In reply to Zobel
Except the framers were perfectly aware that their limit of religion in government meant limiting Christianity in government and opening the government to those of other faiths. They were quite explicit about it. The federal government was not nominally Christian. It wasn't Christian. Religion is mentioned twice in the Constitution. In both places it is limited rather then enshrined.
And while the vast majority of the population were Christian, there were sizable numbers of deists, free thinkers, and Jews who immigrated before the Civil War and Muslims amongst the enslaved. Race mattered more in immigration than religion, though there absolutely was religious discrimination.
Here's the thing, it's not 1723, 1823, or 1923. We're a religiously plural society and we were founded as a government that accepted that pluralism and sought to put limits on one faith holding power over another, no matter what broad category that faith belonged to.
Zobel said:
The US was founded as a nominally Christian nation. For the time period of the writing of the constitution not establishing a national religion would have meant as a variant of Christianity. It wasn't in anyone's mind that this would be something else. I know you know that many states at the time had state religions, and many were explicitly Christian in their constitutions or oaths of office. Until sixty some odd years ago we even had explicit immigration policies to continue this general feature of our society.
Trying to eradicate Christianity from our laws, culture, and society is a radical position that has gained traction under a historically tone deaf understanding of our laws at best, but probably more likely an intentional agenda of change.
Except the framers were perfectly aware that their limit of religion in government meant limiting Christianity in government and opening the government to those of other faiths. They were quite explicit about it. The federal government was not nominally Christian. It wasn't Christian. Religion is mentioned twice in the Constitution. In both places it is limited rather then enshrined.
And while the vast majority of the population were Christian, there were sizable numbers of deists, free thinkers, and Jews who immigrated before the Civil War and Muslims amongst the enslaved. Race mattered more in immigration than religion, though there absolutely was religious discrimination.
Here's the thing, it's not 1723, 1823, or 1923. We're a religiously plural society and we were founded as a government that accepted that pluralism and sought to put limits on one faith holding power over another, no matter what broad category that faith belonged to.