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ARTICLES & COMMENTARY:
TOC: The Rise of Church-State Alliances: Imperial Edicts & Church Councils: 306-565
Ulrich Zwingli and Zurich's Protestant Alliance of Church and State
The Constitution, the Bible, and the Commandments
The Classical Temple Architecture of Washington, DC
The Bible and the Quran: A Scriptural Comparison
Religious Right vs Interracial Marriages
Social Conservatism as a Tool of the State
The Changing Religious Identification of the USA
Moral Hypocrisy in the Bible Belt: CDC & FBI stats
Ring Species, Evolution and why the Intelligent Design isn't science
Who am I and Why this project?
INFO & EYE OPENERS FROM OTHERS:
Court Holdings
Historical Revisionism: On David Barton's Christian Nation
Biblical Archeology Review Special: Captivity, Exodus, and Conquest
Some things are said so many times that they become facts in some quarters. One is American law is based on the Ten Commandments. Close behind it is America was founded on religious principles, which is clearly a revision of America was founded on religious tolerance and equality for all. One could actually call it legal acceptance and equality because tolerance denotes putting up with something you deem incorrect or inappropriate. The Constitution puts all beliefs on equal footing. The government, unlike Christianity, accepts a pluralist socity. Another good one is "The Constitution was written by Christians so it is based on Christian principles". With fundamentalists that don't actually read history and rely on their pundits and columnists to read history for them, it has to be so because most were members of churches. There is an argument floating around that all but three signers of the Declaration were members of churches so they had to be Christians expressing Christian values.
What historical revisionists and Christian reconstructionists don't tell you is that in order to have any political clout in the colonies, one had to be a member of a church. It had been that way since their colonial predecessors came ashore. Nobody had changed that requirement. Men like Jefferson and Wythe, who were not really Christians and were antagonistic towards organized religion, joined churches in order to become leaders in their communities. The same can be said of Washington, who spoke to the public in an eclectic way, but was more than likely a deist. In his public life, he never uses the words "Jesus", "Christ" or "salvation", which are must-says for true believers. Washington never partook of Communion either, leaving shortly before the ritual began. The entrance way to Washington's mausoleum is flanked with two Egyptian Obelisks. Jefferson and Madison's gravestones are Egyptian Obelisks. Together with classical writings, Greek, Roman and Egyptian symbolism was much loved and drawn from by the thinkers of both the European and American Enlightenments. Washington, DC shouts pagan and classical architecture, art, and symbolism. Washington shouts New Rome! New Athens!
No matter what the information really says, because they don't really care, the evangelists are still hell-bent on having the government be a promoter of their belief in a God. They did this with the Pledge, getting Congress to establish a religious belief in it, creating a religious test-oath. Government promotion usually means of Judeo-Christianity, with Christian prayers in schools and the commandments in schools and courthouses. After his bizarre commandments circus show, Alabama's Judge Roy Moore claimed that, "It was never about the monument, or the Ten Commandments... It was always about the recognition of God as the sovereign source of our laws, liberty, and government!" Well, that's the problem, Roy! Haven't you read your United States Constitution recently?
The religious right lives for a legal framework that existed before the US Constitution and the Bill of Rights were both ratifed. They believe in it so fervently, they have persuaded themselves that the Constitution didn't ban religious test-oaths and religion-government alliances. Their church-state ideas are right out of the civil and religious framework of Medieval Europe, Britain and their colonies. English governments and the colonial laws did indeed declare and demand of others the recognition of God. That was the main problem for centuries that perpetuated discrimination and violence. Wherever Christianity and the state were teamed up, this was the result. Parliaments did it. Monarchs did it. German Diets (assemblies) did it. Diets sometimes convened with the clergy and government magistrates as the officials that tried the heretics and approved religious doctrine for all. This was the case with Martin Luther at the Diet of Worms ("Vermz"). In alliances of the clergy and the magistrates, governments sponsored and gave special protections to the clergy of the state approved religion. This alliance declared God should be publicly worshipped and the state made it so. According to the religious right, American legal foundations go back in an unbroken legal stream to the first colonial charters. Historical revisionists like David Barton use the colonial charters and pre-constitution state constitutions in arguments that we should recognize God in government. They did, so we should, too is the reasoning. To religious fundamentalists, God was honored in the New Hampshire Constitution of 1784 so we should continue honoring God in the public square of the government. What they fail to tell you is that the same New Hampshire Constitution barred all but Protestants from civil service for the next 93 years. This is unethical and unconstitutional discrimination. This is the world that the religious right of every generation fights to keep alive. The same goes for the Plymouth Combination of 1620, which was a theocracy with principles contrary to those of the US Constitution. (Beginning in 1793, the Plymouth Combination was known as the Mayflower Compact.)
