Word
Gems
What is a
man but the sum of his thoughts?
Justice
& Law:
Daniel
Dreisbach:
- Origins and Dangers of the
- "Wall of Separation" Between Church and State
- "You seem ... to consider the judges as the ultimate
arbiters of all contitutional questions; a very dangerous doctrine indeed, and one which
would place us under the despotism of an oligarchy... The Contitution has erected no such
single tribunal."
-
-
Thomas Jefferson, 1820
Daniel L. Dreisbach
Professor of Justice, Law and Society, American University
Professor
of Justice, Law and Society is a professor in the School of Public Affairs at
American University in Washington, D.C., as well as the William E. Simon Fellow in
Religion and Public Life in the James Madison Program at Princeton University. He received
his D.Phil. from Oxford University and his J.D. from the University of Virginia. He is
author or editor of numerous books, including Thomas Jefferson and the Wall of
Separation Between Church and State; The Founders on God and Government; Religion and
Political Culture in Jeffersons Virginia; and Real Threat and Mere Shadow:
Religious Liberty and the First Amendment.
The following is adapted from a lecture delivered at Hillsdale College on
September 12, 2006, during a Center for Constructive Alternatives seminar on the topic,
"Church and State: History and Theory."
No metaphor in American letters has had a greater
influence on law and policy than Thomas Jeffersons "wall of separation between
church and state." For many Americans, this metaphor has supplanted the actual text
of the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, and it has become the locus classicus of
the notion that the First Amendment separated religion and the civil state, thereby
mandating a strictly secular polity.
More important, the judiciary has embraced this figurative language as a virtual
rule of constitutional law and as the organizing theme of church-state jurisprudence.
Writing for the U.S. Supreme Court in 1948, Justice Hugo L. Black asserted that the
justices had "agreed that the First Amendments language, properly interpreted,
had erected a wall of separation between Church and State." The continuing influence
of this wall is evident in the Courts most recent church-state pronouncements.
The rhetoric of church-state separation has been a part of western political
discourse for many centuries, but it has only lately come to a place of prominence in
American constitutional law and discourse. What is the source of the "wall of
separation" metaphor so frequently referenced today? How has this symbol of strict
separation between religion and public life become so influential in American legal and
political thought? Most important, what are the policy and legal consequences of the
ascendancy of separationist rhetoric and of the transformation of "separation of
church and state" from a much-debated political idea to a doctrine of constitutional
law embraced by the nations highest court?
The Wall that Jefferson Built
On New Years Day, 1802, President Jefferson penned a missive to the Baptist
Association of Danbury, Connecticut. The Baptists had written the new president a
"fan" letter in October 1801, congratulating him on his election to the
"chief Magistracy in the United States." They celebrated his zealous advocacy
for religious liberty and chastised those who had criticized him "as an enemy of
religion[,] Law & good order because he will not, dares not assume the prerogative of
Jehovah and make Laws to govern the Kingdom of Christ." At the time, the
Congregationalist Church was still legally established in Connecticut and the Federalist
party controlled New England politics. Thus the Danbury Baptists were outsiders'a
beleaguered religious and political minority in a state where a
Congregationalist-Federalist party establishment dominated public life. They were drawn to
Jeffersons political cause because of his celebrated advocacy for religious liberty.
In a carefully crafted reply, the president allied himself with the New England
Baptists in their struggle to enjoy the right of conscience as an inalienable right-not
merely as a favor granted, and subject to withdrawal, by the civil state:
Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely between Man &
his God, that he owes account to none other for his faith or his worship, that the
legitimate powers of government reach actions only, & not opinions, I contemplate with
sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their
legislature should "make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or
prohibiting the free exercise thereof," thus building a wall of separation between
Church & State.
