The Truth About Religion in America: The Founders Loathed Superstition and We Were Never a Christian Nation
By Kerry Walters, Free Inquiry
Posted on June 15, 2012, Printed on June 16, 2012
Once they begin to circulate, falsehoods—like counterfeit currency—are
surprisingly tenacious. It doesn’t matter that there’s no backing for
them. The only thing that counts is that people believe they have backing. Then, like bad coins, they turn up again and again.
One counterfeit idea that circulates with frustrating stubbornness is
the claim that America was founded as a Christian nation. It’s one of
the Christian Right’s mantras and a favorite talking point for
televangelists, religious bloggers, born-again authors and lobbyists,
and pulpit preachers. Take, for example, the Reverend Peter Marshall.
Before his death in 2010, he strove mightily (and loudly) to “restore
America to its traditional moral and spiritual foundations,” as his
still-active website says, by telling the truth about “America’s
Christian heritage.” Or consider WallBuilders, a “national pro-family
organization” founded by David Barton, whose mission is “educating the
nation concerning the Godly foundation of our country.” Called
“America’s historian” by his admirers, Barton is a prolific writer of
popular books that spin his Christian version of American history. And
then there’s Cynthia Dunbar, an attorney and one-time professor at
Liberty University School of Law. She’s another big pusher of the
Christian America currency. Her 2008 polemic One Nation Under God proclaims
that the Christian “foundational truths” on which the nation rests are
being “eroded” by a “socialistic, secularistic, humanistic mindset” from
which Christians need to take back the country.
Saturday, June 16, 2012
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