The old legal order prior to the ratification required a certain religious belief for full citizen rights. States also raised that bar to requiring religious test-oaths for public service. In order to serve the public, one had to make a religious declaration with the legally specified oath. The US Constitution's new order of liberties and the separation of equal powers was intended to end this religion based legal system. That religious test framework goes back to the fourth century's alliances of religion and the state. The new constitution separated the equal government powers and then walled off religious doctrine from government with a complete ban on religious tests for oaths of office and a policy of "total separation of the church from the state". From the State. I like that. Those are James Madison's words to Robert Walsh in a letter dated March 2, 1819. There was no continuation, as reconstructionists claim, of that old religious legal order of the past age with the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. In fact, there was no contamination of the new by the Old World's legal framework's extreme religious orientation. Zip. It was a totally new form of government with unprecedented guarantees regarding liberties of conscience. The American's liberties of conscience went beyond the Old World model of freedoms for believers. They went all the way for every belief that didn't run afoul with public order. The government took no sides, which was the core of the break from the past's models of religious law. Legally, it was like a guillotine on the Head of the old legal order: the alliance of church and state. Revisionists can't see the end of the old order because they don't understand the new constitutional order. This new framework is why time-worn sabbath and blasphemy laws have gone to court.
The unbroken stream that the religious right claims is found in American history is wishful evangelical thinking. Just by looking at the colonial charters and state constitutions prior to the ratifications shows us that they are of an antiquated legal framework. The old order has little in common with the new Constitution's ordering of government and society. First and foremost, regardless of the exact form of government, the old laws were concerned with promoting and sustaining religious belief while the new was not in the slightest. While the words God, Christian and Jesus are found ubiquitously throughout Medieval and colonial law, they are absent from the Constitution. Zip. Comparison of pre-ratification charters and constitutions with the laws and traditions of late antiquity tell us a different story than the revisionist one. They show us that the colonial laws had much more in common with the church-state alliances begun in late antiquity that continued for an age. The real unbroken legal stream started with late antiquity's Emperors and church councils, continued with Monarchs and Protestantism which became the church-state laws of the colonies. A Nicene current runs through them all for quite a long time.
The religious tests that the US Constitution banned in the Sixth Article are rooted in that period of long ago and have nothing in common with the Constitution. Before the religious test ban and the First Amendment's religious clauses, the government ordered that God be publicly worshipped and its officials were bound by oath to support the recognition and public worship of God. Some oaths even made one promise not to try to change these laws. Of primary importance is the dogma regarding the Trinity and the nature of the Incarnation that are found from late antiquity right into the colonies and the states. Co-equal cosubstantiation of every member of the Trinity was politically very important from the fourth century's Council of Nicaea right into some of the eighteenth century Colonial religious requirement. With the Reformation, religious tests added the sectarianism. Protestant religious tests disqualified Catholics. Catholics disqualified Protestants. The Creedal beliefs of both were anchored in the Nicene Doctrine of the Consubstantial Trinity, meaning that Jesus is as God as the Father is God. What the two differed about was how Christianity was to be ministered. The Protestants saw the Roman Church as a government of abuses and corruption. It was a fight over authority: the Bible vs the Church Hierarchy and its absolute head, the Pope, as supposedly decreed in the New Testament. 'My Church, on this Rock'.
A serious question arises: What factors lie behind the church state alliances' quest to control the religions of the masses and to wipe out the competition? WHY do both Christian and Muslim fundamentalists relentlessly try so hard to have government recognize and promote their religion. Coupled with human nature's sometimes maniacal authoritarianism, scriptures contribute greatly to this because they actually believe the words of their scriptures to be the voice and commands of God. When a person believes passionately, whether it be a religion or a cause, the belief tends to become a force in itself and take on a life of its own. Sometimes a belief imprisons the believer in a cell with only one view. The quest for an alliance between religion and the state is driven by innate drives for power and certain scriptures and doctrines. If everyone must believe then the government needs to get involved to make sure no error creeps into society. This is true in both the Bible and the Quran, as is shown by side by side scriptural comparisons. Religion and government allies have always using scripture for their assaults on religious diversity to support their religious dominionism. The scriptures can actually be found cited in some of their laws. You will see that below.
