Prologue
It was not the best of times as far as American Christians were
concerned. Urban crime had exploded as young thugs took over the
cities. Promiscuity and alcoholism were rampant. Ordinary people
had stopped going to church. Many in the nation's universities
seemed actively hostile to traditional religion, preferring to
place their trust in reason alone rather than a God who operated in
human affairs.
Even in politics, traditional religion and morality were
flouted. One of the era's most influential Presidents was an avowed
materialist, who scoffed in private at the miracles of the Bible
and historic Christian doctrines. Another was the only President in
our history to have murdered another person in a duel. Then there
was the social reformer who was invited by Congress to give a
special address to the nation's legislative body--the social
reformer who elsewhere proposed a "Declaration of Mental
Independence" that denounced private property, traditional
religion, and marriage as "a trinity of the most monstrous evils
that could be combined to inflict mental and physical evil upon his
whole race."2
In many ways, America in the early 1800s--for that is when these
events occurred--was remarkably like America today. Yet most
historians would not describe 19th century America as godless and
amoral. If anything, the period is often held up as the epitome of
a Christian America, when Christianity--or at least the Protestant
variety of Christianity--was all but the de facto religion
of the state, and when Biblical ethics supplied the basis for
social relations. Nor would criminologists describe the 19th
century, at least the second half of it, as awash in crime. In
fact, as James Q. Wilson writes, lawlessness went down in the
latter half of the 19th century despite urbanization,
industrialization, and other factors typically associated with
increased crime rates.3
So what is going on here? Both depictions can't be true. Or can
they?
The first part of the 19th century was a time of remarkable
spiritual, moral, and civic instability. But out of that
instability came a social and political revolution that ought to
give us hope, as well as provide us with a warning on how to engage
our culture at the dawn of a new century.
What happened in the early 19th century is commonly called the
Second Great Awakening, referring to a series of evangelical
revivals that started in the Northeast, but ultimately spread all
the way to the western frontier. But these revivals are only part
of the story. They were paralleled by a massive infusion of
evangelical Christians into the public arena. Evangelicals across
denominations organized associations in order to spread the gospel,
end poverty, stop practices such as dueling, and reduce alcoholism.
This reform movement became one of the leading controversies in
America before the Civil War.4
We sometimes think that the conflict over religion in politics
is a new thing in America. It is not. During the first decades of
the 19th century, America was embroiled in a bitter debate about
just how far religious people should go in promoting a social and
cultural agenda. Christians involved in the politics of the era
were accused of subverting republican government and trying to take
over the state. Complained one group of citizens, the Christian
political activists are "infusing a spirit of religious intolerance
and persecution into the political institutions of the country, and
which unless opposed, will result in a union of church and
state."5
The more things change, the more they stay the same.
I recall this bit of our nation's history not for the sake of
historical trivia, but because there is something we can learn from
it. The 19th century Christian reformers were remarkably successful
in bringing about social change, and I think their example holds
lessons for how people of faith ought to engage the present culture
today.
Lesson #1: Stop looking to the
government for solutions to all of our problems.
The first lesson is that government may not be the solution to
all of our problems. Prior to the Second Great Awakening, many
politically active evangelicals had a tendency to look to
government to promote religion. They thought that in order for
religion to flourish, the government had to promote it through
public days of fasting and thanksgiving, strict laws against
Sabbath-breaking, and the use of tax dollars to pay the salaries of
ministers. Piety had to be promoted by law. Congregationalist
evangelicals in New England were the fiercest supporters of this
view.
They almost seemed to think that vibrant religion depended on
government.
Thomas Jefferson and his political party thought differently.
They believed in a fairly strict separation between church and
state, and they certainly did not favor tax dollars going to pay
ministers. When the Jeffersonians began to triumph in state and
local elections in New England, state support for churches began to
end. Disestablishment--the ending of official government support
for churches--finally came even to such Congregationalist bastions
as Connecticut and New Hampshire in 1818 and 1819.
