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What makes the US a Christian nation
Asia Times ^ | 30 november 2004 | Spengler

Posted on 11/29/2004 7:24:42 AM PST by Pitiricus

After George W Bush's re-election, few people doubt that the United States is a Christian nation. But who are American Christians, where do they come from, and what do they want? Discontinuity makes American Christianity a baffling quantity to outsiders; only a small minority of American Protestants can point to a direct link to spiritual ancestors a century ago.

Little remains of the membership of the traditional Protestant denominations who formed what Samuel P Huntington calls "Anglo-Protestant culture" a century ago, and virtually nothing remains of their religious doctrines. Most of the descendants of the Puritans who colonized New England had become Unitarians by the turn of the 19th century, and the remnants of Puritan "Congregationalism" now find themselves in the vanguard of permissiveness.

More than any other people in the industrial world, Americans change denominations freely. During the past generation, the 10 largest born-again denominations have doubled their membership, while the six largest mainstream Protestant denominations have lost 30%:

This suggests an enormous rate of defection from the mainstream denominations, whose history dates back to the 16th century (in the case of Episcopalians, Lutherans and Presbyterians) or the 18th century (in the case of Methodists), in favor of evangelical churches that existed in seed-crystal form at best at the beginning of the 20th century.

The Catholic historian Paul Johnson argues that "America had been founded primarily for religious purposes, and the Great Awakening [of the 1740s] had been the original dynamic of the continental movement for independence". But he struggles to explain in his History of the American People why not a single traditional Christian can be found among the leading names of the American Revolution. Neither George Washington, nor John Adams, nor Thomas Jefferson, nor Benjamin Franklin, nor Alexander Hamilton professed traditional Christian belief, although most of them expressed an idiosyncratic personal faith of some sort. The same applies to Abraham Lincoln, who attended no church, although his later speeches are hewn out of the same rock as the Scriptures.

Johnson's less-than-convincing explanation is that "by an historical accident", the US constitution "was actually drawn up at the high tide of 18th-century secularism, which was as yet unpolluted by the fanatical atheism and the bloody excesses of its culminating storm, the French Revolution". Despite the French Revolution, Harvard College became Unitarian in 1805, and all but one major church in Boston had embraced Unitarianism, a quasi-Christian doctrine that denies the Christian Trinity. John Calvin had one of its founders, the Spanish physician and theologian Michael Servetus, burned at the stake in Geneva in 1553.

The New England elite ceased for all practical purposes to be Christian. Ralph Waldo Emerson, a Unitarian minister, abandoned the pulpit in 1831 for a career as a "Transcendentalist" philosopher, admixing Eastern religious and German philosophy with scripture. But a grassroots revival, the so-called "Second Great Awakening", made Methodism the largest American sect by 1844. Just as the First Great Awakening a century earlier gave impetus to the American Revolution, evangelicals led the movement to abolish slavery.

Different people than the original Puritans of the Massachusetts Bay Colony were swept up in the First Great Awakening, and yet another group of Americans, largely Westerners, joined the Second Great Awakening during the 19th century. Yet another group of Americans joined what the late William G McLoughlin (in his 1978 book Revivals, Awakenings and Reforms) called a "Third Great Awakening" of 1890. If the rapid growth of born-again denominations constitutes yet another "Great Awakening", as some historians suppose, the United States is repeating a pattern of behavior that is all the more remarkable for its discontinuity.

Few of the Americans who joined the Second Great Awakening knew much about the first; even fewer of today's evangelical Christians have heard of Jonathan Edwards, the fiery sermonist of the 1740s. Without organizational continuity, doctrinal cohesion, popular memory, or any evident connection to the past, Americans are repeating the behavior of preceding generations - not of their forebears, for many of the Americans engaged in today's evangelical movement descend from immigrants who arrived well after the preceding Great Awakenings.

