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Presidential
Election 2008:
Politics & Religion
by
Alan Shapiro
To
the Teacher:
The
role of religion in politics has become a controversial 2008 election
issue. Republican candidate Mitt Romney felt compelled to respond
to questions about his faith. Debate moderators asked about religion
and faith. A campaign ad for candidate Mike Huckabee flashed the
words "CHRISTIAN LEADER." Meanwhile, one survey reported
that a majority of Americans believe the founders of the U.S.
intended it to be a Christian nation.
Below
is an introductory quiz for students on the question of politics
and religion. Following it, three student readings address: 1)
the Constitution and the founders on religion, 2) presidential
candidates' speeches on faith and politics, and 3) the appropriateness
of religious questions directed to candidates.
See
"Teaching on Controversial Issues" on this website for
suggestions on handling sensitive topics such as this one. For
further background on the church-state issue, see also "Separation
of Church & State: Four Case Studies."
Church
and State: An introductory quiz
Before
each number write T (True), F (False) or U (Uncertain)
1.
To run for the U.S. presidency, a candidate must belong to
an established religion.
2.
The founders of the United States intended it to be a Christian
nation.
3.
Congress appropriates money for the use and support of religious
groups.
4.
The words "God" and "Christianity" appear
in the Constitution.
Answers:
All
of the statements in the quiz are false.
1) See the quotations in Reading 1 from the Constitution and the
Bill of Rights
2) See "Presidents Washington and Adams on Christianity,
below.
3) See the First Amendment.
4) See the Constitution. The appearance on US currency of the
words "In God We Trust" and the words "under God"
in the Pledge of Allegiance began in the 1950s after Congressional
legislation.
Student
Reading 1:
Religion, the Constitution and the founders of
the US
Sixty-five percent of Americans believe that the founders of the
U.S. intended that it be a Christian nation, according to a survey
released by the First Amendment Center (9/11/07, www.firstamendmentcenter.org).
But
is this majority view correct? Here are some quotations from the
Constitution and from the views of the first four U.S. presidents.
Constitution
of the United States:
Senators
and representatives, the members of the state legislatures, and
all executive and judicial officers "shall be bound by oath
or affirmation, to support this constitution; but no religious
test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or
public trust under the United States."
--Article VI
"Congress
shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or
prohibiting the free exercise thereof
."
--First Amendment to the Constitution
U.S.-Tripoli Treaty:
"As
the government of the United States of America is not in any sense
founded on the Christian religion--and as it has in itself no
character of enmity against the laws, religion or tranquility
of Musselmen [Muslims]
it is declared by the parties that
no pretext arising from religious opinions shall ever produce
an interruption of the harmony between the two countries.'
-- From the treaty of 1796-1797 between the United States and
Tripoli, which was negotiated by the Washington Administration,
ratified by the Senate, and proclaimed by President Adams on June
10, 1797. (See Irving Brant, The Bill of Rights: Its Origins
and Meaning.)
President Thomas Jefferson:
In
the First Amendment, the United States has built "a wall
of separation between church and state."
--President Thomas Jefferson, in a letter to the Danbury, Connecticut
Baptist Association, 1802
President James Madison:
In
1811, Congress passed a bill reserving five acres worth about
$10 for a Baptist meeting house on public lands. President Madison
vetoed the measure because it would be a precedent for appropriating
U.S. funds "for the use and support of religious societies,
contrary to the article of the Constitution which declares that
Congress shall make no law respecting a religious establishment."
President Madison was also chief author of the Bill of Rights.
For
discussion
1.
What questions do students have about the reading? How might they
be answered?
2.
What meanings do you give to the words "no religious test"
and "no law respecting an establishment of religion"?
Ask students to consider the following two situations:
a) A state pays for the transportation of students attending religious
schools.
b) A state provides a prayer for students to recite at the beginning
of the school day.
In
your opinion, does either state action violate the "establishment"
clause of the First Amendment? Why or why not? (Note: Each of
these cases and the Supreme Court decisions on them is discussed
in "Separation of Church &
State: Four Case Studies" on this website.)