Congregationalist evangelicals first thought disestablishment
was the end of the world. Famed preacher Lyman Beecher recalled in
his autobiography that the day state support of religion was voted
down in Connecticut, he had the "worst attack [of depression] I
ever met in my life. It was as dark a day as ever I saw. The injury
done to the cause of Christ, as we then supposed, was
irreparable."6
Or was it? Beecher continued: "For several days I suffered what
no tongue can tell for the best thing that ever happened to the
State of Connecticut."7
The best thing that ever happened? That's right.
Disestablishment, said Beecher, "cut the churches loose from
dependence on state support. It threw them wholly on their own
resources and on God."8
State support had been a crutch that had kept the churches
crippled. While Congregationalists in New England looked to
government as their savior, they had little incentive to do much on
their own. As a result, their churches dwindled and Unitarianism
won the hearts and minds of the people. When state support was
removed, however, New England evangelicals finally realized that
they had to go out and hustle. They had to try to persuade people
that their religious beliefs were right. They could no longer
depend on government subsidies or government compulsion. When they
recognized this, things started to change.
Of course, some evangelicals had known this truth all along,
especially Baptists. That's why many of them supported Jefferson.
But for Congregationalists and Presbyterians from New England, the
free enterprise system in religion was a radical innovation. Once
they accepted it, they prospered. And so did evangelicalism in
general.
Lyman Beecher was one of the people who came to understand most
clearly the possibilities of the new system of voluntary religion.
He became the chief architect of what one historian has called
America's "`voluntary establishment' of religion."9 Beecher argued that it was vain to
expect that orthodox religion could be guaranteed by religious
tests for public office, Sabbath-breaking laws, and state
subsidies. If irreligion and immorality dominated society, it was
the responsibility of Christians themselves to form private reform
associations to combat these evils--to convert people and to
promote virtue.
And that is precisely what happened. Led by Beecher and others,
evangelicals organized scores of voluntary associations for
evangelism, missions, and for social and political reform. They
formed groups to help end poverty, to teach reading and writing to
the poor, and to prevent alcohol abuse. Still others promoted
prison reform and voluntary observance of the Sabbath. This
multitude of private associations transformed American society in a
way that few government programs ever could.
"They say ministers have lost their influence," Beecher wrote
years later. "The fact is, they have gained. By voluntary efforts,
societies, missions, and revivals, they exert a deeper influence
than ever they could" have by state support.10
He was right. If you doubt it, just compare America with
European countries that still have state churches today. In the
United States, as bad as we are, more than 40 percent of Americans
attend religious services once a week or more, 65 percent believe
there is a personal God, 67 percent believe in Hell, 85 percent
believe in Heaven, and 86 percent believe that the Bible is the
actual or inspired word of God.
Compare these figures to England, where only 14 percent of the
people attend church once a week or more, only 57 percent believe
in Heaven, only 30 percent believe in Hell, and only 31 percent
believe in a personal God. Sweden is even worse: Only 5 percent of
the people attend church once a week or more, only 10 percent
believe in Hell, and only 19 percent believe in a personal God.11
For all of its faults, the free enterprise system in religion
works. And that is something we might want to remember today as we
face ever more problems and social decay. Private-sector solutions
may be far more powerful than many government solutions. In fact,
the best thing we might be able to do is get government to give us
the freedom to pursue these private-sector solutions.
Lesson #2: Cultivate the common
ground.
A second lesson that I think we can learn from the evangelical
experience of the early 1800s is the importance of staking out the
moral common ground.
When evangelicals turned to social reform in the early 1800s,
they did not seek to enact the Bible into law. Nor did they claim
that the Bible was the only repository of moral truth. True, they
regarded the Bible as the clearest and most authoritative
exposition of morality. But they also believed in God's general
revelation--that God revealed his moral laws to all human beings by
writing them on their hearts. This belief in general revelation can
be seen most clearly at evangelical colleges, which regularly
offered courses in moral philosophy. Indeed, the major American
texts on the subject were written by Presbyterian Samuel Stanhope
Smith, Baptist Francis Wayland, and Episcopalian Jasper Adams. Even
diehard Congregationalists like Timothy Dwight and Nathaniel Emmons
acknowledged that man had a natural capacity to understand the
principles of morality.
Call this general revelation of morality what you will--common
grace, common sense, light of nature, law of nature, or something
else--the underlying point is the same: Christians do not need to
feel guilty about offering secular arguments for their positions.
