
acknowledge a
favor
5. to indicate or make known the receipt of: to acknowledge a
letter
6. to take notice of or reply to: to acknowledge a greeting
7. Law. to confirm as binding or of legal force: to acknowledge a
deed. [late :NlE acknow- leche, equiv. to acknow (OE acndwan to
recognize; see
A-3, Ib acid!- -ac-
-Syn. 1. concede, grant. acknowledge, admit, confess agree in the
idea
of declaring something to be true. Acknowledge implies making a
statement
reluctantly, often about something previously denied: to acknowledge a
fault. Admit especially implies acknowledging something under
pressure: to
admit a charge. Confess usually means stating somewhat formally an
admission of wrongdoing, crime, or shortcoming: to confess guilt; to
confess an inability to understand. -Ant. 1. deny.
Acknowledgment (ak no1Hj mant), n.
1. act of and an acknowledging or admitting.
2. recognition of the existence or truth of anything: the
acknowledgment of a sovereign power.
3. an expression of appreciation.
4. a . a thing done or given in appreciation or gratitude.
5.Law:
a. declaration by a person before an official that be executed a
legal
document.
b. an official certificate of a formal acknowledging.
c. public recognition by a man of an illegitimate child as his own.
Also. esp. Brit. wteria) ac.knowliedge.ment. [acknowledge + -ment]
Source of Information:
Webster's New Universal Unabridged Dictionary, Barnes &: Noble
Books, (1994) p. 12.
It has always been about power. Going back to the First Century A D
it was
about power.
Church and state unions have always been about power. "Maintain the
status
quo" has always been about power--mainlining the existing power
balance and
structure. "Recognize minorities and give them the equality they are
entitled to" is about power, The disenfranchised have little power,
they
want some, those that have it don't want to give it up. Same sex
marriages,
again power. Gays are demanding equality and those who have the power
currently feel threatened and don't want them to be equal in power.
Commentary about "Ceremonial Deism" from a variety of sources
********************************************************************************
Christians Against "Ceremonial Deism."
Another description of the "American Civil Religion" is "Ceremonial
Deism." Although many Christians used to claim victory when Christian
symbols were approved by a court, many are now recognizing these
victories
as pyrrhic.
[Pyrrhic victory--a victory gained at too great a cost.]
***********************************************************************************
Ceremonial Deism in Classical times
If "Ceremonial Deism" is suppose to mean something that is so
instilled in
our culture that it has basically lost any real religion meaning,
importance or significance, then kindly explain the reaction of the
Congress, the President, the justice Department, many religious
leaders and
large segments of the public to the June 26, 2002 "Under God" ruling.
Those reactions alone establish the falsity of the Ceremonial Deism
claims.
**************************************************************************************
Balkinization
Jack M. Balkin
Note that the doctrine of ceremonial Deism is a double edged
sword. It
allows state officials to acknowledge God's existence, but only by
requiring them to affirm that the meaning of the acknowledgment is
purely
ceremonial and doesn't reflect fervent adherence to a particular
religious
belief. However, one suspects that many people want to invoke God's
name
precisely because they do have such fervent beliefs and they want
other
people to share in those beliefs, or, at the very least, publicly say
the
words that reflect such beliefs. But *that* purpose for legislation
really
is impermissible-- Our Constitution doesn't allow us to force our
religion
on other people.
If the Supreme Court takes the Ninth Circuit case, they may very
well
reverse the decision on the grounds I've just outlined-- that the
pledge is
just ceremonial Deism, and therefore doesn't mean what religious
Americans
want it to mean. That would be a predictable result, and an ironic
one.
But the irony works in both directions. For a court to strike down
the
words "under God," particularly when they have been said formulaicly
for
decades, may have exactly the opposite social meaning-- suggesting
that the
court is attempting to remove God from the public square. Ceremonial
Deism
by its nature tries to have it both ways. It treats certain religious
expressions as being both religious and not "really" religious. It
justifies this on the grounds that the practice is one of long
standing and
its religious content has long since faded into the background. The
problem, however, is then that deviating from the status quo in any
direction-- making the government's claims more overtly religious or
removing the religious language altogether-- seems to create a social
meaning of non-neutrality with respect to religion. So in most cases
the
best thing to do with examples of ceremonial Deism is just to leave
them
alone.
SEE
Thoughts on Power, Ceremonial Deism & Public Religion
From a Variety of Sources
http://members.tripod.com/~candst/c-deism.htm
.
|