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“America,”
writes Washington-based columnist Jonah Goldberg, “is today
in the midst of an obscene moral panic over the role of Christians
in public life.”
The panicked Americans Goldberg has
in view in making this observation are not typical middle Americans
— who themselves are Christians. Rather, the Americans who
are in a panic over Christians in public life are the secular elite
who dominate the university-media complex, where a kind of functional
atheism has firmly established itself as the official orthodoxy.
Those who uphold this orthodoxy now
curiously regard themselves as the only true guardians of the American
way, the embattled defenders of American democracy. Emboldened by
historical amnesia, this secular-minded elite would prefer that
Americans simply take their word for it when they assert that this
nation’s political foundations rest firmly on Enlightenment
rationality and not on religious conviction.
But such secularist assertions come
in for very rough treatment from Dr. John Howard in a new book examining
the powerfully Christian impulses that have shaped America’s
political heritage. The book is Christianity: Lifeblood of America’s
Free Society (1620-1945).
Religious Inspiration
Readers remember again that religious
faith inspired the first settlers of this country. In the wintry
November days when a hardy Pilgrim band landed at Plymouth Rock,
it was their firm commitment to the “advancement of Christian
faith” that guided their efforts to build a new “civil
body politic” under conditions so harsh that fifty-one of
the original one hundred and two died during the horrific first
winter.
Christian faith not only survived but
even grew more intense in the decades leading up to the American
War of Independence. During what historians call the Great Awakening,
Jonathan Edwards of New England joined forces with the visiting
English preacher George Whitefield in kindling in American souls
a deep desire to serve God in all aspects of their lives, including
their politic and civic lives. Howard points out that even as Whitefield
urged his listeners to turn to Christ, he also urged American colonists
to resist the “secret plot of the British Ministry”
against their “civil and religious liberties.”
The political attitudes incubated by
the Great Awakening thus proved critically important in emboldening
the brave 18th-century patriots who broke with Great Britain and
established an inspired new form of government.
As a Protestant, Howard lacks the understanding
afforded Latter-day Saints by modern Scripture identifying the Constitution
as the work of “wise men” whom the Lord raised up for
the very purpose of writing and ratifying it (D & C 101: 80).
But he nonetheless recognizes in the Constitution something of a
miracle, a miracle made possible only because the Framers were —
like the Pilgrims before them — “armed with the Peace
of Christ.”
Faith of the Fathers
Of course, not all of the Framers were
actually Christians. But Howard will not let 21st-century secularists
go very far in claiming as their own a Benjamin Franklin who urged
upon his fellow delegates to the Constitutional Convention the need
of “humbly applying to the Father of Lights to illuminate
our understanding.” Nor will he let these secularists suppose
they are the true heirs of a Thomas Jefferson who soberly asked,
“[C]an the liberties of a nation be thought secure when we
have removed their only firm basis, a conviction in the minds of
the people that these liberties are the gift of God?”
In any case, Howard rightly discerns
a distinctively and profoundly Christian faith in the indispensable
titan of the Revolution and of the Constitutional Convention —
namely, George Washington. A devout Anglican vestryman, Washington
considered it part of his political duty as President to ask the
nation to join him in “humbly offering our prayers and applications
to the great Lord and Ruler of Nations ... to enable us ... to render
our National Government a blessing to all the people.”
The Christian faith that sustained
Washington in the waning years of the 18th century grew even stronger
as a political presence during the first half of the 19th century.
Thus, when Alexis de Tocqueville made his famous visit to the United
States in 1831, he marveled at how intensely “Americans feel
the necessity to instill morality into democracy by means of religion.”
Trial of Faith
Tocqueville, however, did not anticipate
the events that plunged America’s singularly religious democracy
into the horrific bloodletting of the Civil War. Hardly alone in
his perplexity, Lincoln contemplated with particular pain the way
in which this fratricidal war pitted the faith of the Northerner
against the faith of the Southerner.
“Both read the same Bible,”
Lincoln poignantly remarked, “and pray to the same God, and
each invokes His aid against the other.” Howard concedes that
that doubts fostered by this national tragedy grew stronger in the
20th century, as new economic patterns undermined the family farm
long central to America’s rural life. Millions of ill-prepared
Americans thus found themselves thrust into hostile urban environments
that exposed them to corrosive new temptations, including alcohol,
crime, and illicit sex..
Still, Howard discerns potent Christian
impulses still informing many aspects of 20th-century America. Only
the persistence of Christian faith can explain, for instance, why
in the years that following World War I, Woodrow Wilson hoped to
build a better and more secure civilization “permeated with
the spirit of Christ.”
American Christianity did not, of course,
prevent the outbreak of World War II. But as a decorated veteran
of that war, Howard affirms that only firm Christian beliefs can
account for the unwavering courage of ordinary farm boys accepting
perilous duties in that conflict or the far-sighted magnanimity
of General MacArthur in dealing with a defeated foe.
Moral Lassitude
But even as he lauds American warriors
for their fortitude in defending the country’s the Christian
heritage, Howard laments the moral lassitude of a cultural elite
— artists, writers, and professors — who have neglected
or attacked that heritage. Howard particularly indicts the nation’s
universities and colleges for undermining traditional religious
and moral commitments.
Howard claims an exceptional perspective
on the moral confusion infecting higher education in recent decades:
he served as the President of the American Association of Independent
Colleges and Universities from 1969 to 1972, a period of intense
campus disruption. In his valiant effort to reaffirm the Christian
moral obligations of higher education, Howard came into close association
with Dallin Oaks, then serving as President of Brigham Young University.
BYU subsequently awarded Howard an honorary doctorate in 1976, in
recognition of his exceptional educational leadership.
Lamentably, few have joined Howard
in his efforts to bring Christian convictions back into cultural
prominence. Instead, thousands of intellectuals, entertainers, and
artists have dismissed or ridiculed the Judeo-Christian beliefs
of ordinary Americans, offering in their place a strange synthesis
aptly labeled by commentator Tom Brokaw as “a new form of
popular religion ... the rock-and-roll church, with its narcissistic,
mischievous, and anti-authoritarian creed.”
This new church, Howard warns, conduces
to neither spiritual redemption nor social order. Rather, it threatens
a dark future of violence and social breakdown.
Most Latter-day Saint readers will
share Howard’s deep concern over secularization of American
culture. In deploring the way America’s cultural elite is
now systematically suppressing any expression of religious beliefs,
Howard indeed sounds recognizably like Mormon when he decries the
work of those who in his day were “seeking to put down all
power and authority which cometh from God” (Mor. 8: 28).
With good reason, Howard fears that
the extirpation of America’s religious traditions is turning
millions of young men and women into “cultural orphans.”
We can only hope that this timely book will — by reminding
us of our country’s precious religious patrimony — help
Americans recognize the path that leads from a dark and ugly orphanage
back to our faith-filled home.
Christianity: Lifeblood of America’s Free Society
(1620-1945), by John A. Howard. Manitou Springs,
CO: Summit Ministries, Dec. 2007. 185 pages.
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