Archive for the ‘washington dc’ Category

Why Should Church and State Be Kept Separate?

Wednesday, November 16th, 2011

By now many of us are familiar with the right-wing argument that religion and government are inextricably intertwined, that the two have always mixed and can never be completely separated, and that the Constitution does not bar religious influence in governance. However, a group of legal experts at a recent forum have criticized this assumption as a myth, maintaining that secular civil government is critical for preserving civil liberties and American exceptionalism. The only problem is our reasoning for keeping church and state separate–what does America being “exceptional” have to do with it, anyway? As a ULC minister, do you find it relevant?

The forum was held on Tuesday, 8 November, at the U.S. National Press Club, a professional organization and private social club for journalists in Washington, DC. (Every U.S. president since Warren Harding has been a member of the club.) During the forum, experts from the fields of law, history, and political science addressed growing concerns about references to God and religion on the part of conservative Republican presidential hopefuls during the 2012 U.S. presidential campaign. The event was characterized by overwhelming support for separation of church and state as a vital component of American democracy, and suspicion toward how Republicans are disingenuously using God and religion to promote their political and social agendas.

Those in attendance gave a number of reasons for their concern over the growing attempt to blur the boundary between church and state. John Ragosta, author of Wellspring of Liberty: How Virginia’s Religious Dissenters Helped to Win the American Revolution & Secured Religious Liberty, said that the United States would not have received the respect and support of non-Christians if it were an unequivocally Christian nation, according to Shahid Ali Panhwer and Maha Mussadaq in a story in The Miami Herald. Meanwhile, Jamie Raskin, Maryland state senator and director of the Law and Government Program at American University’s School of Law, argued that while the U.S. Constitution allows people to practice the religion of their choice, government actions themselves should rely on logic and science. He also pointed out that while most Americans may be Christian in a demographic sense, the government itself is not Christian, and forcing right-wing fundamentalist Christianity on to constitutional law would topple two centuries of developments in secular government. The basic message seemed to be that America needs to remain politically secular in order to remain exceptional as a paragon of democracy.

There are many fantastic points being made by people like Raskin: there is an important difference between the majority of private citizens being Christian on one hand, and government being Christian on the other–while most Americans are Christian, the actions of government are not predicated on the majority religious belief, for such beliefs are a private and not a political exercise.

But supporters of church-state separation are still emphasizing exceptionalism as their motive. Why should our commitment to secular civil government be motivated by America being “exceptional”? Isn’t the preservation of civil liberties reason enough? To say that the American government should remain secular (and thus preserve civil liberties) in order to remain exceptional is like saying that it should remain secular in order to look good in front of everybody else. While exceptionalism can be defined as “setting an example”, it also connotes superiority, so protecting secular civil government in order to be exceptional suggests greater interest in looking “cool” than in protecting people’s rights; it suggests a mercenary, “might makes right” sort of attitude preoccupied more with recognition and personal interests than with principles themselves. But that smacks of egoism. Perhaps you’ve asked the same question as a minister ordained online: should the U.S. be protecting civil liberties in order to be “better” than other nations; or should it be protecting civil liberties for their own sake?

Besides, why shouldn’t other nations be expected to serve as examples of successful democracy? Why shouldn’t they be expected or encouraged to develop secular civil governments themselves, thereby preserving the civil liberties of their own people? Placing this expectation on the U.S. alone suggests either that Americans alone have the ability to develop democracy, or that only Americans deserve it. But, obviously, if the U.S. believes that non-Americans deserve the same rights as Americans, it follows that the U.S. should expect other nations to be exceptional too. It is not, in other words, the sole prerogative of the U.S. to embody and benefit from democracy.

We do see the U.S. helping other nations demonstrate this kind of initiative with movements like the Arab Spring, in which fledgling Middle-Eastern democracies are earning the admiration of the world for toppling their erstwhile tyrants. Hopefully we will see more examples of this sort of assistance to other nations seeking the same liberties.

There are many reasons why preserving secular civil government helps to nurture a healthy democracy (some nations, like the United Kingdom, manage to do this through organic secularization), but what should be our motive for doing so? To protect civil liberties for their own sake, or to make ourselves look like the cat’s meow, and the rest of the world chopped liver? If we wish for every citizen of every nation to enjoy the benefits of secular civil government, at the same time enjoying free exercise of religion, it should be the former. The U.S. needs to start fighting this cause because it benefits people, and not to get something out of it, like the sniveling, fawning admiration of weak and dependent foreign nations. That sort of attitude borders on nationalistic.

