Wednesday, December 5, 2012

A New Eden


 I recently watched a segment of “God in America” called “A New Eden” that discusses the problems that the US encountered with Faith in its infancy. I think it’s safe to say that in this modern day most American people believe in the separation of church and state, and that our country was never founded on a basis of faith, or at least one particular faith. However this was not the case, America’s faith at one point played a massive role in its cultural identity.

               During the 17th century, the most powerful church in North America was the Anglican Church. It was state sponsored and was maintained by an elite class of individuals, they maintained a tight grip on their faithful and made efforts to prevent other sects of Christianity (or any religion) from coming in. However, history has taught us that when there is an abusive ideology that benefits a small elite, there is likely to be an ideology that comes along to challenge it. In this situation that would be baptism, which declared that everyone had the responsibility to go out and find god for themselves, with or without the church. This of course didn’t sit right with the Anglicans, and they tried to limit the locations in which Baptists where permitted to speak. This is ultimately what gives birth to the discussion of liberty and freedom of religion. Thomas Jefferson would take up the Baptist cause to ensure that religious freedom would become a key American value. What was even more interesting was the fact that he himself did not support the Baptists religious message but rather there right to speak their message freely without opposition from the state. This was surprising to me because I typically thought of Jefferson as an anti-religious intellectual, be he was intensely spiritual, and he even created his own version of the gospels. That being said, he believed that all these ideals should be free to compete for the approval of the common man. We see that Jefferson wanted to create a completely new kind of national identity, were we weren’t united by a religion or ethnicity, but rather the belief in individual rights and freedoms. Thomas’s efforts ultimately made freedom of religion of America’s key values, but this left a “spiritual gap” in the country now that it was without a state religion. Less and less American’s took an interest in spiritual values after the revolutionary war. People became conflicted about what religion they should follow. Out of this “spiritual gap”, Protestantism would rise to become the major religion in America and it eventually began to become a part of America’s maturing cultural identity. Protestantism was even taught in public schools, and it came to be associated with the progress that America was making. However this led to conflict because now that America was a nation where all religion was “legal”, people from Europe came in droves to escape religious intolerance in their home countries. One of these places was Ireland, which had a Catholic majority ruled by a Protestant minority at the time. Needless to say that there was some intense conflict between the new catholic population and the protestant population in the US. Many Americans declared that Catholicism was against the ideals of liberty and civil rights believing that their loyalty was to Da Vatican. A lone Catholic priest John Hughes fought the state to deny Protestant teachings in public schools and eventually succeed. This time period in American history can be described as a culture war or culture crisis in which it was conflicted with its founding ideals of freedom of religion, and its newly acquired protestant identity. 

               I personally like culture wars very much because they give as an opportunity to observe how culture interact with one another, which is always interesting for me, so needless to say I really like this documentary. This particular culture war shows us some interesting things like how just because a country is tolerant by law doesn’t mean the public is tolerant of foreign beliefs and customs. It also shows us just how much of a new idea this was at the time. This idea of religious freedom was nowhere to be found in the rest of the developed world at the time, and the reaction to it was very diverse because this was uncharted territory, no one really knew if any religion could sustain itself without state support. But I think the main point this documentary brings up is America’s cultural identity. When America was founded many theorized it would slowly evolve into an aristocracy like Britain, and thus enforce a national religion, but this wasn’t the case at all (in fact they became more and more like us over time) this was the birth of something completely new. The idea that people could be held together by national ideals as opposed to a state religion was ground breaking. But as a result there was a tremendous conflict to discover a completely new cultural identity.