Catholics Persecuted Protestants; Protestants Persecuted Catholics; and Protestants Persecuted One Another.
Here is George Washington reflecting on this dynamic:
I was in hopes that the enlightened & liberal policy which has marked the present age would at least have reconciled Christians of every denomination so far that we should never again see their religious disputes carried to such a pitch as to endanger the peace of Society.There is contention over whose ideology is responsible for the American founding. As I see it, the ideological origins of the American founding came from disparate streams that formed an amalgam. Christianity, or Protestant Christianity, was one of four or five chief ideological sources (see Bernard Bailyn). Though, the Protestant Christian component was extremely "pluralistic" for lack of a better term, in a sectarian sense of the term (pluralities of sects).
Mark David Hall and others argue that reformed/Calvinism predominated. That may be true. However, there were plenty of other sects who not only fought for their "place at the table," but did so with a strong distrust of Calvinists, especially of the Presbyterian bent. This is John Adams writing on how he regretted his recommendation for a National Fast as President because of Presbyterian distrust!
The National Fast, recommended by me turned me out of office. It was connected with the general assembly of the Presbyterian Church, which I had no concern in. That assembly has allarmed and alienated Quakers, Anabaptists, Mennonists, Moravians, Swedenborgians, Methodists, Catholicks, protestant Episcopalians, Arians, Socinians, Armenians, & & &, Atheists and Deists might be added. A general Suspicon prevailed that the Presbyterian Church was ambitious and aimed at an Establishment of a National Church. I was represented as a Presbyterian and at the head of this political and ecclesiastical Project. The secret whisper ran through them “Let us have Jefferson, Madison, Burr, any body, whether they be Philosophers, Deists, or even Atheists, rather than a Presbyterian President.” This principle is at the bottom of the unpopularity of national Fasts and Thanksgivings. Nothing is more dreaded than the National Government meddling with Religion.
Finally, much has been made about Thomas Jefferson's letter to the Danbury Baptists wherein he invokes the term "separation of church and state." Much ink has been spilt on "the context" of what was meant by Jefferson's "Wall of Separation" and the implications thereof. Here is something to keep in mind: The "context" of the letter was a "complaint" about a particular religious sect who had control over Connecticut's then religious establishment -- the reformed/Calvinistic Congregational Church. Both Jefferson and the Danbury Baptists wanted to be "separate" from THEM. That's against whom their "wall" was directed.
4 comments:
“Both Jefferson and the Danbury Baptists wanted to be "separate" from THEM. That's against whom their ‘wall’ was directed.”
Interesting but wrong.
Persecution of the Danbury Baptists, and Baptists in general, was not an isolated concern between “THEM” as can be illustrated by Washington’s letter to the Roman Catholics in America (1790), “As mankind become more liberal, they will be more apt to allow, that all those who conduct themselves as worthy members of the Community are equally entitled to the protection of civil Government. I hope ever to see America among the foremost nations in examples of justice and liberality.”
The history of the British American colonies was rife with religious repression and oppression, just like Europe’s struggles between alliance of King and church in order to wield power over the masses. Catholics oppressing and killing Protestants, Protestants oppressing and killing Catholics, and Catholics and Protestants oppressing and killing Jews, “Mohamedans”, heretics/dissenters, free-thinkers, and pagans.
The centuries of religious/Christian persecution and oppression, including wars, massacres, imprisonment, torture, banishments, and executions in the name of Christ, in both Europe and the colonies, is what inspired the founding generation to establish a more perfect Union to include both the natural human right of conscience as well as expression of one’s own conscience, regardless of matters of faith.
The legacy of early colonial extremism in religion was fresh on the minds of the founders.
The Massachusetts Bay Colony (British), established in 1630, was explicitly governed as a Puritan colony. It was envisioned to be a "city upon a hill", a model Christian community based on strict Puritan doctrine. Only church members could vote or participate in government.
From its founding into the 1680s, dissent from strict Calvinistic Reformed Protestant Christian doctrine was severely punished. Other Puritan-controlled British colonies, such as Plymouth Colony (ca, 1620-1690s), also showed no tolerance of dissent.
These colonies are often described as theocracies, a form of government wherein a state is ruled by religious leaders or officials (magistrates) who are believed to be guided by a divine power. In this system, there is no separation of church and state, and laws are based on religious texts or doctrines.
Another description, theonomy, might be a better term; governed by the theological and political view that biblical law, particularly the judicial and civil laws of the Old Testament, remains binding on modern nations. It proposes that God's law should be the foundation for civil government, justice, and societal structure today. To anyone familiar with today’s Christian Nationalist movement, this should sound familiar.
Roger Williams was banished into the wilderness from the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1635 because of his radical views on religious freedom and civil governance that threatened the Puritan establishment.
Was Williams, a man and minister of the Christian religion, preaching against Christianity? No. Williams was put on trial for speaking his mind about the state of Christianity in the colony. Among other charged heresies* was his outspoken belief that the colony’s magistrates had no jurisdiction over the consciences and souls of the people.
It was Williams that made the first call for "a wall or hedge of separation" between "the wilderness of the world" and "the garden of the church." Following his banishment into the wilderness he went on to establish “Providence Plantations” as a haven for freedom of conscience for all, including persecuted Baptists, Quakers, Catholics, Jews, Deists, non-believers, and atheists; essentially a haven for those of any or no faith. Providence Plantations would go on to become the colony of Rhode Island (1644).
Providence Plantations was an isolated religious/political refuge in a sea of religious bigotry and repression.
* he further denied the validity of religious oaths for public office arguing that forcing unregenerate (non-religious) people to swear in God's name was a form of blasphemy and coerced worship.
The goals of today’s Christian Dominionism/Nationalism are nothing short of establishing America as a modern Puritan bastion of Biblical control of American society; essentially it is the reestablishment of 17th century Theonomy. It is the tyranny that the founders had hoped to prevent.
There are increasing numbers of Republican politicians and Administration officials jumping aboard and openly declaring themselves to be “Christian Nationalists.” Trump has been openly anointed as God’s commander on the ground.
Pete Hegseth, a declared Christian Crusader, is wrapping his war crimes in the Bible. Project 2025, The 1776 Project, and the White House Department of Faith are leading the way in the Bartonesque project to defile both American government and the Christian religion.
And the renowned professor’s video, produced for the “White House Salute to America 250 Task Force,” is nothing more than dishonest/misleading content toward their goals of establishing a Biblical nation - literally a return to pre-founding (pre Declaration and pre US Constitution) religious fanaticism. It is a takeover of the US government to be used as the coercive power to repress and oppress their religious enemies.
They are rewriting history and they are rewriting the founding and they are rewriting the Constitution.
Frankly, I was surprised to see such a renowned scholar use the debunked Lutz Study 34% lie (a lie by omission). I guess that makes David Barton and Glenn Beck renowned scholars. Oh well, I guess that it still plays well in his circles.
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