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by ED VITAGLIANO | AFA Journal News Editor
You just cant trust human nature.
At least thats what the Founding Fathers believed. Which is
why they would not ratify the U.S. Constitution and thus
establish a centralized national government without including
in that same document a list of limitations on centralized power.
That list of limitations is called the Bill of Rights, and it consists
of the first Ten Amendments to the Constitution.
The First Amendment to the Constitution has always been the shining
jewel in the Founders crown. The freedoms guaranteed there,
especially regarding religion and the press, have been an example
to humankind for over 200 years.
This should be a simple lesson in civics. But over the last 60
years or so the U.S. Supreme Court has issued rulings in one particular
area church-state cases that have so muddled the simplicity
of the First Amendment as to cause ordinary Americans to despair
of understanding its meaning. The most recent high court rulings
on public displays of the Ten Commandments which some even
consider to be contradictory manifested this legal confusion.
Not
a federal case
The wording in the Constitution appears to be simple and straightforward.
The First Amendment contains two principles related to religion:
"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion,
or prohibiting the free exercise thereof."
For obvious reasons, the first part of that dual statement is called
the "Establishment Clause," and much of the confusion over Supreme
Court decisions revolves around it.
Up until the middle of the last century, understanding the meaning
of those words was not difficult. The Establishment Clause was seen
as restricting only the power of the U.S. Congress, by prohibiting
it from interfering with established religions and certainly forbidding
the federal government from creating a national church or religion.
This was the view of the First Amendment held by the Founding Fathers.
Thomas Jefferson, for example, wrote in an 1808 letter: "Certainly,
no power to prescribe any religious exercise, or to assume authority
in religious discipline, has been delegated to the General [national]
Government. It must then rest with the States, as far as it can
be in any human authority."
Prior to 1940, the Supreme Court consistently ruled in a manner
which reflected this belief. In Permoli v. New Orleans (1845),
for example, the Supreme Court ruled: "The Constitution makes no
provision for protecting the citizens of the respective states in
their religious liberties; this is left to the state constitutions
and laws: nor is there any inhibition imposed by the Constitution
of the United States in this respect on the states."
Of course, since most state constitutions were closely modeled
after the U.S. Constitution, citizens found their religious liberties
safeguarded by state courts. But the federal judiciary stayed
out of the fray.
A
revolution in law
However, this all changed abruptly in 1940, when the Supreme
Court ruled in Cantwell v. Connecticut that the First Amendment
applied not just to Congress, but to the states.
How did the court suddenly arrive at this novel view? It relied,
not on the First Amendment, but on the Fourteenth. That amendment
says: "No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge
the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor
shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property,
without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction
the equal protection of the laws."
Brian Fahling, senior trial attorney for the AFA Center for Law
and Policy, said this legal view which uses the Fourteenth
Amendment to encompass the First is called the "Incorporation
Doctrine."
He explained: "The Incorporation Doctrine was invented by the Court,
and it rests upon the dubious premise that the first eight amendments
to the Constitution are magically incorporated through the due process
clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and now apply as limitations
on the states."
However, this newly-minted interpretation, which was upheld and
strengthened in Everson v. Board of Education (1947), was
devoid of both historical and legal support.
As a matter of history, the Thirteenth, Fourteenth and Fifteenth
Amendments were passed in rapid succession between 1865 and 1870,
in the wake of the Civil War. The Thirteenth abolished slavery,
the Fourteenth was passed to make sure that states especially
in the South did not deny rights to African-American citizens,
while the Fifteenth ensured them the right to vote.
Thus, as David Barton explained in his book The Myth of Separation,
the purpose of the Fourteenth Amendment was "to guarantee that
recently emancipated slaves would have civil rights in all states."
In the historical setting in which the Fourteenth Amendment was
passed, the federal judiciary rejected the ideas which would come
to be known as the Incorporation Doctrine. Justice Felix Frankfurter
wrote in Adamson v. California (1947): "The notion that the
Fourteenth Amendment was a covert way of imposing upon the States
all the rules which it seemed important to 18th Century statesmen
to write into the Federal Amendments was rejected by judges who
were themselves witnesses of the process by which the Fourteenth
Amendment became part of the Constitution."
Even some of those who agreed with this expansive view of the Fourteenth
Amendment saw the inconsistency. Justice Stewart, for example, said
in his dissent in Abington School District v. Schempp (1963):
"I accept too the proposition that the Fourteenth Amendment has
somehow absorbed the Establishment Clause, although it is not without
irony that a constitutional provision evidently designed to leave
the States free to go their own way should now have become a restriction
upon their autonomy."
Later, having already adopted this novel view of the Fourteenth
Amendment, the Supreme Court had no problem admitting that it was
a radical departure from history and precedent. In Walz v. Tax
Commission (1970), the Supreme Court pointed to "the revolution
initiated by the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment, reversing
the historic position that the foundations of those liberties rested
largely in state law.
The Establishment Clause was not incorporated
in the Fourteenth Amendment until Everson v. Board of Education"
was decided.
Vacuuming
state power
Consideration of this "revolution" might be nothing more than
a dry discussion of abstract and inconsequential theory, except
for the fact that it produced results that were only too concrete.
The Supreme Court in the Cantwell and Everson rulings
infused the Fourteenth Amendment and thus the federal judiciary
with the power of a legal vacuum cleaner, enabling it to
suck up state power like so much worthless dust.
And make no mistake the federal judiciary has used that
power to systematically dismantle local and state authority on matters
of religious expression.
Daniel L. Dreisbach, professor of law at American University, wrote
in his book Thomas Jefferson and the Wall of Separation Between
Church and State: "Thus, a barrier [the First Amendment] originally
designed, as a matter of federalism, to separate the national and
state governments, and thereby to preserve state jurisdiction in
matters pertaining to religion, was transformed into an instrument
of the federal judiciary to invalidate policies and programs of
state and local authorities.
Incorporation, in short, destroyed
a vital purpose for which the First Amendment
had been written."
Rather than allowing local and state governments as expressions
of public will through the voting process to decide about
matters of religion, federal judges now decide what does and does
not violate the Establishment Clause.
But who can know what a judge will decide from case to case? Fahling
said, "Unshackled, so to speak, from the chains of the Constitution,
justices have felt free to fashion tests and change rules in a manner
that permits them to arrive at outcomes agreeable with their personal
judgment, if not with constitutional law."
As one might predict, the decisions of the Supreme Court often
shift at the whim of those who sit upon it, while the rest of the
American people wait with bated breath for an announcement from
on high.
According to Barton, Thomas Jefferson seemed worried about this
very possibility. Jefferson wrote in 1820 that to "consider the
judges as the ultimate arbiters of all constitutional questions"
would be "a very dangerous doctrine indeed, and one which would
place us under the despotism of an oligarchy".
Which is to prove the point that you just cant trust human
nature like our Founding Fathers believed.
More
about church-state issues
Helpful Web sites, as recommended by WallBuilders (see listing
below), an organization that is a friend to AFA:
The American Christian History
Institute
Claremont Institute
Documents
in Law, History and Diplomacy
The Founders
Constitution
Peter Marshall Ministries
Religion and
the Founding of the American Republic
WallBuilders
If you believe
your right to exercise your religious freedoms has been abrogated,
contact the AFA Center for Law and Policy, at 1-800-FAMILIES,
Ext. 232, or 662-680-3886. On the Web: www.afa.net/clp.
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