The Alabama Supreme Court on February 16, 2024, decided that cells awaiting implantation for in vitro fertilization are children and that the accidental destruction of such an embryo falls under the state’s Wrongful Death of a Minor Act. In an opinion concurring with the ruling, Chief Justice Tom Parker declared that the people of Alabama have adopted the “theologically based view of the sanctity of life” and said that “human life cannot be wrongfully destroyed without incurring the wrath of a holy God.”
Payton Armstrong of media watchdog Media Matters for America reported today that on the same day the Alabama decision came down, an interview Parker did on the program of a self-proclaimed “prophet” and Q-Anon conspiracy theorist appeared. In it, Parker claimed that “God created government” and called it “heartbreaking” that “we have let it go into the possession of others.”
Parker
referred to the “Seven Mountain Mandate,” a theory that appeared in 1975, which
claims that Christians must take over the “seven mountains” of U.S. life:
religion, family, education, media, entertainment, business…and government. He
told his interviewer that “we’ve abandoned those Seven Mountains and they’ve
been occupied by the other side.” God “is calling and equipping people to step
back into these mountains right now,” he said.
While
Republicans are split on the decision about embryos after a number of hospitals
have ended their popular IVF programs out of fear of prosecution, others, like
Republican presidential candidate Nikki Haley agreed that “embryos, to me, are
babies.”
House
speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) identifies himself as a Christian, has argued that
the United States is a Christian nation, and has called for “biblically
sanctioned government.” At a retreat of Republican leaders this weekend, as the
country is grappling with both the need to support Ukraine and the need to fund
the government, he tried to rally the attendees with what some called a
“sermon” arguing that the Republican Party needed to save the country from its
lack of morality.
As
Charles Blow of the New York Times put it: “If you don’t think this
country is sliding toward theocracy, you’re not paying attention.”
In
the United States, theocracy and authoritarianism go hand in hand.
The
framers of the Constitution quite deliberately excluded religion from the U.S.
Constitution. As a young man, James Madison, the key thinker behind the
Constitution, had seen his home state of Virginia arrest itinerant preachers
for undermining the established church in the state. He came to believe that
men had a right to the free exercise of religion.
In
1785, in a “Memorial and Remonstrance against Religious Assessments,” he
explained that what was at stake was not just religion, but also representative
government itself. The establishment of one religion over others attacked a
fundamental human right—an unalienable right—of conscience. If lawmakers could
destroy the right of freedom of conscience, they could destroy all other
unalienable rights. Those in charge of government could throw representative
government out the window and make themselves tyrants.
In
order to make sure men had the right of conscience, the framers added the First
Amendment to the Constitution. It read: “Congress shall make no law respecting
an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof….”
Madison
was right to link religion and representative government. In the early years of
the nation, Americans zealously guarded the wall between the two. They strictly
limited the power of the federal government to reflect religion, refusing even
to permit the government to stop delivery of the U.S. mails on Sunday out of concern that Jews and Christians did
not share the same Sabbath, and the government could not choose one over the
other. The Constitution, a congressional report noted, gave Congress no
authority “to inquire and determine what part of time, or whether any has been
set apart by the Almighty for religious exercises.”
But
the Civil War marked a change. As early as the 1830s, southern white enslavers
relied on religious justification for their hierarchical system that rested on
white supremacy. God, they argued, had made Black Americans for enslavement and
women for marriage, and society must recognize those facts.
A
character in an 1836 novel written by a Virginia gentleman explained to a
younger man that God had given everyone a place in society. Women and Black
people were at the bottom, “subordinate” to white men by design. “All women
live by marriage,” he said. “It is their only duty.” Trying to make them equal
was a cruelty. “For my part,” the older man said, “I am well pleased with the
established order of the universe. I see…subordination everywhere. And when I
find the subordinate content…and recognizing his place…as that to which he
properly belongs, I am content to leave him there.”
The
Confederacy rejected the idea of popular government, maintaining instead that a
few Americans should make the rules for the majority. As historian Gaines
Foster explained in his 2002 book Moral Reconstruction, which explores the
nineteenth-century relationship between government and morality, it was the
Confederacy, not the U.S. government, that sought to align the state with God.
A nation was more than the “aggregation of individuals,” one Presbyterian minister
preached, it was “a sort of person before God,” and the government must purge
that nation of sins.
Confederates
not only invoked “the favor and guidance of Almighty God” in their
Constitution, they established as their motto “Deo vindice,” or “God will
vindicate.”
The
United States, in contrast, was re-centering democracy during the war, and it
rejected the alignment of the federal government with a religious vision. When
reformers in the United States tried to change the preamble of the U.S.
Constitution to read, “We, the people of the United States, humbly
acknowledging Almighty God as the sources of all authority and power in civil
government, the Lord Jesus Christ, as the Ruler among nations, and His revealed
will as of supreme authority, in order to constitute a Christian government,
and in order to form a more perfect union,” the House Committee on the
Judiciary concluded that “the Constitution of the United States does not
recognize a Supreme Being.”
That
defense of democracy—the will of the majority—continued to hold religious
extremists at bay.
Reformers
continued to try to add a Christian amendment to the Constitution, Foster
explains, and in March
1896 once again got so far as the House Committee
on the Judiciary. One reformer stressed that turning the Constitution into a
Christian document would provide a source of authority for the government that,
he implied, it lacked when it simply relied on a voting majority. A religious
amendment “asks the Bible to decide moral issues in political life; not all
moral questions, but simply those that have become political questions.”
Opponents
recognized this attempt as a revolutionary attack that would dissolve the
separation of church and state, and hand power to a religious minority. One
reformer said that Congress had no right to enact laws that were not in
“harmony with the justice of God” and that the voice of the people should
prevail only when it was “right.” Congressmen then asked who would decide what
was right, and what would happen if the majority was wrong. Would the Supreme
Court turn into an interpreter of the Bible?
The
committee set the proposal aside.
Now,
once again, we are watching a minority trying to impose its will on the
majority, with leaders like House speaker Johnson noting that “I try to do
every day what my constituents want. But sometimes what your constituents want
does not line up with the principles God gave us for government. And you have
to have conviction enough to stand [up] to your own people….”
—Heather
Cox Richardson
Notes:
Gaines
Foster, Moral
Reconstruction: Christian Lobbyists and the Federal Legislation of Morality,
1865–1920 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina
Press, 2002).
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/02/21/opinion/alabama-ivf-trump-biden.html
https://www.politico.com/news/2024/02/20/donald-trump-allies-christian-nationalism-00142086
https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2024/02/abortion-bans-alabama-ivf-explained.html
https://theoutline.com/post/8856/seven-mountain-mandate-trump-paula-white
https://www.politico.com/live-updates/2024/02/21/congress/johnsons-sermon-to-gop-retreagt-00142436
https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Madison/01-01-02-0027
https://www.archives.gov/founding-docs/virginia-declaration-of-rights
https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Madison/01-08-02-0163#JSMN-01-08-02-0163-fn-0014-ptr
[Nathaniel
Beverly Tucker], George Balcombe: A Novel (New York: Harper &
Brothers, 1836).
https://avalon.law.yale.edu/19th_century/csa_csa.asp
https://americanhistory.si.edu/collections/nmah_412912
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