Secular Religious Ideology Gone Mad

Secular religions_CroppedThe media are obsessed with a candidates religion. Anyone who believes in God is a theocrat heaven-bent on “dominion.” Anyone who is familiar with the history of America knows that religion played a major role. Some bad, but mostly good. We often forget that secularism and liberalism are religions with their own creeds, priests, and sacred institutions, and they do a lot of damage.

The Constitution requires that “No person . . . shall be eligible to [the office of President] who shall not have attained to the Age of thirty-five Years, and been fourteen Years a Resident within the United States” (Art. II, Sec. 1). Does this mean that a candidate shouldn’t be questioned about his abilities and limited experience if he is constitutionally qualified at just thirty-six years old? Ronald Reagan was thought by some to be too old. He was 69 when he took office in 1981. Reagan turned concern about his age on its head during his 1984 re-election campaign when he promised not to “exploit, for political purposes,” the “youth and inexperience” of his 56-year-old Democrat challenger, Walter Mondale. The age question haunted John McCain as well. Questions about age are important, and so are questions about religion.

While Article VI does prohibit a “religious test,” the same article states, “the Senators and Representatives before mentioned, and the members of the several state legislatures, and all executive and judicial officers, both of the United States and of the several states, shall be bound by oath or affirmation, to support this Constitution.” Bound to and by what? Nineteenth-century church historian Philip Schaff wrote, “‘in recognizing and requiring an official oath’ for both state and federal officeholders, ‘the Constitution recognizes the Supreme Being, to whom the oath is a solemn appeal.’”[1] George Washington seems to have understood this principle since he followed his affirmation to “execute the office of President of the United States and . . . preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States” with “So help me God.”[2]

Oaths and affirmations were deemed important to many of the founders since they bound a person’s word to a higher authority beyond the sanctions of mere mortals who have no jurisdiction over the soul. For example, in his Essay on Toleration (1685), John Locke exempted atheists from the civil protection of toleration when it came to holding political office by arguing that an atheist who denies that God exists could not be expected to tolerate what he believes to be a myth:

Lastly, those are not all to be tolerated who deny the being of God. Promises, covenants, and oaths, which are the bonds of human society, can have no hold upon an atheist. The taking away of God, though but even in thought, dissolves all; besides also, those that by their atheism undermine and destroy all religion, can have no pretence of religion whereupon to challenge the privilege of toleration.[3]

In recent years, the words “so help me God” have been challenged. They were stricken from the written oath of office that Notaries take in order to serve in the state of Florida. “Those words never should have been there to begin with,” Ken Rouse, general counsel for the Florida Department of State, said. Religious leaders from Miami to Jacksonville were shocked. “This is frightening, that one person could sway the state to change things like that,” said Glen Owens, assistant executive director of the Florida Baptist Convention in Jacksonville. “How can they completely abolish a system of doing things for one person?” The Reverend Gerard LaCerra, chancellor of the Archdiocese of Miami understands the implications of the ruling. “What are we supposed to base our commitments on if something like this is removed? The state?”[4]

In 1788, Henry Abbot, a delegate to the North Carolina convention that was considering the Federal Constitution, understood the implications of an oath without specific religious content: “[I]f there be no religious test required, pagans, deists, and Mahometans might obtain office among us, and the senators and representatives might all be pagans. . . . Some are desirous to know how and by whom they are to swear, since no religious tests are required—whether they are to swear by Jupiter, Juno, Minerva, Proserpine, or Pluto?”[5] Abbot feared what would happen to America if it ever claimed that the God of the Bible was somehow irrelevant to good government. Given the long-term goals of Islam, a day could come when America became officially Islamic.

What few people seem to realize is that there are all types of non-religious belief systems that hold to an absolutist ideology and use the power of the State to impose that ideology on the rest of us. Civil governments can confiscate property, tax earnings, put us in prison, send us off to fight in wars, mandate how many MPG our cars must get, order what type of toilets we can use, require that foods contain no trans fats, and so much more. The law of the land is enforced by the full authority of the civil government that makes the law. As long as a law is on the books, that law is absolute. A law doesn’t have to be tied to any particular traditional understanding of religion to be made a law and enforced by the power of the State. In fact, the above short list of government freedom-inhibiting laws is not tied to any particular religious creed, but the result is still the same—absolutism!