It does not diminish the Bible or its authority to appeal to the
natural moral law, because that law also comes from God.
The belief of 19th century evangelicals in general revelation
meant that they had no problem in articulating their political
objectives on secular grounds. Because of this, when they fought
the practice of dueling, or objected to slavery, or promoted prison
reform, they were able to join together with people from different
theological traditions, including Unitarians.
The commonsense approach to morality of 19th century
evangelicals is something we can learn from today. Instead of
appealing to specifically religious standards that other citizens
may not accept, people of faith have an obligation to try to
articulate their positions in a way understandable to those who do
not share their particular religious beliefs.
Lesson #3: Setting priorities is
important.
A third lesson that can be learned from evangelicals in politics
in the early 1800s is the importance of setting priorities.
Evangelicals during this period struggled with the question of
how broad the religious community's political involvement ought to
be. The best thinkers among them concluded that Christians, as
Christians, ought to limit their political activities to those
issues where a clear moral principle was at stake. Otherwise, they
would be in danger of bringing disrepute on the gospel.
Lyman Beecher made this point explicitly in a sermon in
1824:
Christians are not to attempt to control the administration of
civil government, in things merely secular.
This is what our Saviour refused to do, when he declined being a
king, or ruler, or judge. It would secularize the church, as the
same conduct secularized the church of Rome:--and bring upon her,
and justly, a vindictive reaction of hatred and opposition. When
great questions of national morality are about to be decided, such
as the declaration of war; or, as in England, the abolition of the
slave trade; or the permission to introduce Christianity into India
by Missionaries; it becomes Christians to lift up their voice, and
exert their united influence. But, with the annual detail of
secular policy, it does not become Christians to intermeddle,
beyond the unobtrusive influence of their silent suffrage. They are
not to "strive, nor cry, nor lift up their voice in the streets."
The injudicious association of religion with politics, in the time
of Cromwell, brought upon evangelical doctrine and piety, in
England, an odium which has not ceased to this day.12
Beecher saw with piercing clarity that if Christians became too
avidly involved in ordinary political strife, their activities
would damage not only the state but the church. "No sight is more
grievous or humiliating," he wrote, "than to see Christians
continually agitated, by all the great and little political
disputes of the nation, the state, the city, and town, and village;
toiling in the drudgery of ambition; and flowing hither and
thither, like waves which have no rest, and cast-up only mire and
dirt."13 Beecher added that "there is
no one particular in which it is more important that there should
be a reformation."14
Lesson #4: Integrity is important.
A fourth lesson that can be drawn from evangelicals in politics
in the early 1800s is the importance of personal integrity.
During the 1790s and through the first years of the new century,
many conservative Protestants had allied themselves with the
Federalist Party against the Jeffersonians, who they thought were
godless. During these years, some ministers virtually became party
hacks, demonizing members of the other political party and using
the pulpit to generate support for the political agenda of the
Federalist Party. Eventually, there was a backlash against this
harsh partisanship among Christians, and there was an increasing
recognition among many religious leaders that Christians in
politics had not lived up to the requirements of their faith and
had to do better. They had to guard against the dangers of pride
and hatred even while striving to stand up for the truth.
Timothy Dwight was one of the people who recognized this.
President of Yale, Dwight himself had been one of the fiercest
critics of Jefferson and a staunch supporter of the Federalist
Party. But he came to realize the dangers of tying Christianity so
closely to party politics, and he began trying to counteract it. In
his commencement address of 1816, he told students that the
prejudices, the fervour, and the bitterness, of party spirit are
incapable of vindication. I may be permitted to think differently
from my neighbour; but I am not permitted to hate him, nor to
quarrel with him, merely because he thinks differently from me.
Our countrymen have spent a sufficient time in hostilities
against each other. We have entertained as many unkind thoughts,
uttered as many bitter speeches, called each other by as many hard
names, and indulged as much unkindness and malignity; as might
satisfy our worst enemies, and as certainly ought to satisfy us.