Scriptures have ignited the religious zeal and lust for authority in all those saviors of the world that seek religion-government alliances. In The Great Commission, Jesus said, "Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature. He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned". Paul makes a claim that "every knee shall bow and every tongue shall confess that Jesus Christ is Lord". This one will get them excited, too: and if any one was not found written in the scroll of the life, he was cast to the lake of the fire.
Now folks, this is some really serious business! Call the President, the Governor and the FBI!!! An emergency session of both Houses! The whole world is damned from the start so you had better get off your ass and find every way possible in order to save as many as possible. The problem is, their belief has blinded them to the fact that not everyone agrees on all this as fact. It sounds like the kind of fear inducing strategy that would definitely gain converts and and zealous evangelists. There is no ifs, ands, or buts in the central theme behind those scriptures. Having the reigns of government can help people get saved because it can give special voice (to save everyone, of course) to the Christian Gospel. Having the reigns of government can help create a uniform and obedient populace, too. Religious intolerance and violence towards those in error is a virtue in the Bible. Nothing tops the New Testament's eternal damnation but before the Bible had a New testament, a Heaven and a Lake of Fire, the Old Testament didn't miss the opportunity to punish those in religious error. It sentences to death unbelievers and pagans. In a brutal and cruel execution dictated by God, they are stoned to death. The Old Testament is full of instances where God orders or is pleased with the destruction of pagan temples and altars. The New Testament tells us that those who don't believe will be cast into the lake of fire and there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth forever. With church-state accomodationists, Jesus is King of Kings so all Kings and people should submit to 'His Word'. To the Medieval governments of Europe and England, this is all a great reason to mix religion with government. They are called by a higher power under a higher law. To hell with man's laws. These people can't be trusted to respect the laws if the laws don't allow their religious influence. And not every true believer agrees on what that higher supreme law is. Luckily, here in the USA, its the Constitution as stated in the Sixth Article.
The compact also promulgated "That no man speak impiously or maliciously, against the holy and blessed Trinity, or any of the three persons, that is to say, against God the Father, God the Son, and God the holy Ghost, or against the known Articles of the Christian faith, upon pain of death. That no man blaspheme Gods holy name upon pain of death. No man shall speak any word, or do any act, which may tend to the derision, or despite of Gods holy word upon pain of death".
The military commanders were also ordered that "Almighty God be duly and daily served, and that they [military commanders] call upon their people to hear Sermons, as that also they diligently frequent Morning and Evening prayer themselves by their own exemplar and daily life, and duties herein, encouraging others thereunto, and that such, who shall often and wilfully absent themselves, be duly punished according to the martial law in that case provided."
Not only was the Virginia government subservient to Christ as the supreme King and authority, it gave special shielding to the doctrines of the Trinity and that the Bible as divinely inspired. Here was America's first colony making a Nicene Trinitarian declaration of faith and requiring it of others. Going to church was also recommended for the civilian folk, too, if one wished to stay unmolested. Governor Argall's Decree of 1617 stated, "Every Person should go to church, Sundays and Holidays, or lye Neck and Heels that Night, and be a Slave to the Colony the following Week; for the second Offense, he should be a Slave for a Month; and for the third, a Year and a Day."
The Plymouth Combination of 1620, signed by those originally headed for Virginia, organized a government, "In the name of God, Amen. We, whose names are underwritten, the Loyal Subjects of our dread Sovereign Lord, King James, by the Grace of God, of Great Britain, France and Ireland, King, Defender of the Faith, etc. ..Having undertaken for the Glory of God, and Advancement of the Christian Faith, and the Honour of our King and Country, a voyage to plant the first colony in the northern Parts of Virginia;.."
That's music in the ears of the historical revisionists of the religious right. Old time religion's godly government. Let's look at some more European laws of colonial America.