3.
Why do you suppose that the US government thought it necessary
to emphasize in its treaty with Tripoli that the nation "is
not in any sense founded on the Christian religion"?
4.
Do you think the following actions would breach "a wall
of separation between church and state"? Why or why not?
a) A president concludes a speech to the nation with the words,
"God bless our nation."
b) Congress passes a bill that appropriates money to support the
rebuilding of a church, synagogue or mosque destroyed in a hurricane.
5.
What do you think congressional legislation reserving five
acres for a Baptist meeting house had to do with "an establishment
of religion" in President Madison's mind? Do you agree with
his veto? Why or why not?
Student
Reading 2:
Presidential candidates on church and state
John
Kennedy
In
1928, Al Smith became the first Roman Catholic to run for president,
and he lost, in good part, because a fair number of Americans
would not accept a Roman Catholic as their leader. Some believed
his election would give the Pope power over the U.S.
In
1960, John Kennedy wanted to head off a similar result and decided
to address the issue of his Roman Catholicism directly. Below
are excerpts from his speech to Southern Baptist ministers on
September 12, 1960.
"I
believe in an America where the separation of church and state
is absolute
.I believe in an America that is officially neither
Catholic, Protestant nor Jewish; where no public official either
request or accepts instructions on public policy from the Pope,
the National Council of Churches, or any other ecclesiastical
source
.where religious liberty is so indivisible that an
act against one church is treated as an act against all
.
"I
believe in an America where religious intolerance will someday
end, where all men and all churches are treated as equal; where
every man has the same right to attend or not to attend the church
of his choice
.
"I
believe in a president whose religious views are his own private
affair, neither imposed by him upon the nation, or imposed by
the nation upon him as a condition to holding that office
.
"Whatever
issue may come before me as president-on birth control, divorce,
censorship, gambling or any other subject-I will make my decision
in
accordance with what my conscience tells me to be the national
interests, and without regard to outside religious pressures or
dictates."
Mitt
Romney
Mitt
Romney is a Mormon--that is, he is a member of the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints, as the religion is formally designated.
He is the first Mormon to run for president.
Romney
fell behind Mike Huckabee, a former Baptist minister, in Iowa
polls published in late November. A Newsweek poll of 1,406
Iowans asked registered voters the following question: "Do
you consider people of the Mormon faith to be Christian?"
57% of respondents said yes, 27% said no, and 16% said "don't
know."
After
some months of hesitation and probably experiencing pressures
similar to those John Kennedy had felt, Romney decided to speak
publicly about his religious faith before his supporters at the
George H.W. Bush Presidential Library on December 5, 2007. An
excerpt:
"There
are some who may feel that religion is not a matter to be seriously
considered in the context of the weighty threats that face us.
If so, they are at odds with the nation's founders, for they,
when our nation faced its greatest peril, sought the blessings
of the Creator. And further, they discovered the essential connection
between the survival of a free land and the protection of religious
freedom. In John Adams' words, 'Our Constitution was made for
a moral and religious people.'"
.
"Freedom
requires religion just as religion requires freedom
.Freedom
and religion endure together or perish alone
.
"Let
me assure you that no authorities of my church, or any church
for that matter, will ever exert influence on presidential decisions.
Their authority is theirs within the province of church affairs
and it ends where the affairs of the nation begin
.
"There
is one fundamental about which I am often asked. What do I believe
about Jesus Christ? I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of
God and the savior of mankind
.
"We
separate church and state in this country for good reason. No
religion should dictate to the state nor should the state interfere
with the free practice of religion. But in recent years the notion
of the separation of church and state has been taken by some well
beyond its original meaning. They seek to remove from the public
domain any acknowledgement of God. Religion is seen as merely
a private affair with no place in public life. It's as if they
are intent on establishing a new religion in American-the religion
of secularism. They are wrong.
"The
founders proscribed the establishment of a state religion, but
they did not countenance the elimination of religion from the
public square. We are a nation 'under God' and in God we do indeed
trust
.
