This is the question to debate: What was in the mind of the Founding Fathers as they drafted the US Constitution, Secular government or a representative government based on Judeo-Christian “Values?”This is a very easy question, and I don't even need sources to back me up, just plain common sense.
First Amendment of the Constitution:
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
First of Moses' Ten Commandments:
Thou shalt have no other gods before me.The two are obviously in direct contrast with one another, so if the founding fathers had at all intended a "representative government based on Judeo-Christian 'values,' the first amendment wouldn't even exist. It is not a Judeo-Christian value to let people live and worship as they please - and I'm not attacking religion here, just stating how it is.
My second point: the personal beliefs of the founding fathers are completely irrelevant. It doesn't matter if they were Christian, or deist, pagan, or agnostic. We use the words they wrote and the documents they left to determine how to operate our government, not their personal beliefs. Just because
some of the founding fathers had Christian leanings does not mean that this government was intended to espouse Christian views and morals. This country was founded by many men, some of who happened to be Christian - not "this country was founded by Christian men." There is a world of difference between having a religion and founding a country, and founding a country based on your religion.
I could easily turn that argument on its head anyway, and say that "because some of the founding fathers believed in slavery, obviously it's okay to write slavery into law." Or how about "because the founding fathers were all white, obviously this country was intended to be a country where the laws are biased towards white males."
Put this long-winded piece of weak supporting evidence -
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"For example in my opinion when I read an article on Patriarchy and read “the Roman Catholic Church believes that God the Father passed down his authority to the bishops, who are sometimes called patriarchs. In the Roman Catholic Church, only men are allowed to be bishops. In the United States the men who signed the Constitution are referred to as "founding fathers."” It leads me to think hey they were following the church values of the time."
next to
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Art. 11. As the Government of the United States of America is not, in any sense, founded on the Christian religion; as it has in itself no character of enmity against the laws, religion, or tranquillity, of Mussulmen; and, as the said States never entered into any war, or act of hostility against any Mahometan nation, it is declared by the parties, that no pretext arising from religious opinions, shall ever produce an interruption of the harmony existing between the two countries.
and I think the answer is fairly obvious. In any case, the founding fathers did not refer to themselves as being the founding fathers. As the history of America went on, these individuals were deemed "founding fathers" quite post-mortem. So your entire evidence is completely flawed. But to even play devil's advocate for a moment and assume that they did call themselves the founding fathers - so what? So the etymology of the term has religious roots? How in the
world do you make the leap from that, to the Constitution being based on Judeo-Christian values?
You only have to grasp at straws at justification if you're wrong.
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When a person says the Constitution was based on Christianity...they mean that the philosophy of the religion (such as love you neighbor as you would love yourself and free will).
The cute thing about that is that the philosophies they mean are whatever you want them to mean. You can say that they mean the philosophies of "love your neighbor as you would yourself" and the anti-gay person would cling to the Judeo-Christian philosophy of "prohibiting unnatural acts (or acts against our god-given nature)" and the anti-choice person would cling to the Judeo-Christian "philosophy" of "thou shalt not kill." Then on the other hand, you can have a pro-choice or pro-gay rights person espousing the Judeo-Christian "philosophy" of free will. So when a person says "America was founded on Judeo-Christian values" they mean "America was founded on the principles found in the Bible that I like." Then you have the individuals who will point to the phrase "in God we trust" on the money (added in
1864), the phrase "under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance (added in
1954), or assertions like "since the public
schools used to set aside class time for Biblical instruction," then *obviously* the
founding fathers - the last of who I'm certain had died before 1864 - intended this nation to be Christian-based instead of a democracy.
Um... no. I don't think so.
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Moving on from that...yes the nation is founded on Judeo-Christian Values because the FFs were God-fearing men. They were Deists...believed in a Higher Power but not all the miracle mumbo jumbo. Read the Declaration of Independence...A "God" is mentioned several times.
The logic is so horrendously flawed that I honestly don't know where to begin. Let's start by setting to rest the assumption that "god-fearing" (besides the fact that believing in a god doesn't automatically mean you fear it) equates to "Judeo-Christian." Um, sorry, no. Not everyone who believes in a god is Jewish or Christian, leder, so to first (erroneously) claim that they all believed in a god, and then translate to mean that they used Jewish and Christian "values" to write the Constitution is logically inaccurate. Deists are
not Christian or Jewish, because if they were Christian or Jewish we wouldn't call them deists -
we would call them Christian or Jewish. Second of all, who the hell cares about the Declaration of Independence? This thread is about the
Constitution, and it is the
Constitution that established the foundation for this country. What the Declaration of Independence did was give us sovereignty over ourselves from the British.
As an aside: God is mentioned
several times in the D.o.I? I hardly think so. The word "God" is mentioned
once, and guess what - it's called "Nature's God" (hmm seems pretty deist to me). The term "Creator" is used
once - huh, for overt Christians they sure seem pretty ambiguous. The dating is in "the year of our lord" - this is absolutely nothing new. If I were to write the date on something, I would put "December 19, 2004." Wow that must mean I'm a Christian, if I use the date of Jesus' birth as a reference point. No, actually it just means that something had to be used to mark the passage of time relative to other things, and someone - most notably
not the writers of the D.o.I. - decided Jesus' birth would be a good date to start with. That's a whopping
three instances in which a god-like concept was ambiguously referred to. Not exactly a slam-dunk pile of evidence.