This sort of thing confounds the Europeans, whose clerics are conversant with centuries of doctrine. They should be, for the state has paid them to be clerics, and the continuity of their confessions is of one flesh with the uninterrupted character of their subsidies. Americans leave a church when it suits them, build a new one when the whim strikes them, and reach into their own pockets to pay for it.

Christianity, if I may be so bold, does not fare well as a doctrine for the elites. Original sin cannot be reconciled with free will, as Martin Luther famously instructed Desiderius Erasmus, which led the Protestant reformers to invent the doctrine of predestination, and their Unitarian opponents to abandon original sin. The Catholic Church refused to admit the contradiction, which explains why philosophy became a virtual Protestant monopoly for the next four centuries. The Unitarian path, which stretches from Servetus to Emerson, leads to doubt and agnosticism, for one throws out original sin, the personal God Who died on the cross for man's sins becomes nothing more than another rabbi with a knack for parables.

Intellectual elites keep turning away from faith and toward philosophy - something that Franz Rosenzweig defined as a small child sticking his fingers in his ears while shouting "I can't hear you!" in the face of the fear of death. But one cannot expect the people to become philosophers (or, for that matter, Jews).

My correspondents point out frequently that one can trace no obvious connection between the religion of America's founders and today's American evangelicals. For that matter, observes one critic, there is no direct connection between the 14th-century English reformer and Bible translator John Wycliffe and the 16th-century Lutheran Bible translator John Tyndale - none, I would add, except for the Bible.

Two combustible elements unite every century or so to re-create American Christianity from its ashes. The first is America's peculiar sociology: it has no culture of its own, that is, no set of purely terrestrial associations with places, traditions, ghosts, and whatnot, passed from generation to generation as a popular heritage. Americans leave their cultures behind on the pier when they make the decision to immigrate. The second is the quantity that unites Wycliffe with Tyndale, Tyndale with the pilgrim leader John Winthrop, and Winthrop with the leaders of the Great Awakenings - and that is the Bible itself. The startling assertion that the Creator of Heaven and Earth loves mankind and suffers with it, and hears the cry of innocent blood and the complaint of the poor and downtrodden, is a seed that falls upon prepared ground in the United States.

Within the European frame of reference, there is no such thing as American Christendom - no centuries-old schools of theology, no tithes, no livings, no Church taxes, no establishment - there is only Christianity, which revives itself with terrible force in unknowing re-enactment of the past. It does not resemble what Europeans refer to by the word "religion". American Christianity is much closer to what the German pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer, writing in 1944 from his cell in Adolf Hitler's prison, called "religionless Christianity". Soren Kierkegaard, I think, would have been pleased.


TOPICS: News/Current Events; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: bushvictory; christianheritage; christianity; christiannation; europe; unitedstates
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Very interesting analysis...
1 posted on 11/29/2004 7:24:42 AM PST by Pitiricus
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To: Pitiricus

We are not a Christian nation. If we were, we wouldn't have the problems that we have today.


2 posted on 11/29/2004 7:25:35 AM PST by AppyPappy (If You're Not A Part Of The Solution, There's Good Money To Be Made In Prolonging The Problem.)
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To: AppyPappy

Broccolli, celery, gotta be...


3 posted on 11/29/2004 7:27:58 AM PST by Rammer
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To: Pitiricus

Interesting, yet flawed. John Adams and Gerge Washington were devout Christians. They make GWB seem like a non-believer.

Thomas Jefferson and Ben Franklin saw flaws in the main Christain denominations of their day, but both professed belief in Christ as the true Son of God.


4 posted on 11/29/2004 7:32:03 AM PST by pissant
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To: Pitiricus

Article paints with a very broad brush. It attempts to cover a books worth of info in a few hundred words making no shortage of errors along the way.

Just because a figure like Alexander Hamilton did not stick to a congregation does not mean that he was not a traditional Christian. Read McDonald's biography of Hamilton.


5 posted on 11/29/2004 7:34:33 AM PST by Monterrosa-24 (Technology advances but human nature is dependably stagnant)
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To: Pitiricus
Very interesting analysis...

