fromtheright
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Johnv,
When the Government starts respecting or endorsing religion, even if that religion is yours, then the erosion process upon your right to free excercise thereof begins.
If that monument had remained, whose free exercise rights would have been violated? During the time it was there, was anyone's religious liberty violated?
Was free exercise endangered when Congress, appropriated funds for different Christian groups to send missionaries to the Indians? I don't recall that either Jefferson or Madison objected to it.
The problem with the "respecting" language of the First Amendment is that the strict separationist interpretation doesn't square with history. Another interpretation, consistent with that history is that the First Amendment prohibited Congress from enacting anything that had to do with a true establishment of religion, such that while they could not enact a national establishment neither could they touch the state establishments that existed. The Founders knew what an established religion was, many had opposed it before the Revolution and had opposed it afterward, especially in Virginia.
When the Government starts respecting or endorsing religion, even if that religion is yours, then the erosion process upon your right to free excercise thereof begins.
If that monument had remained, whose free exercise rights would have been violated? During the time it was there, was anyone's religious liberty violated?
Was free exercise endangered when Congress, appropriated funds for different Christian groups to send missionaries to the Indians? I don't recall that either Jefferson or Madison objected to it.
The problem with the "respecting" language of the First Amendment is that the strict separationist interpretation doesn't square with history. Another interpretation, consistent with that history is that the First Amendment prohibited Congress from enacting anything that had to do with a true establishment of religion, such that while they could not enact a national establishment neither could they touch the state establishments that existed. The Founders knew what an established religion was, many had opposed it before the Revolution and had opposed it afterward, especially in Virginia.