[1] The subtitle to Professor Benne's perceptive article poses
the question whether America's civil religion is "destructive,
useless, or beneficial." It can be all three. Civil
religion is "destructive" when it becomes monolithic and intolerant
of denominational and religious diversity. Civil religion is
"useless" when it is reduced to a "ceremonial deism" that is
bleached and bland enough to pass constitutional scrutiny but
morally barren and liturgically banal. Civil religion is
"beneficial" when it helps to articulate and celebrate the sturdy
beliefs and values that are essential to the preservation and
flourishing of a people and a polity. For the past century
and more, a Bellah-Benne style of beneficial civil religion
supported the American republic. While this style of civil
religion remains effective in some quarters, it is gradually, I
submit, being eclipsed by "a new freedom of public religion."
[2] For many today, all this talk of civil or public religion is
idle nostalgia for the long gone days of Christian
establishment. Our civic catechisms and canticles celebrate
Thomas Jefferson's experiment in religious freedom. To end a
millennium of repressive religious establishments, we are taught,
Jefferson sought religious freedom in the twin formulas of
privatizing religion and secularizing politics. Religion must
be "a concern purely between our God and our consciences," he wrote
in 1802. Politics must be conducted with "a wall of
separation between church and state." "Public" or "Civil"
religion is a threat to civil society and must thus be
discouraged. "Political ministry" is a menace to political
integrity and must thus be outlawed.
[3] These Jeffersonian maxims remain for many today the cardinal
axioms of a unique American logic of religious freedom to which
every patriotic citizen and church must yield. Every public
school student learns the virtues of keeping his Bible at home and
her prayers in the closet. Every church knows the tax law and
tort law advantages of high cultural conformity and low political
temperature. Every politician understands the calculus of
courting religious favors without subvening religious
causes. Religious privatization is the bargain we must
strike to attain religious freedom for all. A wall of
separation is the barrier we must build to contain religious
bigotry for good. If only those right-wing killjoys of our
day would learn proper patriotism, instead of pestering us with
their Ten Commandments and faith-based initiatives!
[4] Separation of church and state was certainly part of
American law when many of today's civic opinion-makers were in
school. In the landmark cases of Cantwell v.
Connecticut (1940) and Everson v. Board of Education
(1947), the United States Supreme Court for the first time used the
First Amendment religion clauses to declare local laws
unconstitutional. The Court also read Jefferson's call for "a
wall of separation between church and state" as the essential
meaning and mandate of the First Amendment. In more than 30
cases from 1947 to 1985, the Court purged public schools of their
traditional religious teachings and cut religious schools from
their traditional state patronage. Armed with these
precedents, lower courts struck down many other traditional forms
and forums of church-state cooperation in the public square.
[5] After forty years of such cases, it is no surprise that
Jefferson's metaphor of "a wall of separation between church and
state" became for many the source and summary of American religious
freedom. Indeed, many within and beyond these borders think
Jefferson's words are enshrined in the First Amendment
itself. It is often disconcerting for readers to discover
that the First Amendment has much more restrained and ambiguous
language: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment
of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof."
[6] "Metaphors in law are to be narrowly watched," Justice
Benjamin Cardozo once warned, "for starting as devices to liberate
thought, they end often by enslaving it." So it has been with
the metaphor of a wall of separation. This metaphor has held
popular imagination so firmly that many of us have not noticed that
separation of church and state is no longer the law of the
land.
[7] In a long series of cases over the past fifteen years, the
Supreme Court has abandoned much of its earlier separationism, and
reversed several of its harshest cases on point. The Court
has upheld government policies that support the public access and
activities of religious groups -- so long as these religious groups
are voluntarily convened, and so long as non-religious groups are
treated the same way. So, church-affiliated pregnancy
counseling centers could be funded as part of a broader federal
family counseling program. Religious student groups could
have equal access to state university and public school classrooms
that were open to non-religious student groups. Religious
groups could gain equal access to public facilities, forums, and
funds that were already opened to other civic groups. Clergy
were just as entitled to run for state political office as
laity. Religious student newspapers were just as entitled to
public university funding as those of non-religious student
groups. Religious schools were just as entitled to
participate in a state-sponsored school voucher program as other
private schools.
