New York Times, July 7, 2002
The word "God" does not appear in the Constitution of the
United States, a document that erects if not quite a wall, at least a
fence between church and state. "In God We Trust" began to
appear on American coins in the 19th century, but in the early 20th
century President Theodore Roosevelt, having asked the sculptor Augustus
Saint-Gaudens to design new coinage, was relieved to find no statute
mandating "In God We Trust" on coins.
"As the custom, altho without legal warrant, had grown up," T.
R. wrote to a clergyman distressed over the prospect of godless coins,
"I might have felt at liberty to keep the inscription had I
approved of its being on the coinage. But as I did not approve of it, I
did not direct that it should again be put on."
T. R. expressed his "very firm conviction that to put such a motto
on coins . . . not only does no good but does positive harm." His
objection to "In God We Trust" was not constitutional; it was
aesthetic. He felt that the motto cheapened and trivialized the trust in
God it was intended to promote. "In all my life I have never heard
any human being speak reverently of this motto on the coins or show any
sign of its having appealed to any high emotion in him," he wrote.
Indeed, he added, "the existence of this motto on the coins was a
constant source of jest and ridicule."
Congress, devoted then as now to religiosity, overruled T. R. and made
the motto mandatory. A similar issue now arises from the decision by the
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit that the insertion
of the phrase "under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance is
unconstitutional.
The Pledge of Allegiance was written in 1892 by Francis Bellamy, a
former Baptist minister, as part of the celebration of the 400th
anniversary of what our politically incorrect ancestors called
Columbus's "discovery" of America. Bellamy was a Christian
socialist dedicated to the ideal of a cooperative commonwealth. His
unpopular socialist critique of capitalism from the pulpit forced his
resignation from the ministry. Soon afterward he joined the staff of The
Youth's Companion, the once-famous children's magazine, which printed
his Pledge of Allegiance on Sept. 8, 1892.
Francis Bellamy said on Flag Day in 1931, a short time before his death,
that the pledge was "born out of my own love of the flag and for
all the lofty Americanism it represented." Two alterations have
been made in Bellamy's text. In 1924 "my flag" became
"the flag of the United States of America." And in 1954
Congress changed "one nation indivisible" into "one
nation under God, indivisible."
This second change came about in order to emphasize the antagonism
between God-fearing Americans and godless Communists, as if that
antagonism needed reinforcement in the age of Joe McCarthy. "From
this day forward," President Dwight D. Eisenhower said in signing
the law, "the millions of our schoolchildren will daily proclaim .
. . the dedication of our nation and our people to the Almighty."
T. R.'s objection to the cheapening of religious avowals had long since
been forgotten. (Eisenhower also said, "Our government makes no
sense unless it is founded on a deeply held religious belief - and I
don't care what it is.")
Bellamy "would have objected strongly to this change, as it changed
the fundamental meaning," according to his granddaughter, Barbara
Bellamy Wright. "He had considered that `One nation, indivisible'
conveyed the deep meaning that after the Civil War our nation could not
be divided," she said, and the reference to God "tampered with
the original meaning of the pledge as well as spoiling its rhythmic
cadence."
Yet a hysterical clamor has risen against the Ninth Circuit decision and
in favor of returning the pledge to the original text - a text that
Americans found quite satisfactory for nearly two-thirds of a century.
The "under God" addition, by identifying patriotism with
religion, excludes agnostics, atheists and all believers in some deity
or deities other than the Christian God. Nor does the "under
God" addition meet Theodore Roosevelt's test of promoting reverence
and appealing to high emotions. Doubtless all the crooks in the
corporate community have
recited the pledge without notably improving their conduct.
As for the Constitution, more than a half-century ago the Supreme Court,
in West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette, declared
unconstitutional a law requiring schoolchildren to salute the flag and
recite the Pledge of Allegiance. "If there is any fixed star in our
constitutional constellation," Justice Robert H. Jackson memorably
said for the court, "it is that no official, high or petty, can
prescribe what shall be orthodox in politics, nationalism, religion, or
other matters of opinion."
The court handed down its decision against compulsory pledges of
allegiance and flag salutes on Flag Day in 1943, when young Americans
were fighting and dying for that flag around the planet. The American
people then, far from denouncing the court, applauded the decision as a
pretty good statement of what we were fighting for. Are we backsliding
today? Perhaps the next step for those who identify patriotism with
religion will be to try to amend the Constitution itself by mentioning
God.
Arthur Schlesinger Jr. is the author, most recently, of ``A Life in
the 20th Century.''
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/07/07/opinion/07SCHL.html?ex=1027071807&ei=1&en=fbd4386d11dc0547