What do you think as a nondenominational wedding officiant?

Source:

The Miami Herald

    Conan O’Brien Ordained by Universal Life Church Monastery

    Friday, October 28th, 2011

    As New York Magazine‘s Vulture blog has just announced, Conan O’Brien, will be celebrating the one-year anniversary of his Late Night TBS talk show, by officiating the same-sex marriage of a longtime staffer.  We’re proud to confirm that Conan is one of the Universal Life Church Monastery’s most recent ordained ministers! Though the date of the wedding ceremony has yet to be released, Conan was ordained with Universal Life Church Monastery on October 21st and will likely be performing the marriage as part of the shows one week stint of episodes in New York City next week.

    The Monastery salutes Conan’s courage to perform a same-sex marriage and to set the example that we are all children of the same universe; gay, straight, black, white, brown, young and old.  The church invites all to become a minister of their own beliefs and speak truth to power during these critical times of change.

      “Occupy Wall Street” Draws Religious Progressives

      Wednesday, October 12th, 2011

      Religion and liberal progressivism have become increasingly polarized in the United States, but new grassroots forces are rising to reunite the two. Typically religion has been absent from left-wing protest movements, but the Occupy Wall Street movement which has spread from New York to other American cities has been characterized by an unusually vociferous religious contingent. It seems only appropriate when one thinks about it. After all, the faithful have traditionally been among the first to speak up against greed and show support for the underdog.

      The unexpected spiritual component of the Occupy movement became apparent early on at the demonstration in Zuccotti Park, in downtown Manhattan. Amid the din of drums and shouting could be heard the hymns of the “Protest Chaplains”, a group of progressive students, ministers, seminarians, and laypeople from Boston who joined the protesters in their denunciation of corporate greed. Marisa Egerstrom, an organizer of the group and a student at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Arts Sciences, said, “In a group that had a lot of bandanas and black hoodies, we stood out…. But people kept coming up to us and saying, ‘You know, you are the first Christians I’ve seen at a protest … on our side.’” For the Protest Chaplains, it was only natural to speak out against economic practices they views as unethical, and the best way of doing so was through their faith.

      But it is not only Christians who are getting involved in the growing protest movement against corporate greed; in many cases Christians, Jews, and Muslims have joined together in an interfaith effort at reform. Another group led by major New York City religious leaders joined the march at Zuccotti Park on 9 October and held a prayer session afterward, but it was not purely a Christian activity; it also involved prayers and speeches by leaders of the Jewish and Muslim faith communities. According to Rev. Donna Schaper, senior minister at New York’s Judson Memorial Church, the group’s chief motivating principle is the “golden rule” of the Bible–to do unto others as you would want them to do unto you. “The golden rule is not just one that Christians observe”, she tells Jack Jenkins of Religion News Service, “… it’s a way that all major faiths can unite”. But the nondenominational religious activities which have begun to characterize the Occupy movement do not end with prayer sessions. The Protest Chaplains worked with the organizers of the “Occupy Boston” tent community to set up a “Faith and Spirituality” tent, which has hosted Muslim prayer services, yoga workshops, and even a Yom Kippur service.

      Interestingly, the interfaith protest efforts of the Occupy movement’s religious progressives are driven largely by a traditional understanding of sin and moral corruption. For Schaper and other progressive, left-wing Christians, Wall Street’s transgressions are multifarious and conflict directly with the values cherished by their faith communities, and greed is only the most obvious of these moral missteps. In their march at Zuccotti Square, Schaper’s group carried a handmade golden calf resembling the famous bull statue near the New York Stock Exchange. “We think Wall Street has become idolatrous”, she tells Jenkins. “I’m not saying God is against the people of Wall Street, but I think God is sick of Wall Street taking more than they deserve”. Shaper suggests that Wall Street has mistakenly elevated money to the level of the divine, placing less importance on altruism than on the thrill of personal material gain, to the detriment of more indigent members of society. Of course, this position conflicts with that of many right-wing evangelicals, who often seem to champion the theory of trickle-down economics, arguing that the rich must remain rich in order for the poor to benefit from them. However, critics of this position ask whether anyone ever feels this wealth trickle down. Wouldn’t a true Christian support legislation which places money directly in the hands of those who need it, without making them dependent on the whims and fancies of the wealthy, who might not be so keen on creating more jobs for people they don’t want to pay?

