Here's another perspective on the separation of church and state that Christians, who insist we're a Christian nation, should keep in mind:On this 234th anniversary of our forefathers’ declaration of independence from England this question prevails: What would the Founding Fathers think about the way 21st century America handles the freedoms we enjoy and burdens that come with them?
Is it still the same Constitution they completed in 1787? It’s only been changed 27 times. “The Founding Fathers were very conscious of politics. ... They made some very significant compromises in writing the Constitution ... There was no consensus. These were compromises, just as there would be compromises today,” said Peter Bergerson, a social sciences professor at FGCU who teaches classes on this subject.
In the original Constitution there was little or no discussion of free speech and religion, guns and states rights.
So, after the Constitution was ratified in 1789, James Madison went to work on a Bill of Rights — the first 10 amendments to the Constitution.
Madison, the Father of the Constitution, wanted no part of enumerating these rights in the beginning.
“He thought it was nauseating that there should be a Bill of Rights,” Bergerson said. “His argument was that you would be limiting what the people had a right to have.”After compromise, persuasion and a letter from Thomas Jefferson that said “half a loaf is better than no bread; if we cannot secure all our rights, let us secure what we can,” the Bill of Rights was written and became law two years after the Constitution was enacted.
To this day, these bills of rights are the most debated issues our court system tackles.
The philosophy behind the Founding Fathers’ position on religion is rather simple, stated elegantly in a letter written by James Madison in 1803: “The purpose of the separation of Church and State is to keep forever from these shores the ceaseless strife that has soaked the soil of Europe in blood for centuries.”
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