A secular ideology can be just as sacrosanct and absolute as any religious doctrine or creedal formulation but with a significant difference:

Pure ideology differs greatly from the Judeo-Christian tradition that locates sin in the human will; ideologists disdain such ideas and cite evil “structures,” “institutions,” and “systems” as the problem. Sin is political, not personal. Get the structure rights, so the argument goes, and all will be well with individuals.[6]

These “structures” can only be restructured and made right by increased government control, bureaucratic management, the curtailment of freedoms, and, as always, more money. We are told that these new freedom-limiting laws are for our own good and the good of society. Liberals have always believed that civil government should be in the personal management business since their ideas for other people are always for their good. They don’t see their laws as ideologically (religiously) motivated. Take the case of taxing soft drinks in San Francisco.[7] The mayor says that high fructose corn syrup leads to obesity which puts a strain on the city’s health care system. This proposed law is overtly religious in that it is designed to “save the children” from the potential harm of sugar-saturated soft drinks. What will be next? Pizza? Potato chips? Fries and a Big Mac? Video games and computers that contribute to a sedentary lifestyle among young and old?[8] In the same city, a different kind of ideology protects sex acts that result in numerous sexually transmitted diseases that cost billions of dollars in healthcare costs and thousands of lives each year in America.[9] The homosexual religious ideology has its own set of anti-blasphemy laws. Anyone who gets caught uttering a negative word about homosexuality is immediately censored. Hate-crime legislation is designed to silence all criticism. These are marks of a secular religious ideology gone mad.

Christians who understand the proper mix of religion and politics would argue that it’s not the role of civil government to micro-manage people’s lives. There is no prescription in the Bible to use the power of civil government to control a person’s diet through taxation. Long before there were high fructose corn syrup drinks, there were fat people. The king of Eglon was fat (Judges 3:17, 22), and Eli is described as “old and heavy” (1 Sam. 4:18). The Bible warns against drunkenness and gluttony (Prov. 23:20–21), but there is no call to tax alcoholic beverages and food in an attempt to modify these behaviors. A change in these behaviors comes by way of persuasion and the marketplace.

The biblical view of change is that what people believe and understand must be restructured before there will be any appreciable change in a person’s lifestyle. Self-government (self-control) is the operating principle. Christians who want to use the power of the State to manage people for what they perceive are good causes are as misguided and dangerous as secularists who believe that their ideology will save us.

In the end, all ideologies are absolute, but it’s only with Christianity that civil government is limited. Christians need to understand this when considering voting for people who promise to use the power of civil government for the supposed common good.

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Notes:
  1. Daniel Dreisbach, “The Constitution’s Forgotten Religion Clause: Reflections on the Article VI Religious Test Ban,” Journal of Church and State 38:2 (Spring 1996), 289. []
  2. See Forrest Church, So Help Me God: The Founding Fathers and the First Great Battle Over Church and State (Orlando: Harcourt, Inc., 2007), 445–449. []
  3. John Locke, Two Treatises of Civil Government and A Letter Concerning Toleration, ed. Ian Shapiro (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2003), 246. []
  4. “‘God’ Removed from Notaries’ Oath,” The Kansas City Star (February 18, 1992), 2A. []
  5. Henry Abbot, North Carolina ratifying convention: Elliot’s Debates, 4:192. []
  6. Lloyd Billingsley, The Absence of Tyranny: Recovering Freedom in Our Time (Portland, OR: Multnomah, 1986), 71. []
  7. Jesse McKinley, “San Francisco’s Mayor Proposes Fee on Sales of Sugary Soft Drinks,” The New York Times (December 18, 2007). []
  8. The “Wii” is being used in retirement homes to get the elderly up and moving. The bowling, golfing, and tennis games are great exercise. “The Wii has become so popular at Sedgebrook [retirement community] that on Sunday afternoon there will be a video game bowling tournament in the lounge. More than 20 residents have signed up to compete.” (Dave Wischnowsky, “Wii bowling knocks over retirement home,” Chicago Tribune [February 16, 2007]). []
  9. John R. Diggs, “The Health Risks of Gay Sex,” Corporate Research Council (2002). []

  • SEAN MURRY

    The left has a problem of religious ideology for republian canadates.

