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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsBirth Of A (Christian) Nation: Scholars Debate The Genesis Of A Popular Myth
Americans United blog
Birth Of A (Christian) Nation: Scholars Debate The Genesis Of A Popular Myth
Mar 16, 2015 by Rob Boston in Wall of Separation
God is still part of the Religious Right's trinity, but the other two figures are President Ronald W. Reagan and Ayn Rand.
The New York Times over the weekend ran a provocative column by Kevin M. Kruse, a history professor at Princeton University, on the origins of the Christian nation myth.
Kruse, author of the book One Nation Under God: How Corporate America Invented Christian America, argues that the Christian nation idea really took off in the early 1930s when a band of business leaders endorsed the concept as a way of fighting back against President Franklin D. Roosevelts New Deal.
I havent read Kruses book, but his Times column is thought-provoking and well argued. Its worth your time. I was especially interested in Kruses use of the term Christian libertarian to describe some of the prominent corporate leaders of the Christian nation crusade. Ive had the same thought while attending meetings of Religious Right organizations. At the annual Values Voter Summit sponsored by the Family Research Council (FRC) theres very little talk these days about religion and theology. Rather, the events have the feel of Heritage Foundation briefings. (In fact, the Heritage Foundation co-sponsors the Summit.)
These events are essentially primers of libertarian economic theory, with the main idea of the FRC these days being not that Jesus is good but that government is always bad. God is still part of their trinity, but the other two figures are President Ronald W. Reagan and Ayn Rand. (Ironically, Rand was an atheist.) At the Summit, Reagans name is dropped constantly Jesuss, not so much.
Kruses ideas are interesting and worth exploring in more detail, but I think there may be more to the story. This July, former Americans United Legal Director Steven K. Green will publish a new book titled Inventing a Christian America: The Myth of the Religious Founding. I received an early copy and read it a few weeks ago. Green, who is now a professor of law at Willamette University in Oregon, argues that the Christian nation myth springs from the 1820s, during a time of growing religious piety when a generation that rose up after the Founding Fathers began to cast about for a foundational myth that would link the still-new nation with the Almighty in a profound way.
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https://au.org/blogs/wall-of-separation/birth-of-a-christian-nation-scholars-debate-the-genesis-of-a-popular-myth
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Birth Of A (Christian) Nation: Scholars Debate The Genesis Of A Popular Myth (Original Post)
Panich52
Mar 2015
OP
jwirr
(39,215 posts)1. I want to read both of those books. I can see the idea that the "christian nation" springs from the
1820s is also connected to the Great Awakening religious movement of the Campball family and to all of us who grew up believing that George Washington cut down a cherry tree this theory is very familiar. We believed.
Panich52
(5,829 posts)2. Another book on a related topic: The Creationists, by Ronald Numbers. Indepth look at the movement.
Good read. I read it in mid-90s and the efforts to sell their fundamentalist idea continues. Don't know if book's been updated.
Here's one link to it (Google books)
http://books.google.com/books/about/The_Creationists.html?id=GQ3TI5njXfIC