The 1638 Fundamentals of Connecticut spoke on forming a government "well knowing where a people are gathered together the word of God requires that to maintain the peace and union of such a people there should be an orderly and decent Government established according to God".
It also says the government is "to maintain and preserve the liberty and purity of the Gospel of our Lord Jesus which we now profess, as also, the discipline of the Churches, which according to the truth of the said Gospel is now practiced amongst us; as also in our civil affairs to be guided and governed according to such Laws, Rules, Orders and Decrees as shall be made, ordered, and decreed…" One has to wonder what the 'liberty of the Gospel' means. (Liberty to dominate everything?) The religious test imposed is to be "sworn according to an Oath recorded for that purpose, shall have the power to administer justice according to the Laws here established, and for want thereof, according to the Rule of the Word of God …"
Isn't that what Islamic Courts do?
In 1639, the people of New Haven, Connecticut gathered to declare their Fundamental Orders of New Haven, where "all the free planters assembled together in a general meeting, to consult about settling civil government, according to GOD, and the nomination of persons that might be found, by consent of all, fittest in all respects for the foundation work of a church, and for the establishment of such civil order as might be most pleasing unto GOD, and for the choosing the fittest men for the foundation work of a church to be gathered. For the better enabling them to discern the mind of GOD, and to agree accordingly concerning the establishment of civil order..."
The people of New Haven had questions to officially settle. Query #1 of the New Haven assembly was, "Whether the scriptures do hold forth a perfect rule for the direction and government of all men in all duties which they are to perform to GOD and men, as well in families and commonwealth, as in matters of the church?"
Query #4, turning to the scriptures, they asked "what kind of persons might best be trusted with matters of government; ought to be intrusted by them, seeing they were free to cast themselves into that mould and form of commonwealth which appeared best for them in reference to the securing. the peace and peaceable improvement of all CHRIST his ordinances in the church according to GOD, whereunto they have bound themselves, as hath been acknowledged."
Query #5 asked, "WHETHER free burgesses shall be chosen out of the church members, they that are in the foundation work of the church being actually free burgesses". The document notes "The assembly voted in the affirmative, 1. That magistrates should be men fearing GOD. 2. That the church is the company where, ordinarily, such men may be expected. 3. That they that choose them ought to be men fearing GOD…"
With the Organization of the Government of Pocasset in 1641, the nineteen individuals of the "Bodie Politick" stood in the presence of Jehovah" to incorporate themselves as the town of Portsmouth and declared, we "will submit our persons, lives and estates unto our Lord Jesus Christ, the King of Kings and Lord of Lords and to all those perfect and most absolute laws of his given us in his holy word of truth, to be guided and judged thereby."
The Organization of the 1641 Government of Rhode Island was held March 16-19. Paragraph One spells out the religious test required for anyone to be a candidate for election, stating,
"it is ordered and agreed, before the Election, that an Engagement by oath should be taken of all the officers of this Body now to be elected, as likewise for the time to come; the engagement which the several officers of the State shall give is this: To the Execution of this office, I Judge myself bound before God to walk faithfully and this I profess in ye presence of God."
The 1641 Massachusetts Body of Liberties opens with, "The free fruition of such liberties Immunities and privileges as humanity, Civility, and Christianity call for as due to every man in his place and proportion without impeachment and Infringement has ever been and ever will be the tranquillity and Stability of Churches and Commonwealths." Then In Section 94 it decreed, "If any man after legal conviction shall have or worship any other God but the Lord God, he shall be put to death". Anyone who consulted a medium could be put to death, too. With the medium.
The New Haven Fundamentals of 1643, agreed upon in October, seems to be a reaffirmation of the 1639 articles that required church membership as a requirement for public office holding, stating, '..that none shall be admitted to be free burgesses in any of the plantations within this jurisdiction for the future but such planters as are members of some or other of the approved churches of New England; nor shall any but such free burgesses have any vote in any election, the six present freemen at Milford enjoying the liberty with the cautions agreed; nor shall any power or trust in the ordering of any civil affairs be at any time put into the hands of any other than such church members,...."
In Section Two, when judging cases, magistrates are to consider "the punishment in such criminals, according to the mind of God revealed in his word touching such offenses,..."
