Return of the Pledge debate
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o7What are your thoughts on a federal court judge’s ruling last week
that the “under God” reference in the Pledge of Allegiance” is
unconstitutional?
f7
“In God We Trust” is our national motto. It is on our currency, in
our National Anthem, and is expressed in our Declaration Of
Independence as the rationale for our existence as a nation of
equality.
“In God We Trust” is part of our DNA as Americans.
It demands no particular denominational allegiance, nor does it
command particular individuals to rightly bow before its divine
referent.
“In God We Trust” affirms a premise upon which our nation is
founded: that God exists. Other governments of history, i.e.,
communist, began with the premise that no god exists. In State We
Trust serves as their unpublished pledge, affirming no transcendent
rights, no morality, and guaranteeing no individual human freedoms.
“In God We Trust” denies that we are an atheist people. Let’s
acknowledge our heavenly Providence, granting the unbelieving
minority their freedom to live in error.
“In God We Trust,” and so God shed His grace on thee. Let’s not be
America the Beautiful in mere facade, but more so within our soul. We
are the home of the brave and the land of the free only so long as we
bravely champion truth. Jesus said, the truth will set you free (John
8:32), the opposite of which I shudder to consider. Let’s call our
courts to account and admonish them to safeguard our cherished motto,
the premise upon which we are blessed and made great.
THE REV. BRYAN GRIEM
Senior Pastor
Light on the Corner
Montrose
At the conclusion of my last year in Junior High School we
students were given a chance to have lunch at a local pizza parlor
during school hours. Those students who liked pizza went. Those who
didn’t, didn’t. And I don’t think any of us was offended.
How unreasonable it would have been to cancel the party because
one student (or one student’s father) had a moral objection to pizza!
No child is legally required to recite the Pledge of Allegiance.
Yet for decades American children of faith have been forced to
acknowledge the theory of evolution even though it contradicts their
deeply held religious beliefs.
We parents of faith have had to teach our children to stand firm
in their beliefs as schools have become increasingly unfriendly to
faith and morality.
Perhaps parents who object to “under God” in the pledge should
practice “tolerance” and learn to do the same.
From what to do in Iraq to how to respond to Katrina, it is
obvious that calling on the name of God, not erasing it, is the one
thing our nation needs most. And God welcomes us all: “Call to Me,
and I will answer you, and I will tell you great and mighty things,
which you do not know.” (Jeremiah 33:3).
PASTOR JON BARTA
Valley Baptist Church
Burbank
It would seem to me that since the words “under God” have been a
part of the pledge for about 50 years now that the phrase would be
safely grandfathered in as constitutional.
Nothing is sacred nowadays, however, with activist judges.
I wish that the phrase had not been inserted into the pledge of
allegiance in the 1950s. It was unnecessary and served only to turn a
patriotic pledge into a religious patriotic pledge.
Since it has been in the pledge for so long now, I doubt that the
Supreme Court will reject it.
I don’t even think a vote will be close, if it comes to a vote.
The words “under God” do not constitute, in my opinion, an
establishment of religion.
If the Court rules the words must go, I do not see how we can
continue to have “In God We Trust” on our coins and other such
religious terms carved on federal buildings and elsewhere visible to
the public.
I suspect this controversial issue will be revisited many times
again in the future no matter what the Supreme Court’s decision may
be.
I think most people would like to see the whole thing go away. Our
nation is based on religious principles. Naysayers should get over
their pique concerning that fact.
THE REV. THOMAS E.
WITHERSPOON
Unity Church of the Valley
La Crescenta
Once again, a few radicals are misrepresenting constitutional law
and are trying to force their extreme ideas upon the entire nation.
The Constitution’s first amendment states that “Congress shall
make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting
the free exercise thereof.”
Our founding fathers were, by and large, a religious group of
people who included prayer and references to God in various functions
of government. It is clear that their intent was not to separate our
country from religion, but rather to prohibit the government from
forcing a particular religion or belief upon the populace.
The pledge of allegiance does not, by anyone’s stretch of the
imagination, force a particular religion upon our public school
students.
Furthermore, the pledge is optional. If a student so wishes, he or
she can remain silent during its recitation.
A benign, optional, reference to God can hardly be misconstrued as
forcing a religion down someone’s throat.
The fact remains that the overwhelming majority of students in
this great country do believe in God.
It is wrong to deny the majority a perfectly constitutional
reference to God because of the wishes of an extreme minority.
I believe that we should leave the Pledge of Allegiance alone.
The pledge is an honorable part of our national awareness, which
strengthens our resolve as one nation under God, indivisible, with
liberty and justice for all.
RABBI SIMCHA BACKMAN
Chabad Jewish Center
Glendale
Part of me wants to say, “Are we really having this debate?”
Personally, there are so many more issues that are worth “going to
the mat” for than this one.
I am old enough to remember when the phrase “under God” was added
to the Pledge of Allegiance. That’s right: added.
The phrase was not in the original Pledge as written, I believe,
by a Baptist minister in the late 1800s or the early 1900s. The year
was 1954 when “under God” was put into the original Pledge. (Those
were Cold War days. We couldn’t let those atheistic communists think
that we didn’t believe in God!)
Strictly speaking, I think the federal court judge was right when
he said the “under God” reference in the Pledge of Allegiance was
unconstitutional.
However, I also don’t believe the debate is worth the time and
money of going all the way to the Supreme Court to make a point.
Besides, the way the Court is leaning, I’m guessing the protest
against having “under God” in the Pledge will lose.
Here’s my suggestion, and I hope I don’t sound like a right-winger
because I am not: if saying “under God” offends anybody, simply don’t
say “under God” while the Pledge is being said.
Then the super-patriotic, super-religious will be satisfied (for
the time being!) and those who are offended by the phrase can simply
not say anything while the rest are saying “under God.”
Again, are we really having this debate?
THE REV. SKIP LINDEMAN
Congregational Church
of the Lighted Window
United Church of Christ
La Canada Flintridge
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