This missive was written in the wake of the bitter presidential contest of
1800. Candidate Jeffersons religion, or the alleged lack thereof, was a critical
issue in the campaign. His Federalist foes vilified him as an "infidel" and
"atheist." The campaign rhetoric was so vitriolic that, when news of Jeffersons
election swept across the country, housewives in New England were seen burying family
Bibles in their gardens or hiding them in wells because they expected the Holy Scriptures
to be confiscated and burned by the new administration in Washington. (These fears
resonated with Americans who had received alarming reports of the French Revolution, which
Jefferson was said to support, and the widespread desecration of religious sanctuaries and
symbols in France.) Jefferson wrote to these pious Baptists to reassure them of his
continuing commitment to their right of conscience and to strike back at the
Federalist-Congregationalist establishment in Connecticut for shamelessly vilifying him in
the recent campaign.
Several features of Jeffersons letter challenge conventional, strictly
secular constructions of his famous metaphor. First, the metaphor rests on a cluster of
explicitly religious propositions (i.e., "that religion is a matter which lies solely
between Man & his God, that he owes account to none other for his faith or his
worship"). Second, Jeffersons wall was constructed in the service of the free
exercise of religion. Use of the metaphor to restrict religious exercise (e.g., to
disallow a citizens religious expression in the public square) conflicts with the
very principle Jefferson hoped his metaphor would advance. Third, Jefferson concluded his
presidential missive with a prayer, reciprocating his Baptist correspondents
"kind prayers for the protection & blessing of the common father and creator of
man." Ironically, some strict separationists today contend that such solemn words in
a presidential address violate a constitutional "wall of separation."
The conventional wisdom is that Jeffersons wall represents a universal
principle concerning the prudential and constitutional relationship between religion and
the civil state. In fact, this wall had less to do with the separation between religion
and all civil government than with the separation between the national and state
governments on matters pertaining to religion (such as official proclamations of days of
prayer, fasting, and thanksgiving). The "wall of separation" was a metaphoric
construction of the First Amendment, which Jefferson time and again said imposed its
restrictions on the national government only (see, e.g., Jeffersons 1798 draft of
the Kentucky Resolutions).
In other words, Jeffersons wall separated the national government on one
side from state governments and religious authorities on the other. This construction is
consistent with a virtually unchallenged assumption of the early constitutional era: the
First Amendment in particular and the Bill of Rights in general affirmed the fundamental
constitutional principle of federalism. The First Amendment, as originally understood, had
little substantive content apart from its affirmation that the national government was
denied all power over religious matters. Jurisdiction in such concerns was reserved to
individual citizens, religious societies, and state governments. (Of course, this original
understanding of the First Amendment was turned on its head by the modern U.S. Supreme
Courts "incorporation" of the First Amendment into the Fourteenth
Amendment.)
The Metaphor Enters Public Discourse
By late January 1802, printed copies of Jeffersons reply to the Danbury
Baptists began appearing in New England newspapers. The letter, however, was not
accessible to a wide audience until it was reprinted in the first major collection of
Jeffersons papers, published in the mid-19th century.
The phrase "wall of separation" entered the lexicon of American law in
the U.S. Supreme Courts 1878 ruling in Reynolds v. United States, although
most scholars agree that the wall metaphor played no role in the Courts reasoning.
Chief Justice Morrison R. Waite, who authored the opinion, was drawn to another clause in
Jeffersons text. The Reynolds Court, in short, was drawn to the passage, not
to advance a strict separation between church and state, but to support the proposition
that the legitimate powers of civil government could reach mens actions only and not
their opinions.
Nearly seven decades later, in the landmark case of Everson v. Board of
Education (1947), the Supreme Court "rediscovered" the metaphor and elevated
it to constitutional doctrine. Citing no source or authority other than Reynolds,
Justice Hugo L. Black, writing for the majority, invoked the Danbury letters
"wall of separation" passage in support of his strict separationist
interpretation of the First Amendment prohibition on laws "respecting an
establishment of religion." "In the words of Jefferson," he famously
declared, the First Amendment has erected "a wall of separation between church
and State. . . . That wall must be kept high and impregnable. We could not approve
the slightest breach." In even more sweeping terms, Justice Wiley B. Rutledge
asserted in a separate opinion that the First Amendments purpose was "to
uproot" all religious establishments and "to create a complete and permanent
separation of the spheres of religious activity and civil authority by comprehensively
forbidding every form of public aid or support for religion." This rhetoric, more
than any other, set the terms and the tone for a strict separationist jurisprudence that
reached ascendancy on the Court in the second half of the 20th century.