From all these efforts of ill-will we have not derived the least
advantage. Friends and brothers have ceased to be friends and
brothers; and professing Christians have dishonoured the religion
which they professed.15
One of Dwight's students from a few years before was a young man
named Jeremiah Evarts. Of all the politically active evangelicals
during the early 1800s, perhaps Evarts was the one who displayed
most clearly during this period a reconciliation between personal
holiness and political action.
Evarts was a lawyer, a journalist, and missionary leader. He was
active in taking a stand on such issues as slavery and alcohol
abuse before those issues were popular. But his greatest legacy was
his defense of the treaty rights of the Cherokee Indians in
Georgia.
The Cherokees had become Christians and adopted a democratic
form of government. They had been promised their treaty lands
forever by the federal government. But in the late 1820s, a
concerted effort was made to take away the Cherokees' land and
compel them to move further west. The effort finally succeeded in a
tragic episode of American history, but it took years to actually
force the Cherokees to move--and that was largely due to the
gallant efforts of Jeremiah Evarts and his missionaries. Evarts'
activities on behalf of the Cherokees literally drove him to
exhaustion and death.
Even most opponents of Evarts respected him. An indication of
why they did so can be seen from his daily prayer list, found among
his papers after his death. Evarts prayed daily that he would "be
preserved from rash and imprudent speeches in regard to the
government" and pleaded for help with avoiding self-righteousness:
"Whenever I hear of sinful actions, before I say a word by way of
censure, [let me] remember how much I find to blame in myself,
though under so great advantages."16
Evarts was a powerful example of how one can stand up strongly
for what one believes to be right and still do it in a Christian
manner. He was an example of what the Apostle Paul, in Ephesians
4:15, called "speaking the truth in love." Avoiding the twin wrongs
of self-righteousness and cowardly compromise, Evarts showed what
it truly means to be a person of faith in politics. We can all
benefit from his example.
Lesson #5: Prudence is important.
To this point, I have been discussing the positive lessons that
we can learn from evangelicals in politics during the early
national period. But there is a final cautionary lesson to learn as
well. It relates to the critical role of prudence in politics.
Idealism in politics--especially idealism born of religious
convictions--is a two-edged sword. It can push us toward necessary
reforms, such as abolition of the slave trade, policies to help the
poor, and efforts to save people from substance abuse; but it can
also lead to extremism. Idealists aim for the sky, and when they
don't reach it, they can become disillusioned, bitter, and even
radical. What happens when social progress does not occur as
quickly as one would like? What happens when grave social evils
seem intractable, either because of public indifference or because
of government-imposed obstacles? The danger of religious idealism
in politics is that when the idealists don't get their way, they
will give up on the system, perhaps even work to undermine it.
Evangelicals faced this problem after the failure to save the
Cherokee Indians. After every legal and political remedy to prevent
Cherokee deportation had been exhausted, the evangelical
missionaries were faced with the question of whether to counsel the
Cherokees to continue to resist or to seek the most favorable
removal agreement possible. Most evangelicals urged the Cherokees
to conclude a new treaty with the federal government, realizing
that outright resistance would now be futile. The only prudent
course was to try to make the best of an admittedly bad situation.
A few evangelicals, however, supported continued resistance by the
Cherokees.
The debate over Cherokee resistance was minor, but it was also
prophetic. It underscored the difficulties religious reformers can
sometimes have in dealing with the hard realities of politics, and
it foreshadowed a much larger debate that would take place several
decades later about slavery. The question then was how far
Christians should go to oppose slavery in a country where its
existence was constitutionally protected. Some abolitionists
attacked the Constitution itself as a corrupt document and
advocated going beyond the law to dismantle slavery. Others sought
to work within the system to stop the spread of slavery and place
it, in Lincoln's words, on the ultimate course of extinction.
Now, extra-legal measures may sometimes be necessary; certainly
civil disobedience has a long and honored pedigree in America, and
anyone who accepts the idea of a higher law ought to accept at
least a theoretical right to sometimes disobey unjust laws.
Nevertheless, this is perilous territory, as Abraham Lincoln
suggested in his justly famous Lyceum Address.17 The danger of taking the law into your
own hands is that, in the process, you may destroy the very
foundations that make law possible. If you are seeking to establish
a legal right for someone, it is problematic to undermine the legal
system itself by going outside it.
