|
PART I While the new nation's shape was being hammered out, George Washington largely stood above the fray, a luxury he was permitted on account of his iconic status as father of the nation. He took particular care almost never to broach matters pertaining to religion. Washington's personal views on religion are obscure. Though raised Anglican, he chose not to take Communion (a rite reserved for church members or "communicants"). When he attended church, he was not particular about the house of worship attending Quaker, German Reformed, and Roman Catholic services as well as those conducted by mainline Protestants. He was just as inclusive in his personal hiring, welcoming (in a letter to Tench Tighman, March 24, 1784) "Mohometans, Jews or Christians of any Sect, or they may be Atheists," so long as they "are good workmen." As commander-in-chief of the Revolutionary forces, Washington rejected a request by the other army chaplains to preclude John Murray, a Universalist minister, from serving in that capacity. Yet he encouraged his unit commanders to begin each day with a prayer. And, as president, he inaugurated the tradition-suspended by Jefferson, only to be reinstated by Madison of issuing national prayers of thanksgiving. Arguing from such evidence (buttressed by the fact that he knelt alongside his fellow delegates while an Episcopal priest recited the Thirty-fifth Psalm at the outset of the First Continental Congress), advocates for a Christian America place Washington at the head of their march. His general attitude toward religion does not support such a claim. At times, he even evinced a personal animus against organized religion. There are reports that after one preacher, with Washington captive in the pews, upbraided him for refusing communion-it being the duty of great men to set a good example-Washington never returned to church again. On church-state separation, Washington is most forthcoming in a series of letters he wrote early in his presidency to religious leaders and congregations of various faiths. In them, he either pledges the government's absolute neutrality in matters of religion or defends that neutrality. In letters written in May 1789 (his first month in office), Washington reassured the United Baptist Church's General Committee that their rights were safe on his watch and issued a like promise to a conference of Methodist Bishops. That October, he made the same protections clear to the Quaker annual assembly for the Mid-Atlantic states, western Maryland, and Virginia. The following month, he gently, yet decisively, answered a complaint from the New Hampshire-Massachusetts Presbytery that no mention of either God or Christ had been included in the Constitution. Shortly thereafter, President Washington reached out to America's Roman Catholic and Jewish populations as well, in the latter instance assuring the warden of a Hebrew congregation in Newport, Rhode Island, that fines and imprisonment for breaking Christian sabbath statutes would now be a thing of the past. SOURCE: Letters on Religious Laws, George Washington, The Separation of Church and State. Writings on a Fundamental Freedon by America's Founders. Edited by Forrest Church, Beacon Press, Boston, (2004) pp. 104-106 CONTINUED IN PART II
|
| |
| |
On Wed, 03 Nov 2004 07:37:17 -0500, buckeye-ELO@nospam.net wrote:
PART I While the new nation's shape was being hammered out, George Washington largely stood above the fray, a luxury he was permitted on account of his iconic status as father of the nation. He took particular care almost never to broach matters pertaining to religion.
George Washington's been superceeded by High Priest G.W. Bush. [] -- Contempt of Congress meter reading-offscale. Hello, theocracy with a fundamentalist US Supreme Court who will ensure church and state are joined at the hip like clergy and altar boys. America 1776-Jan 2001 RIP
|
| |
| |
|