The Founders
Confront Judge Moore
by Thom Hartmann
Judge Moore, the "Ten Commandments Judge" in Alabama,
says the controversy he and Fox news have stirred up is about
religion.
But it's not about religion. It's about power. A power that
seeks, ultimately, to replace democracy.
Religious fundamentalists, pandered to by Fox's evening
entertainers, turned the showmanship of an Alabama judge (soon to be
political candidate) into a national media circus just in time to
divert media coverage away from George W. Bush gutting the Clean Air
Act. The judge's main arguments for keeping a graven image of the
Ten Commandments in the Alabama Supreme Court rotunda were, he said,
that America is a Judeo/Christian nation founded by Christians, and
that the foundation of American law is the Bible and the Ten
Commandments.
The most well-known of the Founders and Framers of this nation -
those who wrote the Declaration of Independence, led the
Revolutionary war, and wrote the Constitution - would strongly
disagree on all counts.
Instead, the record tells us that many of the Founders and
Framers believed that secular democracy is a more powerful unifying
force for a decent and peaceful civil society than any religion ever
was or could be. Although most were spiritual in their own ways, and
many were also openly religious, as students of history the Founders
and Framers knew the damage that organized religion could do when it
gained access to the reigns of political power.
The Founders clearly divided power into four categories:
military, religious, wealth/corporate, and political. The
interaction of these types of power produced the three historic
types of tyranny - warlord kings; theocratic popes; and wealthy
feudal lords or monopolistic corporations like the East India
Company.
Every past tyrannical government in the history of civilization,
our Founders realized, had oppressed its citizens because it had
combined political power with one or more of the other three
categories. This, they believed, was the fatal flaw of past forms of
governance, and they were determined to isolate political power from
each and all of the other three to prevent America from repeating
the mistakes of previous nations.
Thus, political power would only be held by "We the
People," and never again shared with military, corporate, or
religious agencies.
For example, to keep political power from combining with military
power in the new United States of America, the army was put under
the civilian control of the elected President, and he, in turn, was
legally incapable of declaring war (that power being given solely to
Congress). As James Madison pointed out on April 20, 1795,
presidents will always be tempted to gain excessive power by
becoming warlords, which is why Congress must withhold from
presidents the power to make war.
"In war," Madison wrote, "the discretionary power
of the Executive [President] is extended. Its influence in dealing
out offices, honors, and emoluments is multiplied; and all the means
of seducing the minds, are added to those of subduing the force of
the people. The same malignant aspect in republicanism may be traced
in the inequality of fortunes, and the opportunities of fraud,
growing out of a state of war...and in the degeneracy of manners and
morals, engendered by both. No nation could preserve its freedom in
the midst of continual warfare."
Combining political power with the economic power of great wealth
was also to be banned, one of the reasons why Thomas Jefferson
suggested amending the Constitution to "ban monopolies in
commerce." As Jefferson pointed out in a December 26, 1825
letter to William Giles, economic powers will always seek to gain
political power and thus threaten to create "a single and
splendid government of an aristocracy, founded on banking
institutions, and moneyed incorporations under the guise and cloak
of their favored branches of manufactures, commerce and navigation,
riding and ruling over the plundered ploughman and beggared yeomanry
[working class]."
And, with the memory of the Salem witch trials and other
religious atrocities still fresh in their minds, the Founders knew
that those among the organized religions who sought to combine
political power with their existing religious power would be
unrelenting and could be deadly to democracy.
While our Founders were well schooled in the history of the
Crusades they also knew from first-hand experience how oppressive
religious men could be with even small amounts of political power.
Ben Franklin fled Boston when he was a teenager in part to escape
the oppressive environment created by politically powerful
preachers, and for the rest of his life was openly hostile to the
idea of secular political power being wielded by those who also hold
religious power. Although he was enthralled by the
"mystery" of the spiritual experience, Franklin had little
use for the organized religions of the day. In his autobiographical
"Toward The Mystery," he wrote, "I have found
Christian dogma unintelligible. Early in life I absented myself from
Christian assemblies."
Franklin - like most of the more well-known Founders - was a
Deist, a philosophy made popular by early Unitarians who held that
the Creator made the universe long ago and has since chosen not to
interfere in any way, that neither Jesus nor anybody else was divine
(or, alternatively, that we are all divine and shall all do as Jesus
did and said we would), and that there is only one God and not
three.
Another founding Deist who resisted giving political power to
those with religious power was George Washington.