Like Reynolds, the Everson ruling was replete with references to
history, especially the roles played by Jefferson and Madison in the Virginia
disestablishment struggles in the tumultuous decade following independence from Great
Britain. Jefferson was depicted as a leading architect of the First Amendment despite the
fact that he was in France when the measure was drafted by the First Federal Congress in
1789.
Black and his judicial brethren also encountered the metaphor in briefs filed in
Everson. In a lengthy discussion of history supporting the proposition that
"separation of church and state is a fundamental American principle," an amicus
brief filed by the American Civil Liberties Union quoted the clause from the Danbury
letter containing the "wall of separation" image. The ACLU ominously concluded
that the challenged state statute, which provided state reimbursements for the
transportation of students to and from parochial schools, "constitutes a definite
crack in the wall of separation between church and state. Such cracks have a tendency to
widen beyond repair unless promptly sealed up."
Shortly after the Everson ruling was handed down, the metaphor began to
proliferate in books and articles. In a 1949 best-selling anti-Catholic polemic, American
Freedom and Catholic Power, Paul Blanshard advocated an uncompromising political and
legal platform favoring "a wall of separation between church and state."
Protestants and Other Americans United for the Separation of Church and State (an
organization today known by the more politically correct appellation of Americans United
for Separation of Church and State), a leading strict-separationist advocacy organization,
wrote the phrase into its 1948 founding manifesto. Among the "immediate
objectives" of this new organization was "[t]o resist every attempt by law or
the administration of law further to widen the breach in the wall of separation of church
and state."
The Supreme Court frequently and favorably referenced the "wall of
separation" in the cases that followed. In McCollum v. Board of Education
(1948), the Court essentially constitutionalized Jeffersons phrase, subtly and
blithely substituting his figurative language for the literal text of the First Amendment.
In the last half of the 20th century, the metaphor emerged as the defining motif for
church-state jurisprudence, thereby elevating a strict separationist construction of the
First Amendment to accepted dogma among jurists and commentators.
The Trouble with Metaphors in the Law
Metaphors are a valuable literary device. They enrich language by making it
dramatic and colorful, rendering abstract concepts concrete, condensing complex concepts
into a few words, and unleashing creative and analogical insights. But their uncritical
use can lead to confusion and distortion. At its heart, metaphor compares two or more
things that are not, in fact, identical. A metaphors literal meaning is used
non-literally in a comparison with its subject. While the comparison may yield useful
insights, the dissimilarities between the metaphor and its subject, if not acknowledged,
can distort or pollute ones understanding of the subject. If attributes of the
metaphor are erroneously or misleadingly assigned to the subject and the distortion goes
unchallenged, then the metaphor may alter the understanding of the underlying subject. The
more appealing and powerful a metaphor, the more it tends to supplant or overshadow the
original subject, and the more one is unable to contemplate the subject apart from its
metaphoric formulation. Thus, distortions perpetuated by the metaphor are sustained and
even magnified. This is the lesson of the "wall of separation" metaphor.
The judiciarys reliance on an extra-constitutional metaphor as a substitute
for the text of the First Amendment almost inevitably distorts constitutional principles
governing church-state relationships. Although the "wall of separation" may
felicitously express some aspects of First Amendment law, it seriously misrepresents or
obscures others, and has become a source of much mischief in modern church-state
jurisprudence. It has reconceptualized-indeed, misconceptualized-First Amendment
principles in at least two important ways.
