Of all the groups in the religious right, few have been as hostile to Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) as the Christian Coalition. TV preacher Pat Robertson, the group’s founder, has made no secret of the fact that he wants to make sure the GOP nominates anyone but him for president.
But that was before McCain’s now-infamous interview with BeliefNet, in which the senator said, “I would probably have to say yes, that the Constitution established the United States of America as a Christian nation.” The U.S. Constitution is, of course, an entirely secular document, but declaring the country a “Christian nation” has been a religious right goal for years.
And just like that, the Christian Coalition’s animosity towards McCain is fading away. (thanks to Morbo for the tip)
In a Christian Coalition of America blog entry entitled: “McCain’s ‘America is a Christian Nation’ Comments Might Make Him President,” Jim Backlin said: “Comments like ‘America was founded on Christian principles’ by Senator John McCain just might make him president.” […]
Who knows? The McCain Straight Talk Express just might begin appealing to a divided conservative community with courageous comments such as these.”
As for McCain’s comments that the “nation was founded primarily on Christian principles,” which is why he wouldn’t want a Muslim president, the Christian Coalition added, “The fact that the left-wing Muslim groups vociferously reacted against McCain’s remarks, just added validity to his comments, and indeed value for his presidential nomination hopes.”
And while McCain is drawing praise from those he dismissed seven years ago as “agents of intolerance,” he’s also generating criticism from the Anti-Defamation League.
The Anti-Defamation League is calling on Senator McCain to “reconsider and withdraw” his comment over the weekend that the Constitution established America as a “Christian nation.”
The move suggests that a statement of clarification that the Arizona senator’s presidential campaign issued on Sunday did not succeed in defusing anger over his remarks in an interview with beliefnet.com.
“We urge you to reconsider and withdraw your statements describing the United States as a ‘Christian nation’ and a ‘nation founded on Christian principles,'” the national director of the Jewish advocacy group, Abraham Foxman, wrote in a letter to Mr. McCain yesterday. “Not only were your assertions inaccurate, they were also ill-advised for any candidate seeking to lead a nation as religiously diverse and pluralistic as ours.”
And at the risk of belaboring this point, I got a polite email last night from a reader who argued that McCain’s comments, while “ill-advised,” were not wrong. The Founding Fathers were, in fact, all Christians, many of them devout. Their faith guided their thinking when creating the Constitution and establishing our government. In this sense, my correspondent claimed, the United States is a “Christian nation.”
That sounds fairly reasonable, but I’d argue that it’s mistaken. Whether the Constitution was written by Christians is largely irrelevant. It was also written by men. Does that make this a “male nation”? Everyone at the Constitutional Convention was white. Does that make our a “white nation”? Of course not.
As for the notion that the Founding Fathers were guided by their Christian beliefs while writing the Constitution, that also doesn’t stand up well to scrutiny. They wrote a secular document that makes no mention of God, Christianity, or Scripture. Likewise, The Federalist Papers, which sought to show the merit of the Constitution, base none of their arguments on religion.
It’s what makes McCain’s claim so misguided. For a presidential candidate to look at the plain text of the document and conclude that the “Constitution established the United States of America as a Christian nation” suggests either illiteracy or poor judgment.