Wednesday, May 22, 2024

Maintaining and Strengthening a Separation of Church and State

 


My thanks to Jerald Turner and Eric Settles for review and advice.

I write to advocate for the continuation of a well-defined separation of Church and State. This is in no way so that America will become absent of the Christian faith. It is to protect the integrity of the Church, and its divine mission, from political corruption.

It may seem among many Christians, and other faiths, that harnessing our government by religious faith would “set us right with God.” But I am convinced that erasing the line between state and Church would result in the Church becoming the lap dog of those in political power.

I strongly assert that the Church does not have the authority to abdicate Christ’s command for the church to make disciples.

Matthew 28:19-20 teaches, “Therefore, go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20 teaching them to obey everything that I’ve commanded you. Look, I myself will be with you every day until the end of this present age.” (Common English Bible translation)

Christ never made any provision to outsource His Great Commission to any government or other authority. Nowhere in the New Testament does Jesus, the Apostle Paul, or Saint Peter instruct His followers to write letters to the Roman Senate or Roman Emperor, urging the establishment of Christianity as the State religion. It is clear from the New Testament writers that the work of evangelism is solely within the realm of the Church.

I have heard many people claim that “America was founded as a Christian nation.” I assert that the religious condition in colonial, revolutionary America was more complicated than “everybody shared the same Trinitarian ideas of Christianity.”

From our beginning, deism was an idea held by many people of the day, including Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and Thomas Paine, among others. Deism suggests a distant, detached God, without regard to Abraham, Moses, Jesus, or any of the writers of Biblical Gospels or Epistles. The terms “Creator” and “Nature’s God” used in the Declaration of Independence align closer to deism than Christianity.

Aside from those facts is the reality that on this continent, before Europeans arrived Original Peoples held their own religious faith, and continued to do so throughout the colonial period, thereby having a religious influence on arriving Europeans. More, when slave traders brought slaves from Africa, they brought with them many different religions that also continued throughout the colonial period, and even to this day.

So, in its infancy, and still today, America held numerous religious beliefs. But more to my point of maintaining a separation of Church and state is the fact that, whatever religious views the framers of our Constitution may have held, they did not incorporate any of them in the Constitution, even when they had ample opportunity to do so.

The Constitution was not a hastily thrown together document. From May 25 of 1787 to September 17, 1787, its text, ideas, and wording were carefully crafted. Yet, there is no language that indicates or establishes that we were to be a “Christian” nation.

Whatever sentiments of religion our framers communicated in their personal correspondence privately; as representatives of “The People,” they signed their names publicly to a document to be the Law of the Land, and that resides in the Constitution.

I point out a few areas of the Constitution where the framers had opportunities to set a religious baseline, yet chose not to do so: The Preamble, which serves to describe the scope and the intent of the Constitution, we encounter these three words: “We the People.” Not “God Almighty.”

This seems to me to be a direct accommodation of the clause found in the Declaration of Independence: “Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed,” Furthermore, regarding that revolutionary concept, while it is noble  and one to which most people in America would subscribe, it is in jarring conflict with, and disobedience to the New Testament teaching that governments and rulers are established by God and therefore we are to obey them (Romans 13:1, 1 Peter 2:13).

Also in reference to the Preamble, there is no clause that has even a hint of any language or idea indicating the establishment of a “Christian” form of Government.

The framers of the Constitution could have easily inserted religious language, if they had chosen to do so. But, instead, the scope of the Constitution provided by the Preamble reads, in full, We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.”

So, it seems the framers missed several opportunities to address religious influence in the Preamble.

What’s more, within the body of the Constitution…

The last paragraph in Article II reads in full…Before he enter on the Execution of his Office, he shall take the following Oath or Affirmation:—"I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my Ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States."

Please note that the phrase “So help me God” is not present here. While those elected President have chosen to speak those words while taking the oath of office, they have done so as a matter of personal choice and conscience. Neither those words, nor their sentiment, is required by the Constitution.

Clause 3, Article VI reads: “but no religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States.” This is an explicit prohibition of religious favorability within government.

And of course, the First Amendment to the Constitution also has obvious and explicit language regarding religion…

“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;”

Returning to the religious convictions of Native Americans, and Africans brought over on slave ships, there is no language to prohibit their free exercise of religion. Indeed, the Constitution is absolutely neutral as to religious matters.