Particularly for an anti-christian with an agenda.

6 posted on 11/29/2004 7:34:34 AM PST by Protagoras (People who have abortions are murderers)
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To: AppyPappy

"We are not a Christian nation. If we were, we wouldn't have the problems that we have today."


I would agree that the majority of the people in this nation are not 'Christians', however, thus far the foundation that established this a Christian nation is still intact.

Rights endowed by the Creator man/government can not give or take. Remember the majority has never ever been on the 'RIGHT' side, and there is nothing new under the sun.


7 posted on 11/29/2004 7:35:00 AM PST by Just mythoughts
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To: pissant

John Adams was unitarian...


8 posted on 11/29/2004 7:36:01 AM PST by Pitiricus
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To: Pitiricus

As a Christian minister, I have to agree that the USA is NOT a Christian country. It is a country of many nationalities and beliefs. Just because leaders mention God alot does not mean our country is run accordingly. It has no politics of Christian values rather, it uses the Bill of Rights for its doctrine. It grants us the right of religious freedom, it does not dictate Christian values. Democracy is not Christianity.


9 posted on 11/29/2004 7:36:42 AM PST by byHISblood
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To: byHISblood

No it isn't... But the United States are a Christian nation in a way European countries aren't any more... Just compare the Churches here and in Europe on a sunday...


10 posted on 11/29/2004 7:37:54 AM PST by Pitiricus
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Comment #11 Removed by Moderator

To: Pitiricus
John Adams was unitarian...

Only a dimwit would confuse religions with denominations.

12 posted on 11/29/2004 7:39:04 AM PST by Protagoras (People who have abortions are murderers)
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To: pissant
"But who are American Christians, where do they come from, and what do they want?"

Could there be a question anymore inane than this?

Between believers in Christ and those who without direct faith in him yet obedient to him by the laws he's written in our minds and hearts showing their lawful behavior..........these are those that have kept the foundations from crumbling whilst others have done their collective best to change this nation into a nation of Komrades.
13 posted on 11/29/2004 7:40:31 AM PST by Puckster
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To: byHISblood
As a Christian minister,

The poster hates Christians.

Welcome to FreeRepublic.

14 posted on 11/29/2004 7:40:47 AM PST by Protagoras (People who have abortions are murderers)
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To: pissant
John Adams and [George] Washington were devout Christians

John Adams was a Unitarian and couldn't be called a Christian. JQA definitely was. George Washington--no doubt about his beliefs, they are too well documented, including his personal prayers.

I think it is best and wisest to say that we are a Judeo-Christian Society. I would agree to that description.

15 posted on 11/29/2004 7:40:49 AM PST by WalterSkinner
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To: pissant
John Adams and George Washington were devout Christians.

You're right. In fact, I remember reading a story about Washington where he forbade his troops to swear. He reasoned that "God would not look favorably upon our cause if we are not tempered in our speech," or words to that effect.

16 posted on 11/29/2004 7:42:23 AM PST by Uncle Vlad
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To: Pitiricus

Don't you just love it when they try so hard to figure us out using flawed logic and misinformation.


17 posted on 11/29/2004 7:47:26 AM PST by Earthdweller (US descendant of French Protestants)
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To: Pitiricus

No Christian nation would tolerate rampant infanticide.


18 posted on 11/29/2004 7:48:23 AM PST by Sloth ("Rather is TV's real-life Ted Baxter, without Baxter's quiet dignity." -- Ann Coulter)
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To: WalterSkinner

I think so would the writer... He says that the Bible is what unites all the movements across time in the US...


19 posted on 11/29/2004 7:49:03 AM PST by Pitiricus
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To: WalterSkinner

Who are the great Jews in prominent American politics?

I don't understand the fascination with prefixing the correct term with the Jewish reference.


20 posted on 11/29/2004 7:49:23 AM PST by Veritas et equitas ad Votum (If the Constitution "lives and breathes", it dies.)
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