"Any
believer in religious freedom, any person who has knelt in prayer
to the Almighty, has a friend and ally in me. And so it is for
hundreds of millions of our countrymen: we do not insist on a
single strain of religion--rather we welcome our nation's symphony
of faith."
Barack Obama
The
only other presidential candidate to address religion and politics
at length is Barack Obama, but he did so before becoming a candidate.
He has said he was "not raised in a religious household,"
but as an adult he became a member of the Trinity United Church
of Christ. He made the following comments in a speech before the
Call to Renewal Conference sponsored by Sojourners on June 28,
2006.
"Democracy
demands that the religiously motivated translate their concerns
into universal, rather than religion-specific values. It requires
that their proposals be subject o argument and amenable to reason.
I may be opposed to abortion for religious reasons, but if I seek
to pass a law banning the practice, I cannot simply point to the
teachings of my church or invoke God's will. I have to explain
why abortion violates some principle that is accessible to people
of all faiths, and those with no faith at all."
"
.Politics
depends upon an ability to persuade each other of common aims
based on a common reality. It involves the compromise, the art
of what's possible
.
"A
sense of proportion should
guide those who police the boundaries
between church and state. Not every mention of God in public is
a breach in the wall of separation--context matters. It is doubtful
that children feel oppressed or brainwashed as a consequence of
muttering the phrase 'under God.' I didn't. Having voluntary student
prayer groups use school property to meet should not be a threat."
For
discussion
1.
What questions do you have about the reading? How might they be
answered?
2.
John Kennedy said a president's religious views should be
"his own private affair." Do Romney and Obama agree?
Why or why not?
3.
Do you think that Kennedy would agree with Obama's view that the
use of school property
for voluntary prayer groups is not "a breach in the wall
of separation"? Why or why not? Would Kennedy agree with
Romney's warning about "the religion of secularism"?
Why or why not? How would you explain what Romney means by the
"religion of secularism"?
4.
What significance might there be in the audience these candidates
chose for presenting their speeches?
5.
Do you agree with John Adams' quote in Romney's speech? Why
or why not? Does morality require religious belief? Why or why
not? Does freedom require religion? Consider not only the experience
of the US, but the experience of other countries: Iran, Sweden,
Saudi Arabia
6.
Do Romney and Obama agree about the "acknowledgement
of God" in the public domain? Do you agree? Why or why not?
7.
What words does Romney cite for his view that the founders
"did not countenance the elimination of religion from the
public square"? What is the source of these words?
8.
Why do you suppose that Obama believes that on an issue like abortion
a leader must not invoke religious reasons to support his or her
opinion but rather a principle that "people of all faiths
and those with no faith at all" might accept? Do you agree?
Why or why not?
Student
Reading 3:
The role of religion in the presidential campaign
New
York Times editorial, 12/7/07:
"The
authors of the Constitution knew that requiring specific declarations
of religious belief (like Mr. Romney saying he believes Jesus
was the son of God) is a step toward imposing that belief on all
Americans. That is why they wrote in Article VI that 'no religious
test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or
public trust under the United States."
Online
responses to the Times editorial:
"Once,
just once, I'd like to hear a candidate, when asked about his
or her religious beliefs, reply: 'My religious beliefs are none
of your business. Our form of government rightfully requires that
government take no part in promoting religious beliefs.'"--Steve
Emmons
"I
am an atheist. I served in the military. I want a president who
considers me just as worthy an American as anyone else. 'Freedom
requires religion just as religion requires freedom.' The latter
may be true, Mr. Romney, but the former most certainly is not."--Brent
Danley
A debate
question
In
a presidential debate sponsored by CNN and YouTube, one person
made this comment, while holding up the Bible: "This question
will tell us everything we need to know about you. Do you believe
every word of this book?"
On
the WNBC program "Hardball," host Chris Matthews asked
candidate Mike Huckabee about this and other questions like it.
Matthews:
"[The Constitution] says there should be no religious test
ever required as qualification to any office or public trust
..Why
are you Republican candidates submitting to religious vetting
about your belief in the literal nature of the Bible? Why put
up with those kinds of questions?"