If the framers had intended a “Christian” form of government, I count at least six missed opportunities:

·         Two missed opportunities in the Preamble.

·         The lack of address to God in the President’s oath of office.

·         The prohibition of religious test to hold office.

·         The first amendment with its explicit language regarding religion.

·         The absence of prohibition on non-Christian religions known to actively exist at the time of the writing of the Constitution.

All of this is not to say that individual Christians, denominations, and/or other religious groups should not advocate governments to improve the conditions of those living in poverty, those who suffer violence, those who are trafficked, or those who are oppressed in any way. Indeed, as people of faith, be it Christian, Muslim, Jewish, or others, we should feel compelled by our faith to advocate for the “least of these.” (Matthew 25:46)

Nowhere even in the Declaration of Independence is there any compulsion for anyone to subscribe to any particular expression of religious faith. Government cannot instill sincere religious faith in anyone. Government can only indoctrinate a people, and thereby cause them to be absent any genuineness of faith.

My appeal to Christians is to apply our resources of time, money, and social capital according to models present in the New Testament; models of conversion that are effective. The Church best achieves Christ’s Great Commandment by making its argument in the free market of ideas, as Apostle Paul modeled for us in Acts 17:16-34. 

If we want America to be a Christian nation in fact, not just electoral rhetoric, then Christians must actively try to change hearts, rather than be obsessed with dictating what other people must believe. We must avoid the danger of becoming a lap dog of those who hold political power, which is as fickle as musical tastes across generations. Christianity, as well as other religions, is a faith of personal invitation, not political coercion.

For these reasons, among so many others, I believe that we must maintain and strengthen a separation of Church and State.


Friday, May 17, 2024

Concord High School Honors Night 1974: A memoir

 

 

That's me, front row. The "C" stands for Charles, my first name.

     My 24, 1974, yes, fifty years ago, Concord High School held our Honors Night program.

Thank goodness for there being a Library for me to work in otherwise I would not have had opportunity to accept an award, as pictured below, before assembled classmates, their parents, teachers, and administrators on that stage in that affectionally-remembered auditorium.



Having no musical talent, I was not in band or choir, nor did I participate in sporting events which call for physical duration and strength, nor did I have the projection of voice for theater.  I have no high school trophies or framed newspaper reports to adorn walls, shelves, or tables so as to impress visitors with stories of glory. But, by golly gee whiz did I know how to navigate the Dewey Decimal system! I know how to get you to the book you want! “Need Cliff’s Notes for that Shakespeare play? Gotcha covered, brother!”. ”Seeking a biography of King Edward VII? Follow me, sister!” I can even find that obscure recording of Gloriana by Benjamin Britten if that is your musical taste!

 And therefore, I am happy to claim, and exalt, and present this pictured charm as my award for Library Service.

 Yes, fifty years I have held on to this memento.

But seriously, I offer sincere accolades to all my classmates who achieved academic, athletic, artistic, or other school disciple success that year!

You can read about them in this Elkhart Truth article which James Clouse recently posted on Facebook.




And let’s all recommit to our class moto:



Sunday, May 12, 2024

Saxon...Legendary in the Metal Community


 


    I had known of Saxon only by their name on the cover of albums in records stores during my visits in the late 1970s. Not being a fan of heavy metal, I never invested in purchase of album or tickets. Not that I have anything against Heavy Metal. I was much more the Beatles/Simon and Garfunkel kind of appreciant.

When my son suggested this concert featuring Saxon and Uriah Heep at the Lerner Theatre in Elkhart, of course I said “yes”. I love the gathering of music fans to just about any type of music and venue.

    Eric, my son, said, regarding Saxon…”These guys are legendary in the metal community.”

    I was impressed. This band is very precise in their instrumentation, timing, cadence, and more so than most performers I have encountered. Through the loudness, one can distinguish each guitar and vocal. The loudness is not merely for the aim of playing loud…the level of sound they create enables their music to ricochet from the walls in just the right directions for the listener to audibly consume each thrash-strum, slide-pick, and drum roll presented.