Things weren't any different with the Connecticut Colonial Charter of 1662 which makes clear that salvation through belief in the Christian faith is the only and principle end of the colony. One must realize that English Puritans (Calvinists)were at the helm of these colonies after 1830s. The Pilgrims that landed in 1620 were an uneducated lot but those arriving in New England after 1630 were far more educated in the matters of law and politics. Many of those English Puritans who landed in Connecticut had good educations. The Connecticut puritans decreed: "[O]ur said people, Inhabitants there, may be so religiously, peaceably and civily Governed as their good life and orderly Conversation may win and invite the Natives of the Country to the knowledge and obedience of the only true God and Saviour of mankind, and the Christian faith, which in our Royal intentions and the Adventurers free profession is the only and principal end of this Plantation."
Believing that Jesus is true God and Saviour of mankind is clearly a Nicene creedal statement that Jesus is co-equal with the Father in a consubstantial Trinity. You had to believe that Jesus was God in these Protestant Nicene Trinitarian colonies. It was no different in the church-state alliances of late antiquity.
While Rhode Island was considered a pioneer in religious tolerance but not acceptance, the Charter of July 15, 1663 really gives us more of the same but does allow differences within Christianity. Rhode island was the first state to grant religious liberty for people other than the members of the Church of England. But similar to Connecticut, Rhode Island seems to exist for Christian edification, faith, worship, and converting the 'poor ignorant' natives:
"...pursuing, with peaceable and loyal minces, their sober, serious and religious intentions, of goalie edifying themselves, and one another, in the holy Christian faith and worship as they were perswaded; together with the gaineing over and conversione of the poore ignorant Indian natives.."
Rhode Island intends to establish a more tolerant colony, "to secure them in the free exercise and enjoyment of all their civil and religious rights," the rights do not go beyond Christian individuals. Rhode Island wishes "to preserve unto them that liberty, in the true Christian faith and worship of God, which they have sought with so much travail, and with peaceable minds, and loyal subjection to our royal progenitors and ourselves, to enjoy;..." They speak of the dissidents of the Church of England that have been persecuted for their Christian beliefs. Many of them in Massachusetts for sure. Rhode Island, like Roger Williams, was saying, "Hey! we are all Christians, let's not fight any more! We all love Jesus. Come on!" That was a monumental shift. The Charter is clear on this issue: "because some of the people and inhabitants of the same colony cannot, in their private opinions, conform to the public exercise of religion, according to the liturgy, forms and ceremonies of the Church of England, or take or subscribe the oaths and articles made and established in that behalf; and for that the same, by reason of the remote distances of those places, will (as wee hope) be no breach of the unity and uniformity established in this nation: Have therefore thought fit, and do hereby publish, grant, ordain and declare, That our royal will and pleasure is, that no person within the said colony, at any time hereafter, shall be any wise molested, punished, disquieted, or called in question, for any differences in opinion in matters of religion, . . . And that they may be in the better capacity to defend themselves, in their just rights and liberties against all the enemies of the Christian faith, . . "
This kind of platform would have failed miserably in England where anyone not a member of the Church of England would have severely limited liberties and protections under the law.
Beginning in paragraph 95, The Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina, ratified March 1, 1669 also violates many of the Constitutional principles of freedom regarding religion and conscience. The statute reads: "No man shall be permitted to be a freeman of Carolina, or to have any estate or habitation within it, that doth not acknowledge a God, and that God is publicly and solemnly to be worshipped."
Paragraph 96 establishes parliamentary support of the Church of England, saying, "As the country comes to be sufficiently planted and distributed into fit divisions, it shall belong to the parliament to take care for the building of churches, and the public maintenance of divines, to be employed in the exercise of religion, according to the Church of England; which being the only true and orthodox and the national religion of all the King's dominions, is so also of Carolina; and, therefore, it alone shall be allowed to receive public maintenance, by grant of parliament."
In Paragraph 100, the government, which consists of church members, lays down the following religious test-oath requirement for church membership and those wishing to enter a profession:
"In the terms of communion of every church or profession, these following shall be three; without which no agreement or assembly of men, upon presence of religion, shall be accounted a church or profession within these rules: That there is a God." Second "That God is publicly to be worshipped." Third "That it is lawful and the duty of every man, being thereunto called by those that govern, to bear witness to truth; and that every church or profession shall, in their terms of communion, set down the external way whereby they witness a truth as in the presence of God..."