First, Jeffersons trope emphasizes separation between church and
state?unlike the First Amendment, which speaks in terms of the non-establishment and free
exercise of religion. (Although these terms are often conflated today, in the lexicon of
1802, the expansive concept of "separation" was distinct from the narrow
institutional concept of "non-establishment.") Jeffersons Baptist
correspondents, who agitated for disestablishment but not for separation, were apparently
discomfited by the figurative phrase and, perhaps, even sought to suppress the presidents
letter. They, like many Americans, feared that the erection of such a wall would separate
religious influences from public life and policy. Few evangelical dissenters (including
the Baptists) challenged the widespread assumption of the age that republican government
and civic virtue were dependent on a moral people and that religion supported and nurtured
morality.
Second, a wall is a bilateral barrier that inhibits the activities of both the
civil government and religion-unlike the First Amendment, which imposes restrictions on
civil government only. In short, a wall not only prevents the civil state from intruding
on the religious domain but also prohibits religion from influencing the conduct of civil
government. The various First Amendment guarantees, however, were entirely a check or
restraint on civil government, specifically on Congress. The free press guarantee, for
example, was not written to protect the civil state from the press, but to protect a free
and independent press from control by the national government. Similarly, the religion
provisions were added to the Constitution to protect religion and religious institutions
from corrupting interference by the national government, not to protect the civil state
from the influence of, or overreaching by, religion. As a bilateral barrier, however, the
wall unavoidably restricts religions ability to influence public life, thereby
exceeding the limitations imposed by the First Amendment.
Herein lies the danger of this metaphor. The "high and impregnable" wall
constructed by the modern Court has been used to inhibit religions ability to inform
the public ethic, to deprive religious citizens of the civil liberty to participate in
politics armed with ideas informed by their faith, and to infringe the right of religious
communities and institutions to extend their prophetic ministries into the public square.
Today, the "wall of separation" is the sacred icon of a strict separationist
dogma intolerant of religious influences in the public arena. It has been used to silence
religious voices in the public marketplace of ideas and to segregate faith communities
behind a restrictive barrier.
Federal and state courts have used the "wall of separation" concept to
justify censoring private religious expression (such as Christmas creches) in public, to
deny public benefits (such as education vouchers) for religious entities, and to exclude
religious citizens and organizations (such as faith-based social welfare agencies) from
full participation in civic life on the same terms as their secular counterparts. The
systematic and coercive removal of religion from public life not only is at war with our
cultural traditions insofar as it evinces a callous indifference toward religion but also
offends basic notions of freedom of religious exercise, expression, and association in a
pluralistic society.
There was a consensus among the founders that religion was indispensable to a
system of republican self-government. The challenge the founders confronted was how to
nurture personal responsibility and social order in a system of self-government. Tyrants
and dictators can use the whip and rod to force people to behave as they desire, but
clearly this is incompatible with a self-governing people. In response to this challenge
the founders looked to religion (and morality informed by religious faith) to provide the
internal moral compass that would prompt citizens to behave in a disciplined manner and
thereby promote social order and political stability. The literature of the founding era
is replete with this argument, no example more famous than George Washingtons
statement in his Farewell Address of September 19, 1796:
Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, Religion
and morality are indispensable supports. In vain would that man claim the tribute of
Patriotism, who should labour to subvert these great Pillars of human happiness, these
firmest props of the duties of Men and citizens . . . . And let us with caution indulge
the supposition, that morality can be maintained without religion . . . . [R]eason and
experience both forbid us to expect that National morality can prevail in exclusion of
religious principle.
Believing that religion and morality were indispensable to social order and
political prosperity, the founders championed religious liberty in order to foster a
vibrant religious culture in which a beneficent religious ethos would inform the public
ethic and to promote an environment in which religious and moral leaders could speak out
boldly, without restraint or inhibition, against corruption and immorality in civic life.