      The Occupy Wall Street movement has shown an unexpected religious and spiritual dimension, and a successfully interfaith one, to boot. Groups like Protest Chaplains are protesting extortive and usurious practices of the banks and Wall Street because of their religious convictions, not despite them. Perhaps it is time for right-wing evangelicals to fall in step with their more progressive peers by taking a hard look at how wealth is really being distributed in the United States, who really benefits and how much, and whether their views truly reflect the teachings of the Bible and other holy texts to which they might claim to subscribe. Somehow Jesus managed to give to the needy and remain poor at the same time, so it might be an interesting experiment for religious conservatives protective of their wealth to welcome a few new taxes for once just to see whether the poor can benefit without the economy tanking. The point is not which economic theory works, though–the point is whether Christians, Jews, Muslims, and others have acted in accordance with that commandment which is common to nearly all religions: “He that hath two coats, let him impart to him that hath none “.

      Source:

      The Washington Post

        Alabama Town to Criminals: Jail, or Church

        Wednesday, September 28th, 2011

        Prisoner with bookMixing religion and government is nothing new in the United States–it happens all the time–but a recent case in the rural state of Alabama is particularly noteworthy for the blatant way in which it violates the United States Constitution. Many of our own Universal Life Church ministers will be surprised to know what authorities are telling nonviolent offenders in a small Alabama town: go to jail, or go to church. The problem with this type of ultimatum, however, is that it seems to violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution.

        The effort, called Operation Restore Our Community, is being organized after a decision by a city judge in the town of Bay Minette, Alabama. According to CBS and the Associated Press, the judge decided to give misdemeanors the option of working off their sentences by going to jail and paying a fine, or by attending church worship services every Sunday for a year. Offenders who choose to attend the religious services will be able to choose which church they will attend, but they will have to check in with the pastor as well as the police each week. (So far there is no indication that pastors who get ordained online are allowed to participate.) After one year of successful church attendance, the offender’s case will be dismissed. Bay Minette Police Chief Mike Rowland told CBS and the Associated Press that the program could help reform destructive behavior in misguided citizens. Fifty-six churches in the region are participating in the program.

        Besides ostensibly violating the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, the program also seems to violate the Constitution’s Equal Protection Clause, found in the Fourteenth Amendment. This observation was made by Sleepingtolive, one of the commenters on the CBS Web report on the story. It is possible to show how Operation Restore Our Community violates this clause using three hypothetical scenarios.

        In Scenario One, the judge gives the offender a choice between going to jail, or attending a mosque. This scenario violates the Clause, because it shows preference for Muslims over non-Muslims. Likewise, a choice between jail or a Christian church shows preference for Christians over non-Christians (or, for example, interfaith wedding officiants). To satisfy the requirements of the Establishment Clause and show Muslims and Christians equal treatment of the law, authorities must offer all citizens an option of attending either a mosque or a church.

        In Scenario Two, the judge tries to become more inclusive by giving the offender a choice between going to jail, or attending a mosque, synagogue, or Buddhist temple. This still violates the Equal Protection Clause, however, because it favors Islam, Buddhism, and Judaism over Christianity. Nobody would stand such marginalization of Christianity because it would violate the Clause. Similarly, marginalization of Muslims, Buddhists, and Jews violates the Clause. In order to fulfill the requirements of the Clause, Muslims, Buddhists, Jews, and Christians (just like traditionally-trained ministers and people who become a minister online) must all be treated equal.

        But even this is not enough.

        In Scenario Three, the judge tries to be more inclusive than ever before by giving the offender a choice between going to jail, orJustice statue with sword and scaleattending any religious service in any world religion or faith tradition. This still violates the Equal Protection Clause, though, because it shows preference for religion over non-religion. If the judge is to honor the dictates of the Equal Protection Clause, she or he must not show any preference for one or more religion(s) over another, or any preference for religion over non-religion, or vice-versa. He or she must find a suitable alternative that would show equal treatment of all individuals under the law.

        As we can see, there are some serious legal problems with programs like Bay Minette’s Operation Restore Our Community. Not only do they seem to challenge the principle of church-state separation supported by the First Amendment as well as judicial precedence, but they also seem to violate the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment–one of the reconstruction amendments intended to return some powers to the federal government in order to prevent states from curtailing the constitutional rights of the individual by invoking state rights. Basically, it is unfair to give individuals only one religious worship alternative, it is unfair to give them multiple religious worship alternatives (leaving out others), and it is unfair to give them only religious worship alternatives, and not secular alternatives, and the Universal Life Church Monastery is committed to the fair and equal treatment of all groups. The only solution to behavioral problems on the part of civil government is to offer a neutral alternative which would ensure equal treatment of the law for all individuals.