   I was impressed. Each song was acutely predictable. I don’t say that as a negative, contrary, this quality of predictability enabled the listener to know where the variations of the strums and drums was going and where the anticipated landing would be.

  At the beginning thrash-strum of one song my son leaned over to me and said “JFK”. Quickly, I Google-searched “Saxon JFK”. Well, that landed me where I did not want to go. Then I searched “Saxon song JFK”. Ah yes, that gave me the tilte of the song the band was playing (Dallas 1PM) and the lyric, which I present at bottom of this blog post.

Now, that fact made strong connection between baby-boomer me and this British new wave heavy metal band from South Yorkshire, England.

    I was impressed. The crowd that was there responded to each lyric sang as if the crowd knew the lyrics by heart. They were certainly well invested!

   I was convinced, as my son asserted, these guys are legendary in the metal community. They built upon that legend tonight at the Lerner Theater.

If you have never experienced a heavy metal band in concert and are interested in it as a “bucket list” item, for sure see Saxon.



I present the lyric Dallas 1PM in Fair Use as I do not monetize my blog…

[Verse 1]
A crowded main street, the scene was set
They check out the view, turn the radio on
Open the case, assemble the gun
Wait at the ready, for the president's run

[Chorus]
The world was shocked that fateful day
A young man's life was blown away, away, away-ay-ay
At Dallas 1 p.m

[Verse 2]
White hot lead, in the back of the head
Screaming confusion, shots rip the air
Cadillac racing, cops on the run
They couldn't believe the president's hit

*3 Shots*
[Radio Chatter]
"Something has happened here
We understand there has been a shooting
The presidential car coming up now, we know it's the presidential car, you can see Mrs. Kennedy in the pink suit
There's a secret serviceman spread eagle over the top of the car
We understand that governor and Mrs. Connally are in the car with president and Mrs. Kennedy
We can't see who is hit if anybody's been hit, but apparently something is wrong here, something is terribly wrong
[?] behind the motorcade [?] they're going to Parkland Hospital
[?]."


[Guitar Solo]

[Verse 3]
The shooting's done, assassin run
Is he dead? No-one will say
Around the world, the news was flashed
We sat and watched, your tragic history

[Chorus]
The world was shocked that fateful day
A young man's life was blown away, away, away-ay-ay
At Dallas 1 p.m
1 p.m

[Outro]
The world was shocked
In Dallas 1 p.m
We sat and watched
Tragic history

The world was shocked
In Dallas 1 p.m

 

 

 

Friday, May 10, 2024

Favoring the Spector Reproduction of "The Long and Winding Road"

 

Image from discogs.com I claim Fair Use


With a great deal of humility, I offer that my preferred version of “The Long and Winding Road”, released on May 11 in 1970, is the Phil Spector reproduction.

 I just sensed a disturbance in the gravitational field of all of Beatledom.

I was fourteen when I first heard the song on WLS radio station of Chicago. This was the formative version of the recording to which I was introduced. Other people may have had their first experience from the “Let It Be…Naked” album of 2003 which. I admit, had a simpler, more faithful to original recording production.

But the Spector reproduction to my fourteen-year-old self, having followed the Beatles since that first Ed Sullivan show, seemed like the Beatles at full maturity.

From the stage-performable “I Want to Hold Your Hand”, to the studio intense “Tomorrow Never Knows”, to trend-setting ‘Hey Jude”, this Spector reproduction of LWR, with his fullness of choir and orchestra, which seems to escort the listener from the end of one lyrical phrase to the beginning of the next, causes the group to rise above ordinary pop/rock music to unprecedented cultural apex.

Yes, those were my actual words that I wrote in my journal at the time of my first hearing the song. I was hoping to become a rock music critic.

As to McCartney’s lyric, I will say that the best phrase ever I have heard in a pop/rock song follows…

“The wild and windy night that the rain washed away has left a pool of tears, crying for the day. Why leave me standing here, let me know the way.”

Much respect to those who prefer the original recording done in January of 1969.

But to reinforce my argument, the Beatles pretty much shelved that music and left it somewhat abandoned. I see no transgression committed by Allen Klein or Phil Spector in making LWR an even better recording than the concurrent “Bridge Over Troubled Water”, which seems to have similar production value.

I mean no transgression in my preference for the Spector reproduction.

Peace, all.