This is not an indictment on religion, but this is how I see it. Practice your religion, but the first time anyone makes an argument about "christian nation" or "christian morality," I cry foul. Above all, this is NOT DIRECTED AT ANYONE HERE OR ANY INDIVIDUAL. This is a generalization that is an offshoot of the previous "not all christians.... not all religions..." these are generalizations of how the collective of individuals within a specific group can end up having corrosive effects on things. Not the individual.
If you don't want to read the whole thing, I'm basically saying, "yes, Vajingo... the world does need more love. The true Christ-like love that Jesus would have offered to every human, and not just the worthy ones who go to the right church and say the right words."
First words of the first Amendment to the Bill of Rights in the Constitution: Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof... The founding fathers were not Christian, and in fact neither were 70% or more of the people who invaded this continent. The first real Christian evolution of the people who moved here wasn't until the late 1780s and actually didn't take a true foothold until the Civil War. Ethan Allen was a spiritualist and scientist and at his own wedding swore his vows to the laws of nature. George Washington was an Agnostic and originally wrote the words of the first amendment as "freedom from religious intolerance and compulsion." Thomas Payne (also spelled Paine) who was considered the catalyst of the revolution was quoted as saying "I do not believe in the creed professed by the Jewish church, by the Roman church, by the Greek church, by the Turkish church, by the Protestant church, nor by any church that I know of...Each of those churches accuse the other of unbelief; and for my own part, I disbelieve them all." John Adams openly stated in a treaty under Adams' administration with unanimous approval by the Senate, "the government of the United States of America is not in any sense founded on the Christian Religion." He also labeled members of the Christian clergy as having "the pretended sanctity of absolute dunces." He also labeled the church as nothing but a means of making money: "Christian priesthood, finding the doctrines of Christ levelled to every understanding and too plain to need explanation, saw, in the mysticisms of Plato, materials with which they might build up an artificial system which might, from its indistinctness, admit everlasting controversy, give employment for their order, and introduce it to profit, power, and pre-eminence."
Complete sermon with citations can be found here
I have dozens of other examples, and NONE of them are an indictment of religion. I support anyone's right to practice their religion. Where I take exception is when they use their religion to try to force me to live by their rules, which, is by it's very nature a blatant violation of the first amendment. Here we are 250 years after our country was formed by Agnostics, Atheists, and Deists, and now the predominant religion of the land keeps saying that "this is a christian country?" Whaaaa? Never was, never will be. They just THINK it is because they have been the dominant religion.
Timeline:
Article 1 (freedom of religion) 1789: freedom of/from religion. No one opposed this to any known history except a very vocal George Washington who wanted religion all but banned from the nation. Very few people were religious at the time, and even of those who were religious types didn't even really know what Christianity was. Most of the churches of colonial origin were a mashup of Judaism and Quakerism and were more god-centered than messiah-centered.
Article 13 (abolition of slavery) 1863: Lincoln abolishes slavery... with a twist. As (historically assumed) a means of re-uniting the union and confederacy, Lincoln concedes the phrase "except for punishment of crime." Who wanted that phrase? White Christians. They got to keep their slavery. In other states like Texas, slavery wasn't fully abolished until 1865 after Union soldiers finally forced the issue. Again, White Christians.
Article 14 in 1868 was to be the ultimate level playing field. It stated: All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.
It said, if you are a PERSON born here, you are a citizen and EQUAL with EQUAL PROTECTION OF THE LAWS. Not a white person, not a male person, not a rich person, a PERSON. In the late 1870s, rulings like Dredd Scott, Jim Crow, and various others continually denied not only the very same people just freed by the 13th, they denied the 14th, and all in the name of their personal Christian convictions which is a violation of the first amendment. 1950s/60s civil rights. Who opposed it? Southern Christians. Who is the KKK? Christians. Women's lib in the 70s. Who opposed it? Conservative Christians, equally men and women. ERA amendment in the 80s. Who opposed it? White Christians. LGBTQ rights framed against the 14th amendment? Christians say no way. Women wanting some semblance of equal reproductive rights? Christians go nuts, and not only don't give them any rights, but they actively fight to give leniency to rapists because they're nice boys who shouldn't have their records tarnished, or maybe she shouldn't have been wearing such tempting clothing. The trouble now extends to the massive violation of the 14th with deporting American citizens who were born here of immigrant parents. If you want to deport citizens, go for it... but you have to repeal the 14th first.
I'm all for freedom of religion and have at it any way you want. My point is that if we're talking about religion making America a better place.... my contention is that ever since religion became a "thing" in the US, it has done nothing but very successfully destroyed so much progress that America is trying to be by actively fighting and violating with impunity as many constitutional rights as they possibly can. Religion has fought to subvert the 14th amendment any way it can, complete with a conservative Christian majority on many supreme court dais rosters. There is a really good reason we seem to have a racism and classism issue. There is a reason we have the highest income imparity of all developed nations. There is a reason we are lagging in infant mortality, healthcare, and medical research. There is a reason why we we have been at war for 226 of our 244 year history. We've been at war for 92% of our existence. Cause? Mostly white Christians.
Do all the religion-y things, but stop subverting the entire constitution with it. You want a law that says "don't steal E36 M3," that's just common sense and doesn't require religion. You want a law banning polygamy or polyandry? You want a law banning same sex marriage? Take a seat. If you want to have the right to proudly celebrate your religion, you have no choice or right to do anything but sit down when someone else proudly celebrates theirs. That's what America should be, and Christianity hasn't yielded the microphone for 225 years. You don't see Jewish lawmakers trying to ban bacon and shrimp for everyone. They just skip it on their own plates and let you enjoy yours.