On the topic of Washington's religious sentiments, Thomas
Jefferson wrote in his personal diary entry for February 1, 1799,
"when the clergy addressed General Washington on his departure
from the Government, it was observed in their consultation, that he
had never, on any occasion, said a word to the public which showed a
belief in the Christian religion, and they thought they should so
pen their address, as to force him at length to declare publicly
whether he was a Christian or not. They did so.
"However," Jefferson noted to his diary, "the old
fox was too cunning for them. He answered every article of their
address particularly except that, which he passed over without
notice." Jefferson concluded that Washington "never did
say a word on the subject in any of his public papers, except in his
valedictory letter to the Governors of the States, when he resigned
his commission in the army, wherein he speaks of 'the benign
influence of the Christian religion.' I know that Gouverneur Morris,
who pretended to be in his secrets [in Washington's confidence] and
believed himself to be so, has often told me that General Washington
believed no more of that [fundamentalist Christian] system than he
himself did."
In fact, President George Washington supervised the language of a
treaty with African Muslims that explicitly stated that the United
States was a secular nation.
The Treaty With Tripoli, worked out under Washington's guidance
and then signed into law by John Adams in 1797, reads: "As the
government of the United States of America is not in any sense
founded on the Christian Religion,--as it has in itself no character
of enmity against the laws, religion or tranquility of Musselmen,--and
as the said States never have entered into any war or act of
hostility against any Mehomitan nation, it is declared by the
parties that no pretext arising from religious opinions shall ever
produce an interruption of the harmony existing between the two
countries."
But for the Founders this wasn't just an issue of being
Christians or not. Just as they were opposed to warlords taking
control of the government and thus took the ability to make war out
of the hands of the president; just as they opposed economic forces
from taking control of the government and thus excluded the word
"corporation" from the Constitution so companies could be
closely watched by the states and wouldn't be able to corrupt
national officials; so, too, they opposed religious leaders from
gaining any access whatsoever to the levers of political power or
intermingling in any way with state business.
For example, on February 21, 1811, President James Madison vetoed
a bill passed by Congress that authorized government payments to a
church in Washington, DC to help the poor. Faith-based initiatives
were a clear violation, in Madison's mind, of the doctrine of
separation of church and state, and could lead to a dangerous
transfer of political power to religious leaders.
In Madison's mind, caring for the poor was a public and civic
duty - a function of government - and must not be allowed to become
a hole through which churches could reach and seize political power
or the taxpayer's purse. Funding a church to provide for the poor
would establish a "legal agency" - a legal precedent -
that would break down the wall of separation the founders had put
between church and states to protect Americans from religious
zealots gaining political power.
Thus, Madison said in his veto message to Congress, he was
striking down the proposed law, "Because the bill vests and
said incorporated church an also authority to provide for the
support of the poor, and the education of poor children of the
same;..." which, Madison said, "would be a precedent for
giving to religious societies, as such, a legal agency in carrying
into effect a public and civil duty."
Thomas Jefferson was perhaps the most outspoken of the Founders
who saw religious leaders seizing political power as a naked threat
to American democracy. One of his most well known quotes is carved
into the stone of the awe-inspiring Jefferson Memorial in
Washington, DC: "I have sworn upon the altar of God eternal
hostility against every form of tyranny imposed upon the mind of
man." Modern religious leaders who aspire to political power
often cite it as proof that Jefferson was a Bible-thumping
Christian.
What's missing from the Jefferson memorial (and almost all who
cite the quote), however, is the context of that statement, the
letter and circumstance from which it came.
When Jefferson was Vice President, just two months before the
election of 1800 in which he would become President, he wrote to his
good friend, the physician Benjamin Rush, who started out as an
orthodox Christian and ended up, later in his life, a Deist and
Unitarian. Here, in a most surprising context, we find the true
basis of one of Jefferson's most famous quotes:
"DEAR SIR, - ... I promised you a letter on Christianity,
which I have not forgotten," Jefferson wrote, noting that he
knew to discuss the topic would add fuel to the fires of electoral
politics swirling all around him. "I do not know that it would
reconcile the genus irritabile vatum [the angry poets] who are all
in arms against me. Their hostility is on too interesting ground to
be softened.
"The delusion ...on the clause of the Constitution, which,
while it secured the freedom of the press, covered also the freedom
of religion, had given to the clergy a very favorite hope of
obtaining an establishment of a particular form of Christianity
through the United States; and as every sect believes its own form
the true one, every one perhaps hoped for his own, but especially
the Episcopalians and Congregationalists.