Huckabee:
"Well, Chris, when guys like you quit asking it, we'll quit
answering it
.If we act like we're not going to answer them,
then we're going to get hammered for being unwilling to address
the questions that are put to us. So that's why I keep answering
them."
Huckabee
campaign ad
"Faith
doesn't just influence me. It really defines me. I don't have
to wake up every day wondering, 'What do I need to believe?'"
--Campaign ad for Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee,
former governor of Arkansas and former Baptist minister. As he's
speaking the screen flashes in capital letters the words, "CHRISTIAN
LEADER."
McCain statement
"The
Constitution established the United States as a Christian nation."
--John McCain, interview with Beliefnet
"Appropriate"
and "relevant" questions
"I
think you can ask a Quaker, for example, 'Are you capable of being
commander-in-chief?' Or, 'Are you a pacifist?'....I think you
can ask a Jew, 'Are you able if you're Orthodox to serve and act
as president on the Sabbath?' But I don't think 'Do you believe
in Jesus Christ as the savior of mankind?' is an appropriate question
or that it should be answered." [What's missing from all
this talk about religion and politics] is its relevance to governance
--
an explanation for why these questions should matter in our assessment
of who should be president."
--Kathleen Hall Jamieson, professor at University of Pennsylvania
and Director of the Annenberg Public Policy Center (Bill Moyers
Journal, PBS, 12/7/07)
"Religion is particularly relevant when it has bearing on
policy matters. Whether we should teach, for example, intelligent
design, in our public schools
. The soul of religious freedom
[is] the freedom to choose or reject God. And, really, if we're
honest with ourselves, those of us who believe in a Christian
faith, there's no real evangelism without recognizing that a person
has a freedom to either respond to God's call or to reject God's
call. That's a personal decision that is made. And we always have
wanted in our country, and in our best have always tried, to ensure
that we protect both the freedom to choose religion and the freedom
to reject religion.
.One can be deeply, deeply religious
and fight tooth and nail for his neighbor or her neighbor whose
mind or conscience has not been swayed in the same way."
--Melissa Rogers, Director of Center for Religion and Public
Affairs at the Divinity School, Wake Forest University and former
counsel of the Baptist Joint Committee on Public Affairs (Bill
Moyers Journal, PBS, 12/7/07)
For
discussion
1.
What questions do you have on the reading? How might they
be answered?
2.
Do you agree with one, both or neither of the two comments
about the Times editorial? Why or why not?
3.
Imagine yourself a presidential candidate. How, if at all,
would you have answered the question about the Bible?
4.
Would it have been appropriate for Huckabee to refuse to answer
the question about the Bible? Why or why not?
5.
Kathleen Hall Jamieson said that what is missing from the
current discussion about religion in politics is its "relevance
to governance." If you agree, which of the following possible
questions for candidates do you think would be "relevant
to governance" and why?
- What does your religion have to say about stem cell research
and would you uphold that view?
- Would your religion's views on abortion affect your selection
of a new member of the Supreme Court? If so, how? If not, why
not?
6.
Do you think Huckabee's ad with the words "CHRISTIAN
LEADER" unfairly injects religion into politics? Why or why
not?
7.
In the light of these readings, what question would you ask
McCain?
For
inquiry
1.
Since most of the founders of the United States regarded themselves
as Christians, why didn't they include the words "God"
and "Christianity" in the Constitution?
2.
Is President Bush's faith-based initiative a violation of
the First Amendment?
3.
Is studying the theory of intelligent design appropriate in
a public school? Why or why not?
4.
Would a non-denominational prayer to begin the school day in American
public schools be supported by the Constitution?
5.
What are the origins of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints and the major beliefs of its members?
For
writing
Write
a well-organized paper with an introduction, middle, and conclusion
in which you discuss your understanding of how Article VI of the
Constitution and the First Amendment to the Constitution should
be interpreted.
This
lesson was written for TeachableMoment.Org, a project of Morningside
Center for Teaching Social Responsibility. We welcome
your comments. Please email author Alan Shapiro at: ashapiro7@comcast.net.
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