Saturday, March 13, 2010

God is not religious?

And invoking God on our currency is not religious either, or so say the judicial theologians sometimes known as the Federal Appeals Court. The California court decided 2 to 1 to overturn their own 2002 ruling that sided with atheist Michael Newdow's complaint that doing so established a State Monotheistic religion and violated the constitutionally mandated separation of church and state. Did they see the light, or did they feel the heat?

Why? It may seem hard to us to accept that God is not a religious figure or concept, but the reasoning behind the decision: that the government's power is limited by God's power, certainly is a religious atatement and even more certainy is at odds with the Constitution and the philosophy behind it. In fact the Biblical God seems very much against the idea of choosing leaders by popular vote if you remember the fate of Saul and that European Christians could be excommunicated for voting well into the 19th century.

The "pledge of allegiance" is also constitutional said the majority.
"The pledge of allegiance serves to unite our vast nation through the proud recitation of some of the ideals upon which our Republic was founded and for which we continue to strive,"
the two judges said. An interesting concept seeing as both of these shibboleths are rather recent and the founders of the Republic would have started a second revolution if they were around. I never feel more disunited with my countrymen than when at various club functions I have to stand up like a schoolchild and swoon over a symbol and affirm somebody else's religious delusion. Of course I always say "Under Fogg" but that's another matter.

As I've reminded my readers many times, the pledge was not originally about God or its relationship to our Republic, it was about the flag and nationalism and freedom and justice, two out of four of which are good ideas. Forcing children to swear to pray to God in a public school is an abomination and an attempt to punish people who do not believe. That everyone else has come to see this as a part of every public and private meeting or convocation is just silly, but the real comedy is watching federal judges bend over so far backward to be fair to people of superstition that their heads might just as well be fully inserted.

3 comments:

  1. "the real comedy is watching federal judges bend over so far backward to be fair to people of superstition that their heads might just as well be fully inserted."

    Love the imagery. And "amen" to the rest.

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  2. According to The Youth's Companion (1892):

    At the words, "to my Flag," the right hand is extended gracefully, palm down, toward the Flag, and remains in this gesture till the end of the affirmation …

    No matter how hard we try, we just can't rid ourselves of that hand jive.

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  3. Yes, the original salute was supposed to be the Roman style later adopted by Hitler. We've erased that from memory, but not the exaggerated nationalism of the period before the concept of world war came into being.

    We can't get rid of that jive for sure.

    It's important to note that it was "my flag" though, which suggested that WE owned the country and we owned the government. It's changed, hasn't it. Maybe we should remind ourselves that we are the government, that it's our country and that man behind the curtain is out for himself.

    ReplyDelete

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