  • TLF

    Dominion, Relgion, Politics, or Secularism you name it, homosexual activity is not natural. Humans should live with what they were born with. If you born with one of each you decide and go with it. If you don't like what you got tuff that the luck of the draw. If you like others like keep it to your selves. Nature isn't always right, but thats natural. If we belive Darwin we might all be gay some day. Lets all just wake up.
    TLF

    • mikey

      How would we all become "GAY" as they do not reproduce? Darwin's Dogma is about Reproduction over many generations. Homosexual activity does not result in offsprings. I just don't follow your line of thought.

  • TheEkstaza

    sec·u·lar·ism
    n.
    1. Religious skepticism or indifference.
    2. The view that religious considerations should be excluded from civil affairs or public education

    How is that a religion?

    • James C. Harrison

      "Religion" comes from a Latin word which means "to bind." Every man is "religious" He has a worldview consisting of a set of nonnegotiable presuppositions. He may or may not go to church, but he is inescapably religious. He thinks he is an "independent thinker," but he is not. He is standing in a bucket trying to lift himself by the handle. He is following his own pernicious ways, believing that he or man in general is the measure of all things. He is bound hand and foot, thinking that "he does not need a crutch." He is helplessly blind and deaf.

      It is only the gospel of Jesus Christ that can deliver him and only the Holy Scriptures that can guide him. It is only the Holy Spirit of the God who created the heavens and the earth that can lift and transform him. Only when man looks beyond himself is he able to see the truth, which is his only hope. He is NOT an end in himself.

      • TheEkstaza

        Sorry friend, I think you are seriously underestimating the entire human race. Furthermore, nothing is "unnegotiable". Show me irrefutable proof and I will convert right this instant.

        I don't suppose you have anything besides the bible to support your claims that Jesus Christ can do anything at all. After all, even if he existed all, he is long since dead and buried. Please show proof that a god had anything to do with "creating" anything at all, please. No man is not the end or final product of anything at all. He is just anoither step in the ladder, a tiny blip on the long record of time. Nothing man does will last and none of his accomploishments will mean a thing in the ultimate long run. We will have long since past when finally the Universe cools to absolute zero. At which point no one will remain to remember a thing.

        • James C. Harrison

          It seems that you ‘re OVERESTIMATING the human race. For the record, I used the word “nonnegotiable,” not “unnegotiable,” and by it I meant nonnegotiable in the minds of those who hold to presuppositions that THEY consider nonnegotiable.

          I think it strange that you imply that nothing is nonnegotiable, and yet you want me to show you “irrefutable proof” of anything. Do you believe any proof is “irrefutable”? If I showed you proof, then you would want proof of the proof. It would go on and on ad infinitum—ad nausea. In your present mindset, you would “convert” on the other end of infinity—much like the myth fed jokingly to children: “If you put salt on a bird’s tail, he can’t fly away.” You never get that close! You are persistently and constantly in flight. Man, in his fallen state, attempts to run from the image of God in which he was created, as well as the work of God’s law written indelibly on the core of his being. The truth is in man, but his sinful nature causes him to suppress it. This is spiritual and covenantal schizophrenia.

          You seem bent on rejecting the historical accounts in the Bible, so why would you accept any other historical accounts? Flavius Josephus and others also attest to the “existence” of Jesus, but that’s probably not “irrefutable” to you.

          “Long since dead and buried,” yes, but you are overlooking His resurrection. There were many eyewitnesses “to whom also he showed himself alive after his passion by many infallible proofs, being seen of them forty days, and speaking of the things pertaining to the kingdom of God” (Acts 1:3).

          You are right when you identify man as a “tiny Blip,” especially when we try to search out the vastness of this mind-boggling cosmos. Nevertheless, “ who hath despised the day of small things?” (Zechariah 4:10). A good example is this: ”But thou, Bethlehem Ephratah, though thou be little among the thousands of Judah, yet out of thee shall he come forth unto me that is to be ruler in Israel; whose goings forth have been from of old, from everlasting” (Micah 5:2). But God made this “tiny blip” in His own image and sent His Son to reconcile the world unto Himself (II Corinthians 5:19).

          So where is your “irrefutable proof” that the cosmos is running down to absolute zero, as you imply? Are you a “time traveler,” or do you have a “crystal ball”?