Paragraph 101 continues: "No person above seventeen years of age shall have any benefit or protection of the law, or be capable of any place of profit or honor, who is not a member of some church or profession, having his name recorded in some one, and but one religious record at once."
Huh? If I am not a member of a church or a profession, requiring the same religious test-oaths, I am not protected by the law? I can't hold a position of profit or honor? What kind of people are these? They are these people: "Assemblies, upon what presence soever of religion, not observing and performing the above said rules, shall not be esteemed as churches, but unlawful meetings, and be punished as other heresies."
The Delaware Charter of 1701 was somewhat better than England with its Protestant-only requirements, stating: "BECAUSE no People can be truly happy, though under the greatest Enjoyment of Civil Liberties, if abridged of the Freedom of their Consciences,. . . no Person or Persons, inhabiting in this Province or Territories, who shall confess and acknowledge Our almighty God, the Creator, Upholder and Ruler of the world; and professes him or themselves obliged to live quietly under the Civil Government, shall be in any Case molested or prejudiced,..
AND that all Persons who also profess to believe in Jesus Christ, the Saviour of the World, shall be capable (notwithstanding their other Persuasions and Practices in Point of Conscience and Religion) to serve this Government in any Capacity, both legislatively and executively..."
For full liberties of conscience and a peaceful existence in Delaware, believing in and publicly worshipping Jesus Christ as Saviour of the World was not a choice.
Thomas Brewton has a website that presents "The View From 1776". Brewton has an 'Unwritten Constitution, which like David Barton's website, makes claims from the viewpoints of heritage and tradition, not the legal principles of the Constitution. Brewton's first sentence is full of error claiming that the United States was founded on the Judeo-Christian ethic that is the substance of Western civilization. Theocracies like the Massachusetts Bay Colony were founded on strict and intolerant Christian values. But the United States was not. This nation, under our Constitution, was founded, in spite of the Judeo-Christian ethic, on the deepest western intellectual traditions that preceded Christianity. Democracy, the Senate, constitutions, separate powers, intellectual and religious diversity. Classical ideas allowed for great diversity and much freedom; Judeo-Christian values do not. The fundamentalists like to downplay the influence of the enlightenment and the classical. Thomas Jefferson wrote to Admantios Coray of Greece on October 31, 1823, reflecting a view of the American enlightenment's thinkers. Again, no mention of Christian ethics but praise for Greece where the first examples of democracy emerged in classical times. "No people sympathize more feelingly than ours with the sufferings of your countrymen, none offer more sincere and ardent prayers to heaven for their success. . . Possessing ourselves the combined blessing of liberty and order, we wish the same to other countries, and to none more than yours, which, the first of civilized nations, presented examples of what man should be."
The so-called Judeo-Christian ethic prevented democracy and liberties of conscience from emerging by declaring by law what is good for us in the eyes of God. David Barton's Wallbuilder website is also graced with the same kind of heritage and tradition strategy found on Brewton's site. He tells us the site is about "Presenting America's forgotten history and heroes, with an emphasis on our moral, religious, and constitutional heritage". Sorry, Dave, Christian heritage is not the source of Constitutional principles. The west, including the United States, is the product of many different intellectual, political and religious currents, some of which crystallized during the classical periods of Greece and Rome. And they have some influences from Crete, Egypt, Sumeria and even Persia. With the Wallbuilder site there is again that attempt to subvert the real Constitution by appealing to people's religious, historical and sometimes nationalist sentiments. Combined with a distortion of what true US Constitutional principles are, this strategy works great with people who prefer some kind of church-state alliance like days of old. America's forgotten history and David Barton is going to tell you all about it.
The history of Christianity has been very unfriendly towards both democracy and liberty. Christian leaders in the church-state alliances preferred a much more rigid form of government. According to the 4TH century Christan historian Eusebius, in Constantine's monarchy, the nations of the world "found rest and respite from their ancient miseries, a system and method of government for all states." In Chapter 3 of 'The Oration in Praise of the Emperor Constantine', Eusebius attacked equality and democracy, claiming ">monarchy far transcends every other constitution and form of government: for that democratic equality of power, which is its opposite, may rather be described as anarchy and disorder." Right from the start they had it all wrong.
