The topic of discussion for this Constitution Monday is the need for religion in our constitutional republic. The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution guarantees freedom of religion. President George Washington and President Donald Trump believe religion is essential to freedom.
President
Trump believes, according to his State of the Union address on February 24,
that the United States could be in the midst of a spiritual revival. However, a
recent Gallup survey says that the data is mixed. In his article published at The
Daily Signal, Andrew Fowler states:
Nevertheless,
for the nation to prosper and bind together, religiosity is not only a crucial
aspect of civil society, but vital to its sustainability. This sentiment was
express by none other than the country’s first president, George Washington.
Fowler
explained that Washington was “private in his own religious convictions and
skeptical of fanaticism.” However, he gave a “prescient warning to contemporary
and future Americans – on national and international affairs – definitively emphasized
that ‘[o]f all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity,
religion and morality are indispensable supports.’ Moreover, to ‘subvert’ such ‘great
pillars of human happiness’ – like the freedom of religious expression – would
be considered unpatriotic.” Fowler continued his explanation.
Indeed
let us with caution indulge the supposition that morality can be maintained
without religion. Whatever may be conceded to the influence of refined education
on minds of peculiar structure, reason and experience both forbid us to expect
that national morality can prevail in exclusion of religious principle.
Fowler
explained that Washington “was not the only Founding Father to stress religion’s
intrinsic importance to the new republic.” He then quoted a famous statement by
the future President John Adams: “Our Constitution was made only for a moral
and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.”
He quoted a third Founding Father, Benjamin Franklin, as saying: “[God] ought
to be worshipped” and “the most acceptable service we render to him is doing
good to his other children.”
Fowler
continued by quoting “Thomas Jefferson, the most notable deist among the
Founding Fathers.” He “warned about the consequences of abandoning religious
conviction entirely.” Jefferson advocated for a “wall of separation” between
church and state, but he also said: “God who gave us life gave us liberty. Can
the liberties of a nation be secure when we have removed a conviction that
these liberties are the gift of God?”
Fowler
explained that the rationale of the above Founding Fathers “was not without
historical precedent.” He continued by explaining that Christianity has served
for centuries “as the basis for establishing institutions that we take for
granted, such as universities, hospitals, economic systems, and – most importantly
– the philosophy undergirding the truth that ‘all men are created equal.” It
was Alexis de Tocqueville, a 19th-century political scientist, who
observed and then wrote in his “Democracy in America” that “religion is the ‘companion
of liberty’ and a ‘safeguard’ in preserving the ‘pledge of freedom.’”
Fowler
then shared his thoughts about how religion is doing in America today and the
consequences that have followed.
Today,
however, American religiosity is struggling – and the consequences borne from
this sociological trend have reverberated across civil society and political
dynamics.
In
the early 1950s, 75% of Americans found religion to be “very important” in
their lives. Now, that is 47%. Moreover, the March Gallup survey shows that “in
each year since 2022, 28% of Americans have said religion is ‘not very
important’ in their lives,” which is the “highest proportion” in this trend and
“more than double the rate seen as recently as the early 2000s.” Concurrently,
as a recent Pew Research Center survey discovered, the United States is “the
only place” where “more adults (ages 18 and older) describe the morality and
ethics of others living in the country as bad (53%) than as good (47%).”
The
relationship between these trends may not be purely coincidental. Religious
affiliation has historically declined since the 21st century’s
outset; meanwhile, the importance of one’s political party affiliation has
risen and, in some cases, supplanted not only religion as an identifiable characteristic,
but race, culture, and even language.
Additionally,
in recent years, Americans have shifted their self-defining characteristics to
better align with their politics; in effect, a political platform has increasingly
informed one’s values and principles, instead of one’s beliefs being rooted by
families, churches, and communities.
Psychologically,
this identity shift heightens emotional reactions toward political criticisms
since debate – or opposition – now challenges the core of a person’s
personality. Even brain activity confirms political conflict has a similar
effect as being physically attacked and/or threatened. It should be
unsurprising then, as a result, America has seen increased polarization and
even violence against political adversaries.
At
the same time, American civil society has receded. Fewer opportunities exist
for neighbors to gather together, regardless of political affiliation, and
pursue a common goal. In the past, religious organizations and charities were
cornerstones for such activity; today, however, as religiosity fades – which had
been a motivating impulse propelling communal outreach – a void has formed.
Indeed, the less religious are less likely to be civically engaged.
This
massive disconnect between an individual and society at-large presents an
existential crisis in the modern United States. Civilizations cannot survive
without a firm foundation. In an American context, morality was not borne from
thin air nor from moral relativism – but formed by Western philosophy and the
Judeo-Christian religions.
President
Trump is launching initiatives like “America Prays” and establishing the White
House Faith Office. In addition, there are signs that the rising generations
are seeking spiritual guidance. Will this trend continue?
Fowler
offers “Washington’s fatherly advice” given in his Farewell Address as being “relevant
to modern audiences: “when religiosity disappears from the public square, the
moral framework supporting civil society wanes and weakens. A transcendent set
of principles, however, unifies and moors the nation in common principles.”
Fowler
suggests that this year -- America’s 250th birthday anniversary – is
a good time for Americans to return to what has been called the “indispensable”
pillars that hold up society: “prayer, worship, and charity.” He wonders if
faith is powerful enough to “reverse every sociological problem.” He suggests
that religious commitment must be revived if we are to “renew the civic bonds
that sustain, safeguard, and preserve a free society.”
This
year is a suitable time for all of us to pray for America and for our political
leaders.