Yet, unless religious idealists have a firm grasp of the idea of
prudence, religious idealism in politics has the tendency to be
overzealous and even politically destabilizing. What is needed to
counteract this tendency is a heavy dose of realism.
As usual, Lyman Beecher was someone who understood this. In one
of his earliest sermons on reform, he discussed the possibility
that the reformers would not achieve all their goals, and he warned
his listeners about adopting an all-or-nothing attitude toward
reform. "We are not angels, but men," he declared. "If we can
gradually improve ourselves, and improve the society in which we
live, though in a small degree, it is an object not to be
despised."18 In other words, we must
be realistic about what we can achieve in this life, and even small
changes in the right direction are better than no changes at
all.
Conclusion
So what does this all mean for us today? Those of us who
proclaim faith in God have a high responsibility for how we conduct
ourselves. We need to remember that the government is not our
savior, and that many reforms might be accomplished better by
private associations rather than the government. Of course, in
order to empower private associations, we may have to remove the
obstacles created by big government to private action.
We also need to stake out the moral common ground with our
fellow citizens. We let the secularists off the hook too easily if
we allow them to claim that our policy positions are grounded only
in our personal religious beliefs. We must drive home the point
that the policies we advocate are based on public principles.
We further ought to realize that not every political issue is a
religious issue, and we should be wary of those who would claim
otherwise. We devalue the prophetic voice of the churches if we try
to make every public issue a religious one.
And we should hearken to the words and example of Jeremiah
Evarts, remembering to treat our opponents with charity even while
proclaiming the truth as we see it.
Finally, we should remember that politics is the realm of the
possible, not the perfect. We must remember that prudence is a
virtue just like justice and mercy, and we should decline to
abandon politics for something else simply because it seems so
difficult to achieve what we want.
Endnotes
1John G. West, Jr., is a Senior
Fellow at the Discovery Institute and Assistant Professor of
Political Science at Seattle Pacific University. He spoke at The
Heritage Foundation on March 25, 1997, in the Russell Kirk Memorial
Lecture series.
2Robert Dale Owen, "Oration,
Containing a Declaration of Mental Independence," in Oakley C.
Johnson, ed., Robert Owen in the United States (New York,
NY: Humanities Press, 1970), p. 70.
3James Q. Wilson and Richard J.
Herrnstein, Crime and Human Nature (New York, NY: Simon and
Schuster, 1985), p. 434.
4See John G. West, Jr., The
Politics of Revelation and Reason: Religion and Civic Life in the
New Nation (Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 1996),
esp. Chapter 2.
5Quoted in Ibid., p.
ix.
6Lyman Beecher, in Barbara M.
Cross, ed., The Autobiography of Lyman Beecher, Vol. I
(Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press, 1961), p. 252.
7Ibid.
8Ibid., pp.
252-253.
9Elwyn A. Smith, "The Voluntary
Establishment of Religion," in Elwyn A. Smith, ed., The Religion
of the Republic (Philadelphia, PA: Fortress Press, 1971), p.
155.
10Beecher, Autobiography,
Vol. I, p. 253.
11Statistical information
adapted from Richard John Neuhaus, ed., Unsecular America
(Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans Publishing, 1986), Appendix, pp.
115-143.
12Lyman Beecher, The Faith
Once Delivered to the Saints, 2nd ed. (Boston, MA: Crocker and
Brewster, 1824), p. 25.
13Ibid.
14Ibid.
15Timothy Dwight, "On Doing
Good," Sermons by Timothy Dwight (New Haven, CT: Hezekiah
Howe and Durrie and Peck, 1828), pp. 540-541.
16E. C. Tracy, Memoir of the
Life of Jeremiah Evarts (Boston, MA: Crocker and Brewster,
1845), p. 429.
17Abraham Lincoln, "Address to
the Young Men's Lyceum of Springfield, Illinois," 1838, in Abraham
Lincoln, Speeches and Writings, 1832-1858 (New York, NY:
Library of America, 1989), pp. 28-36.
18Lyman Beecher, The
Practicality of Suppressing Vice by Means of Societies Instituted
for that Purpose (New London, CT: Samuel Green, 1804), p.
17.