[8] The Supreme Court has defended these holdings on
wide-ranging constitutional grounds, and it has not yet settled on
a consistent new logic. One consistent teaching of these
recent cases, however, is that public religion must be as free as
private religion. Not because the religious groups in these
cases are really non-religious. Not because their public
activities are really non-sectarian. And not because their
public expressions are really part of the cultural
mainstream. To the contrary, these public groups and
activities deserve to be free, just because they are religious,
just because they engage in sectarian practices, just because they
sometimes take their stands above, beyond, and against the cultural
mainstream. They provide leaven and leverage for the polity
to improve.
[9] A second teaching of these cases is that the freedom of
public religion sometimes requires the support of the state.
Today's state is not the distant, quiet sovereign of Jefferson's
day from whom separation was both natural and easy. Today's
state is an intensely active sovereign from whom complete
separation is impossible. Few religious bodies can now avoid
contact with the modern welfare state's pervasive network of
education, charity, welfare, child care, health care, family,
construction, zoning, workplace, taxation, security, and other
regulations. Both confrontation and cooperation with the
modern welfare state are almost inevitable for any religion.
When a state's regulation imposes too heavy a burden on a
particular religion, the free exercise clause provides a pathway to
relief. When a state's appropriation imparts too generous a
benefit to particular religions alone, the establishment clause
provides a pathway to dissent. But when a general government
scheme provides public religious groups and activities with the
same benefits afforded to all other eligible recipients,
constitutional objections are now rarely availing.
[10] A third teaching of these cases is that freedom of public
religion also requires freedom from public religion.
Government must strike a balance between coercion and
freedom. The state cannot coerce citizens to participate in
religious ceremonies and subsidies that they find odious. But
the state cannot prevent citizens from participation in public
ceremonies and programs just because they are religious. It
is one thing to outlaw Christian prayers and broadcasted Bible
readings from the public school; after all, students are compelled
to be there. It is quite another thing to ban moments of
silence and private religious speech in these same public
schools. It is one thing to bar direct tax support for
religious education, quite another thing to bar tax deductions for
parents who choose to educate their children in religious
schools. It is one thing to prevent government officials from
delegating their core police powers to religious bodies, quite
another thing to prevent them from facilitating the charitable
services of voluntary religious and non-religious associations
alike. It is one thing to outlaw governmental prescriptions
of prayers, ceremonies, and symbols in public forums, quite another
thing to outlaw governmental accommodations of private prayers,
ceremonies, and symbols in these same public forums.
[11] A final teaching of these cases is that freedom of public
religion is no longer tantamount to establishment of a common civil
religion. Government support of a common civil religion might
have been defensible in earlier times of religious
homogeneity. It is no longer defensible in modern times of
religious pluralism. Today, our public religion must thus be
a collection of particular religions, not the combination of
religious particulars. It must be a process of open religious
discourse, not a product of ecumenical distillation. All
religious voices, visions, and values must be heard and deliberated
in the public square. All peaceable public religious services
and activities must be given a chance to come forth and compete, in
all their denominational particularity.
[12] Some conservative Protestants and Catholics today have
seized on this new insight better than most. Their recent
rise to prominence in the public square and in the political
process should not be met with hyperbolic name-calling, glib talk
of censorship, or reflexive incantation of Jefferson's mythical
wall of separation. The rise of the Christian right should be
met with the equally strong rise of the Christian left, of the
Christian middle, and of sundry Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist,
and other religious groups who test and contest its premises,
prescriptions, and policies. That is how a healthy democracy
works. The real challenge of the Christian right is not to
the integrity of American politics but to the apathy of American
religions. It is a challenge for peoples of all faiths, and
of no faiths, to take their place in the marketplace.
See more on Civil
Religion.
© April
2005
Journal of Lutheran Ethics (JLE)
Volume 5, Issue 4