Religious liberty was not merely a benevolent grant of the civil state; rather, it
reflected an awareness among the founders that the very survival of the civil state and a
civil society was dependent on a vibrant religious culture, and religious liberty nurtured
such a religious culture. In other words, the civil states respect for religious
liberty is an act of self-preservation. The unfortunate consequence of 20th-century
jurisprudence is that the First Amendment, designed to protect and promote a vital role
for religion in public life, has been replaced with a wall of separation that, in the
hands of the modern judiciary, has restricted religions place in the polity.
Legacy of Intolerance
In his recent book, Separation of Church and State, Philip Hamburger amply
documents that the rhetoric of separation of church and state became fashionable in the
1830s and 1840s and, again, in the last quarter of the 19th century. Why? It accompanied
two substantial waves of Catholic immigrants with their peculiar liturgy and resistance to
assimilation into the Protestant establishment: an initial wave of Irish in the first half
of the century, and then more Irish along with other European immigrants later in the
century. The rhetoric of separation was used by nativist elements, such as the
Know-Nothings and later the Ku Klux Klan, to marginalize Catholics and to deny them, often
through violence, entrance into the mainstream of public life. By the end of the century,
an allegiance to the so-called "American principle" of separation of church and
state had been woven into the membership oaths of the Ku Klux Klan. Today we typically
think of the Klan strictly in terms of their views on race, and we forget that their
hatred of Catholics was equally odious.
Again, in the mid-20th century, the rhetoric of separation was revived and
ultimately constitutionalized by anti-Catholic elites, such as Justice Hugo L. Black, and
fellow travelers in the ACLU and Protestants and Other Americans United for the Separation
of Church and State, who feared the influence and wealth of the Catholic Church and
perceived parochial education as a threat to public schools and democratic values. The
chief architect of the modern "wall" was Justice Black, whose affinity for
church-state separation and the metaphor was rooted in virulent anti-Catholicism.
Hamburger has argued that Justice Black, a former Alabama Ku Klux Klansman, was the
product of a remarkable "confluence of Protestant, nativist, and progressive
anti-Catholic forces . . . . Blacks association with the Klan has been much
discussed in connection with his liberal views on race, but, in fact, his membership
suggests more about [his] ideals of Americanism," especially his support for
separation of church and state. "Black had long before sworn, under the light of
flaming crosses, to preserve the sacred constitutional rights of free
public schools and separation of church and state." Although he
later distanced himself from the Klan on matters of race, "Blacks distaste for
Catholicism did not diminish." Blacks admixture of progressive, Klan, and
strict separationist views is best understood in terms of anti-Catholicism and, more
broadly, a deep hostility to assertions of ecclesiastical authority. Separation of church
and state, Black believed, was an American ideal of freedom from oppressive ecclesiastical
authority, especially that of the Roman Catholic Church. A regime of separation enabled
Americans to assert their individual autonomy and practice democracy, which Black believed
was Protestantism in its secular form.
To be clear, diverse strains of political, religious, and intellectual thought
have embraced notions of separation (I myself come from a faith tradition that believes
church and state should operate in separate institutional spheres), but a particularly
dominant strain in 19th-century America was this nativist, bigoted strain. We must
confront the uncomfortable fact that the phrases "separation of church and
state" and "wall of separation," although not necessarily expressions of
intolerance, have often, in the American experience, been closely identified with the ugly
impulses of nativism and bigotry.
In conclusion, Jeffersons figurative language has not produced the practical
solutions to real world controversies that its apparent clarity and directness led its
proponents to expect. Indeed, this wall has done what walls frequently do -- it has
obstructed the view, obfuscating our understanding of constitutional principles governing
church-state relationships. The rhetoric of "separation of church and state" and
"a wall of separation" has been instrumental in transforming judicial and
popular constructions of the First Amendment from a provision protecting and encouraging
religion in public life to one restricting religions place and role in civic
culture. This transformation has undermined the "indispensable support" of
religion in our system of republican self-government. This fact would have alarmed the
framers of the Constitution, and we ignore it today at the peril of our political order
and prosperity.
|