        Give us your thoughts. Should local authorities be allowed to give nonviolent offenders the option of either going to jail, or to a Christian worship service? Why or why not is this fair in your eyes?

        Source:

        CBS

          Barack Obama’s Budding Religious Sycophancy

          Monday, September 26th, 2011

          In a recent article on the “Faith and Reason” blog at USA Today, Cathy Lynn-Grossman discussed U.S. president Barack Obama’s increased use of religious rhetoric in an effort to attract the support of evangelical Christians. Various experts have suggested that while this tactic might work for Republican presidential candidates, it will probably not work for Obama, since conservatives will doubt his sincerity while liberals will criticize his appeal to religion. Perhaps what Obama should be doing is not to play the religion card, but to stand up unapologetically for what he would seem to believe in—secular civil government. As a Universal Life Church minister, do you share this opinion?

          Grossman cites the opinions of various researchers in examining the usefulness of Obama’s appeal to evangelicals, comparing the president’s religious proclamations to those of conservatives like Rick Perry. John Green, director of the University of Akron’s Bliss Institute of Applied Politics, suggests that it might be too late for Obama to sway conservative voters: Obama did recite Psalm 46 at the 9/11 memorial event in New York, and Psalm 30 at a memorial concert at the Kennedy Center that same night, but while he is now proclaiming his faith in the right context, he “didn’t talk much about faith during his first two years in office and this has left 40% of Americans wondering just what, exactly, is his faith commitment”. What Green implies—and something which might cause nondenominational ministers ordained online to question the president’s commitment to secular government—is that Obama is using religious rhetoric as a mere campaign strategy at a time when it is crucial to do so rather than making a genuine statement of faith.

          Obama

          Perhaps more disturbing than this appeal to religious teachings at public speaking events is the president’s apparent mixing of religious and national identities. University of Washington communications professor David Domke points out the president’s increasingly complex and frequent invocation of God in public speeches, which he calls “a technique for making ‘Christian’ and ‘American’ synonymous”. The president, Green argues, is “making a claim about the nation. There’s no avoiding that this is a strategic emphasis on his part. He didn’t speak this way when he was at 60% public approval”. For ULC wedding ministers—people who champion religious neutrality and church-state separation—the implication is ominous. Green seems to be suggesting that even though he generally refrains from religious rhetoric at secular events, the president is cowtowing to the conservative argument that America is intrinsically a Christian nation merely in order to get re-elected.

          Conservatives like Perry, however, can rely on religious political rhetoric in order to leverage public support, as Lynn-Grossman shows in her article. A quotation from the Associated Press illustrates the blunt sincerity which Perry—widely considered a Christian dominionist—espouses the purported Christian “roots” of the United States: according to the AP, Perry said that “America is going to be guided by some set of values. The question is gonna be whose values? It’s those Christian values that this country was based upon”. It is not a sentiment that sits well with people who become ordained online to solemnize nontraditional or non-religious weddings. In addition to this, Domke says that “[f]or a Republican, you need a prayer rally. For a Democrat, you just need an opening prayer and more than that makes liberals nervous.” The essence of these observations seems to be that conservative candidates like Perry will succeed with conservatives in painting the U.S. as a fundamentally Christian country, while liberals like Obama (who is not very liberal) will fail not only with conservatives (who mistrust him), but also with liberals, who have lost faith in him as a strong voice of liberalism and church-state separation.

          So, why should Obama even bother attempting to sway evangelical Christian voters with religious rhetoric which both comes across as patently sycophantic and belies his true, underlying principles? As pointed out above, he will probably fail with both conservatives who express suspicion over his sincerity and liberals who resent his appeal to conservative religiosity. Perhaps what the president should be doing is unabashedly embracing his dedication to secular civil government. If he were to do so, and if his words rang true and honest with the masses, he might end up with a greater base of support. And he would also be a worthy opponent to the Christian dominionists on the right who wish to turn the United States piecemeal into the Christian theocracy which, as John Adams wrote in Article 11 of the Treaty of Tripoli, it was never intended to be.

          Your thoughts and opinions as a Universal Life Church officiant are important to us. Do you think Barack Obama should stop playing the religion card and start voicing support for the preservation of secular civil government?

          Source:

          USA Today