"The returning good sense of our country threatens abortion
to their hopes, and they [the preachers] believe that any portion of
power confided to me [such as his being elected President], will be
exerted in opposition to their schemes. And they believe rightly:
for I have sworn upon the altar of God, eternal hostility against
every form of tyranny over the mind of man. But this is all they
have to fear from me: and enough too in their opinion."
Thus began a long and thoughtful correspondence - mostly about
religion - between Jefferson and Dr. Rush. In later years, Jefferson
would put together what is now called "The Jefferson
Bible," in which he deleted all the miracles from the New
Testament and presented Jesus to readers as an inspired philosopher.
His Jefferson Bible is still in print, and well received, if
amazon.com sales and readers' comments are any indication.
In his autobiography, Jefferson wrote an interesting historical
footnote about the religious leaders seeking political power he
confronted head-on when he authored the Statute of Virginia for
Religious Freedom, and who the other Framers confronted when they
submitted the First Amendment, which specified, "Congress shall
make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting
the free exercise thereof..."
Speaking of the Virginia law he authored, which was the
inspiration for the First Amendment, he noted, "Where the
preamble [to the Virginia Statue for Religious Freedom] declares
that coercion is a departure from the plan of the holy author of our
religion, an amendment was proposed, by inserting the word 'Jesus
Christ,' so that it should read, 'a departure from the plan of Jesus
Christ, the holy author of our religion.' The insertion was rejected
by a great majority, in proof that they meant to comprehend, within
the mantle of its protection, the Jew and the Gentile, the Christian
and Mahometan, the Hindoo, and Infidel of every denomination."
But it wasn't just religious tolerance that was the issue for
Jefferson - it was preventing any one religion from claiming it was
uniquely the American religion, and then using that claim to grasp
at political power. Thus, secular government must allow even pagans
and pantheists to coexist, while at the same time rigorously
preventing any of them from gaining power over it. In his
"Notes On Virginia," Jefferson laid it out clearly:
"The legitimate powers of government extend to such acts only
as are injurious to others. But it does me no injury for my neighbor
to say there are twenty gods, or no God. It neither picks my pocket
nor breaks my leg."
Yet in the days of the Founders, like today, there were many
religious leaders who aspired to political power. They claimed that
their right to influence government was legitimate because, they
said, government itself was founded on their territory - the Ten
Commandments. Because our system of laws was founded on the
Judeo-Christian Ten Commandments, the religious leaders said, they
and their Commandments should play a large and powerful role in
government and be able to both take from the public purse and
influence the courts and laws.
This assertion - that British common law and American law derived
from the Ten Commandments - was particularly infuriating to the
Founders.
First, there's the simple fact that there isn't that much
overlap. Our laws don't specify a single god who must be worshipped,
ban graven images, require us to take a day off work every week,
mandate that we "honor" our parents, make it illegal for
men to "covet" other men's wives or sleep with unmarried
women, or make it illegal to lie (in fact, corporations have
recently asserted the explicit "right to lie" under the
First Amendment). The only things in common between the Commandments
and most state or federal laws are prohibitions on killing and
stealing, which most people figure have always been pretty obvious.
Of greater concern to the Founders, though, was the naked power
grab religious leaders were trying to pull off by claiming that
America's system of jurisprudence was founded in their religious
system, and that therefore they should be able to insert themselves
into the secular halls of political power. The claim was made so
often and so loudly (and believed by the more gullible of the
masses), that several of the Founders thought it necessary to refute
it in detail. Jefferson was probably the most methodical, as was so
often the case on constitutional matters.
In a February 10, 1814 letter to Dr. Thomas Cooper, Jefferson
addressed the question directly. "Finally, in answer to
Fortescue Aland's question why the Ten Commandments should not now
be a part of the common law of England we may say they are not
because they never were..." Anybody who asserted that the Ten
Commandments were the basis of American or British law was,
Jefferson said, mistakenly believing a document that was "a
manifest forgery."
The reason was simple: British common law, on which much American
law was based, existed before Christianity had arrived in England.
"Sir Matthew Hale lays it down in these words," wrote
Jefferson to Cooper, "'Christianity is parcel of the laws of
England.'"
But, Jefferson rebuts, it couldn't be. Just looking at the
timeline of English history demonstrated it was impossible:
"But Christianity was not introduced till the seventh century;
the conversion of the first Christian king of the Heptarchy having
taken place about the year 598, and that of the last about 686.
Here, then, was a space of two hundred years, during which the
common law was in existence, and Christianity no part of it....
