Townhall...
America’s
Judeo-Christian Roots are
Bigger Than Texas
By Susan Brown
8/16/2011
The
hysterical reaction to Republican
presidential hopeful Governor Rick Perry’s faith is about as overblown
as his
home state of Texas is big. Perry is facing a federal lawsuit filed by
the
Freedom From Religion Foundation (FFRF) - purportedly because Perry
prayed
publicly for our nation.
America
is headed south to a place
much hotter than Texas, and you would think national figures offering
prayers
for the nation would be a source of inspiration. Even still, FFRF filed
the
lawsuit to prevent the beckoning of blessing from the God of whom this
country
was founded.
Filing
the lawsuit in the Southern
District Court of Texas, the FFRF argued the prayer event Perry
attended
violated the First Amendment’s Establishment Claus. They claimed it
could be
“harmful or counterproductive as a substitute for reasoned action.”
What does
that even mean? If you put the collective brain power of the current
leadership
in Washington into the body of a hummingbird, it would fly backwards,
and yet a
call to prayer on their behalf is “counterproductive” to reasoned
action?
The
very concept of separation of
church and state is intellectually dishonest and legally indefensible.
Even
still, activists attempt to two-step their way around the Constitution
in hopes
to eradicate America’s Judeo-Christian roots and replace them with
their own
“irreligion.”
The
simpler solution would be for
groups such as the FFRF to accept the fact that prayer has weaved its
way into
the moral fiber of America since her inception. British colonists fled
to
America to escape religious intolerance. The first prayer of the
Continental
Congress, in 1774, clearly laid out our founders intentions in the
words: “O
Lord our Heavenly Father...we beseech Thee, on these our American
States, who
have fled to Thee from the rod of the oppressor...desiring to be
henceforth
dependent only on Thee. Be Thou present...and direct the councils of
this
honorable assembly...All this we ask in the name...of Jesus Christ, Thy
Son and
our Savior. Amen.”
The
Bill of Rights (the first ten
Constitutional amendments) was ratified December 15, 1791. Amendment I
speaks
to the protection from federal interference in the free exercise of
religion,
speech, and the press, among other freedoms. Although the term
“separation of
church and state” cannot be found in the Constitution, activists who
seem to be
about as friendly as fire ants to America’s Judeo-Christian roots
borrowed
words from and built case law around a letter Thomas Jefferson wrote to
church
leaders in 1802 mentioning “a wall of separation.”
The
United States Supreme Court
confirmed our nation’s Christian DNA in a unanimous decision February
29, 1892
- that has never been overruled. The court cited various authorities
confirming
the influence the Bible had on America since its founding. This
decision
confirmed our founders’ intentions in the Constitution’s First
Amendment to
protect citizens from a national religion - granting us freedom of
religion -
not freedom from religion.
The
court ruled: “There is no
dissonance in these declarations. There is a universal language
pervading them
all having one meaning: they affirm and reaffirm that this is a
religious
nation. These are not individual sayings, declarations of private
persons; they
are organic utterances; they speak the voice of the entire group. These
authorities were collected to support the historical conclusion that no
purpose
of action against religion can be imputed to any legislation, state or
nation,
because this is a religious people. This is historically true. From the
discovery of this continent to the present hour, there is a single
voice making
this affirmation...we find everywhere a clear recognition of the same
truth...this is a Christian nation...”
Eric
Bearse, spokesman for the Texas
prayer gathering Perry attended said they “expected this kind of legal
harassment, but the right of Americans to assemble and pray has been
established for over 200 years.” While 200 years of precedence has
never
stopped Progressives before, it seems there may be a more obvious
reason why
the man, Perry, who has a campaign winning streak ten elections long,
is
feared: John Sharp, a 1998 lieutenant governor opponent to Perry summed
it up
when he said, “Running against Perry is like running against God.”
Read
it at Townhall
|