Here John Fea tells us about three great post from
Boston 1775, my favorite one of which is found
here. A quotation from that one:
[Matthew] Stewart is clearly arguing against claims of our modern religious right that the U.S. of A. was founded on and for Christian beliefs—almost always the beliefs of the people making those claims. As Stewart points out, people of a particular faith tend to assume that when historical figures they admire mention “God,” that means the same God they themselves believe in. But even when people of the past specifically allude to Christianity or Jesus, they may not share the same understanding of those terms and ideas as their modern readers.
That can cut in all directions. “Presbyterian“ was often used as a general derogatory term by eighteenth-century non-Presbyterians. John Adams’s understanding of “Unitarianism” doesn’t map directly onto the modern Unitarian-Universalist creed. And so on.
2 comments:
As Stewart points out, people of a particular faith tend to assume that when historical figures they admire mention “God,” that means the same God they themselves believe in.
That's right. Even TJeff and Franklin loved the Pillar of Fire leading the Israelites out of Egypt.
Darn right it's the same God. I'm sick of these pinheads denying the obvious.
Oh come on, Tom. You know that the only people ever guilty of confirmation bias are on the "religious right."
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