"We might as well say that the Newtonian system of
philosophy is a part of the common law, as that the Christian
religion is," wrote Jefferson. "...In truth, the alliance
between Church and State in England has ever made their judges
accomplices in the frauds of the clergy; and even bolder than they
are."
In a January 24, 1814 letter to John Adams, Jefferson went
through a detailed lawyer's brief to show that the entire idea that
the laws of both England and the United States came from Judaism,
Christianity, or the Ten Commandments rests on a single man's
mistranslation in 1658, often repeated, and totally false.
"It is not only the sacred volumes they [the churches] have
thus interpolated, gutted, and falsified, but the works of others
relating to them, and even the laws of the land," he wrote.
"Our judges, too, have lent a ready hand to further these
frauds, and have been willing to lay the yoke of their own opinions
on the necks of others; to extend the coercions of municipal law to
the dogmas of their religion, by declaring that these make a part of
the law of the land."
It was a long-running topic of agreement between Jefferson and
John Adams, who, on September 24, 1821, wrote to Jefferson noting
their mutual hope that America would embrace a purely secular,
rational view of what human society could become:
"Hope springs eternal. Eight millions of Jews hope for a
Messiah more powerful and glorious than Moses, David, or Solomon;
who is to make them as powerful as he pleases. Some hundreds of
millions of Mussulmans expect another prophet more powerful than
Mahomet, who is to spread Islamism over the whole earth. Hundreds of
millions of Christians expect and hope for a millennium in which
Jesus is to reign for a thousand years over the whole world before
it is burnt up. The Hindoos expect another and final incarnation of
Vishnu, who is to do great and wonderful things, I know not
what." But, Adams noted, the hope for a positive future for
America was - in his mind and Jefferson's - grounded in rationality
and government, not in religion. "You and I hope for splendid
improvements in human society, and vast amelioration in the
condition of mankind," he wrote. "Our faith may be
supposed by more rational arguments than any of the former."
And yet the true faith of our Founders - the faith in a secular
political system uncontaminated by warlord presidents, wealthy
corporations, or grasping religious leaders - is under attack once
again.
In a modern revival of religious leaders seeking political power,
emails fly around the internet saying that Founders like Madison
claimed the United States was founded on either Christianity or the
Ten Commandments. Many originate in the writings of a right-wing
group whose president helped prepare the History and Social Studies
standards for Texas and California schoolchildren, and are so badly
taken out of context that they can only be called deliberate
attempts to fool people. Others are simple fabrications, quotes
created from nothing.
The United States and our laws were not founded on the Bible, or
even on biblical principles. Moral precepts against killing or
stealing are found not only in the Bible, but exist among every
tribe on earth, some of whose cultures and languages date back over
60,000 years. They're part of the social code of animals ranging
from prairie dogs to gorillas. They're rooted in the biological
imperative of survival.
As Thomas Jefferson wrote in a June 5, 1824 letter to Major John
Cartwright, "Our Revolution commenced on more favorable ground
[than the foundation of English or Biblical law]. It presented us an
album on which we were free to write what we pleased. We had no
occasion to search into musty records, to hunt up royal parchments,
or to investigate the laws and institutions of a semi-barbarous
ancestry. We appealed to those of nature, and found them engraved on
our hearts."
Jefferson then thanks and congratulates Cartwright for writing
that the American Constitution as well as both American and British
common law are entirely secular in their origin: "I was glad to
find in your book a formal contradiction, at length, of the
judiciary usurpation of legislative powers; for such the judges have
usurped in their repeated decisions, that Christianity is a part of
the common law. The proof of the contrary, which you have adduced,
is incontrovertible; to wit, that the common law existed while the
Anglo-Saxons were yet pagans, at a time when they had never yet
heard the name of Christ pronounced, or knew that such a character
had ever existed. But it may amuse you, to show when, and by what
means, they stole this law in upon us."
Jefferson concluded his letter by denouncing the efforts of
churchmen to seize the fledgling United States of America, and
paraphrased a 1732 play by Henry Fielding, "The Lottery,"
in which a character says "Sing Tantararara, Fools all, Fools
all," lamenting that in the lottery of life, the fools win out
all too often.
"What a conspiracy this," Jefferson closed his 1824
letter to Cartwright, "between Church and State! Sing Tantarara,
rogues all, rogues all, Sing Tantarara, rogues all!"
Thom Hartmann (thom at thomhartmann.com) is the award-winning,
best-selling author of 15 books available on 4 continents in 12
languages, and the host of the nation's largest
nationally-syndicated daytime progressive radio talk show. www.thomhartmann.com
Copyright 2003 by Thom Hartmann.