* * *
First of all, the decision (issued by a three-judge panel of
the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on June 26, 2002 and written
by Nixon-appointee Judge Alfred T. Goodwin) has no immediate effect pending its
reconsideration by the full Circuit Court, and most legal scholars
-- liberal and conservative alike -- agree that it will be reversed by
either the Ninth Circuit or by the U.S. Supreme Court.
Even if the
decision stands, it will not change God's position as sovereign over his
creation including the United States of America. The phrase "under God" was not
part of the Pledge of Allegiance until 1954 when, following a campaign by the
Knights of Columbus, Congress added the two words to contrast American faith
with godless Communism. Needless to say, the USA was as fully "under God" for
the first 178 years of its history as it was after the addition of these words
to the Pledge.
Americans who reverence God would have no real reason to
rejoice if the Supreme Court upheld the words "under God" based on the kind of
logic some members of the Court have used in the past. In 1984, for example,
several Justices declared the motto "In God We Trust" constitutionally harmless
because they said it had lost all religious significance through rote
repetition. Similarly, the phrase "under God" in the Pledge amounts only to
"ceremonial deism" according to former Justice William Brennan. Even atheists
can say "O God!" as a careless expression with no meaning. Christians, Jews or
Muslims (all monotheists who worship the God of the Bible) find no comfort
in the secularist rationalization that the Pledge "doesn't say which
god."
The correct result would be for the full Ninth Circuit or the
Supreme Court to reverse the present decision for the right reason. That is the
fact that the expression of meaningful religious faith has always characterized
our nation's public life -- indeed its very charter documents -- and that the
men who wrote and approved the Constitution intended and expected that to
continue to be the case in the future. The First Amendment twice ensures
religious freedom, guaranteeing that government will not favor any particular
religion over another ("Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment
of religion") and that citizens will always be free to practice their own faith
without government interference ("nor prohibiting the free exercise
thereof").
Finally, all of us who say we believe in God would do well to
follow his commandments -- including his command to love our neighbors who do
not share our faith. Dr. Michael Newdow, the atheist emergency-room physician
with a law degree who brought the suit resulting in the June 26 decision, told
the press that he has received numerous threats on his life and that his
second-grade daughter has been moved to a safe location. If true -- and it
probably is -- those who issue such threats make a mockery of the faith they
claim to represent and strengthen the misguided Dr. Newdow's fears that
religious people pose a danger to democracy and to civil society in
general.
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