  • http://tinyurl.com/shmgGWmyth Ray Soller

    On April 30, 1789 George Washington repeated the presidential oath exactly as prescribed by the United States Constitution. Even with what Reverend Forrest Church wrote in the Appendix section of his book, there is no contemporaneous evidence to substantiate the notion that Washington did otherwise. What explicit evidence we do have for that date is from the French ministerial report which has Washington repeating his inaugural oath of office without a religious codicil. Reverend Church failed to mention that fact.

    My recent post Throckmorton on David Barton: Did Early Presidents Sign Documents “In the Year of Our Lord Christ?”

  • tuner38

    Religion is faith based and as such becomes dogma and forbids questioning. Is this what we want? Why?

  • A. Reginald

    Ekstaza, if you believe in the theory of the "Big Bang" you have to explain how all the energy that produced the universe gathered at one place at one time to cause the explasion! Someone has once said, "It takes more faith to be an atheist than it does to believe in a god." You are required to believe in a far greater "myth!"

  • ARMYOF69

    IT is called FAITH, for a very good reason. You either believe , or you don’t. I have never tried to convert anyone to believe that there is a God. I do believe that God made me, I did not come from any monkey genes, ‘though I do believe that there are many who have , mostly voted for hussein.

  • samtman

    Secularism means a believe in science that can be proven with physical evidence, like the fossil record that goes back 4.5 billion years. The Bible is a nice story most of the time, you can believe in it or not, its your choice. Also, there is not a word about the Bible in the US Constitutiion, nor is there a word about democracy or the Constiturion in the Bible.

    • James C. Harrison

      If it can be proven, who was there to witness it? Must we take the unproven interpretation of "the fossil record" by the credentialed men at their word? It makes nice science fiction entertainment.

      The word "democracy" is not in the Bible, but the consequences of its futility are evident: "Though hand join in hand, the wicked shall not be unpunished: but the seed of the righteous shall be delivered" (Proverbs 11:21). Majority rule? I think not. It is God's law or chaos. Majorities are often wrong in this fallen human race.

  • http://www.missiontoisrael.org Ted R. Weiland

    "Nearly all of the presidents have taken their oath of office by placing their hands upon a Bible. But this empty tradition is nowhere required in the Constitution. Even if this custom were spiritually significant for some of the presidents, it was a meaningless ritual for the majority of them. How could swearing upon a Christian Bible be momentous to these men when Christianity itself means nothing to them?

    "Swearing upon the Bible is a meaningless gesture for an even more important reason. If ever there were an unequal yoking, it is when public officials place their hands on the Bible and swear to uphold the laws of WE THE PEOPLE. This no more Christianizes the oath than Aaron’s naming the golden calf 'Yahweh' sanctified his idolatry. The Bible offers no precedent for swearing to uphold any other law than Yahweh’s. Swearing in Yahweh’s name, or swearing on the Bible, means nothing to Him if you simultaneously swear to keep the laws of another god. This is treason and sedition against the God of gods and King of kings."

    Excerpted from "Article 2: Executive Usurpation" at http://www.missiontoisrael.org/biblelaw-constitut….

  • http://Godfather/politics Little time

    Harrison you and those who believe as you do pick Bible verse out of context to use for your purpose to try to negate it’s truth. God’s word is not God’s way or chaos, His teachings admit there will be chaos with or without being a Christian, chaos is in the nature of man. Man has freewill so man’s choices are the responsibility of man.

  • elijahstime

    To whom it may concern, I have read your many different interpretations of what every one of you thinks should be right. There is only one answer to all of this. The true and correct answer to which a have. I'm going to try to write a book on the subject which will provide the correct answer. Until then?

    Mehujael

  • Moe

    Every leader of this Nation needs faith in his/her life. That faith should temper all actions but not override the basic duties of the post assigned by our Citizens. Our leader must be a person of morals and reason in protecting our Constitution and our rights rather than imposing his/her own particular wants and dreams, however deeply desired. If any leader circumvents any part of the established rules set forth in our Constition, that person must be removed from office immediately because if it is done once, it will happen again. That person has shown that there is no regard for our rights or the laws and regulations set forth in our Constitution or laws.

    Obama, being shown to disregard the our laws and our Constitution at his personal discretion on too many occassions, and violated them each time it stands in the way of his obvious desire to rule than to serve, to impose his own personal agenda upon us in his quest to establish a new world aristocracy, and rule as a despot.

    Please read, until you fully understand, the second paragraph of our Declaration of Independence, and remember the words of Emiliano Zappata, “It is better to die on your feet than to live on your knees.”