In 1797, the full Senate and President John Adams had ratified without contention every article and clause of the Treaty of Tripoli. This seems to go over a lot of heads that the full Senate ratified this clause without contention. Contrary to our revisionist times, the members of the Senate knew this and had no problem with it. Article 11 of the Treaty clearly states,
">As the government of the United States of America is not in any sense founded on the Christian religion -- as it has itself no character of enmity against the law, religion or tranquility of Musselmen, and as the said states never have entered into an war or act of hostility against any Mohametan nation, it is declared by the parties, that no pretext arising from religious opinions shall ever produce."
Not in any sense founded on the Christian religion. How can anyone misunderstand that statement? And to support that, there is not one religious principle found in the Constitution; not one hint of anything Biblical. Even during the Federalist Papers debates, Rome and Greece were mentioned far more times than the Bible which is mentioned twice. In 1787, John Adams wrote a book at that time titled, A Defense of the Constitutions of the United States of America where he spends a great deal of time on different Governments, praising the Greek and the Roman models the most. He even has chapters onPolybius, 200-118BCE, who wrote of separate government powers of Roman Republicanism. Polybius was a big enlightenment subject. On the title page of Adams book he has a quote by Pope: "All nature's difference keeps all nature's peace. Well, that certainly sticks it to Christianity's uniform society model.
For some strange reason, Mr. Brewton and his fundamentalist allies think that a view from 1776 reflects some kind of interpretation of the Constitution and view church-state relationships. It does not, and in a serious way. In 1776, did we became a nation of religious liberty? No, we did not. Not even close. Religious bigotry was ingrained in colonial charters and state constitutions. Other than being finally independent from the repressive whims of the British Crown and the English Parliament, the state constitutions still had the same kind of highly discriminatory religious tests from the Old World. Even after the Continental Congress's mandate for every state to rewrite their constitutions after declaring independence, almost all of them still wrote religious discrimination into their new documents. What a let-down that must have been for non-Protestant immigrants. More of the same. They were the same kind of religious tests and oaths that led to so many problems for Europe for so centuries. After declaring independence, the states kept to much of the old legal order of government and religion alliances, subsidizations and special treatments.
The Revolution gave us freedom from England but not freedom from the Medieval religious framework we inherited from England, Europe and before that the Christianized Roman Empire. We had old world church establishments and old world religious tests. Nothing to brag about. Our Articles of Confederation didn't help any, either. They did not mention religion once, leaving the discriminations of the states in power. Below are examples of the pre-ratification laws found in the state constitution after the States were ordered by the Continental Congress to draw up new constitutions. In their constitutions they continued an embrace of some sort of the church-state model. Lets take a tour of the religious discrimination of the colonies and states. Biblically speaking, Judeo-Christian ethics tolerate no other religions. "God loves you but if you don't believe it you will suffer for eternity in hell". Both the Bible and the Quran declare this. What a load.
Article 35 of the Maryland Constitution of 1776 stated, "That no other test or qualification ought to be required, on admission to any office of trust or profit, than such oath of support and fidelity to this State, and such oath of office, as shall be directed by this Convention or the Legislature of this State, and a declaration of a belief in the Christian religion."
In the Maryland Constitution of 1867, this was reworded and changed to Article 37, stating "That no religious test ought ever to be required as a qualification for any office of profit or trust in this State, other than a declaration of belief in the existence of God; nor shall the Legislature prescribe any other oath of office than the oath prescribed by this Constitution."
Ninety years later and they still hadn't gotten it. This was a half measure and still unconstitutional as the Supreme Court ruled in 1961 (case is described below). They had no idea what liberty of conscience really meant.
Delaware's 1776 Declaration of Rights and Fundamental Rules went no farther than its Charter of 1701, declaring:
"That all Persons professing the Christian Religion ought forever to enjoy equal Rights and Privileges in this State..."
But it was not all bad because Delaware instituted several things that were very similar to some of our Federal Bill of Rights. Laws regarding self incrimination, confronting accusers, soldiers in your house, and cruel and unusual punishments are examples. Although seemingly ignorant of or plainly against the principles of free conscience, Delaware also framed a rule that religious conservatives should take note of: Judicial Independence. Section 22 states:
"That the independency and uprightness of judges are essential to the impartial administration of justice, and a great security to the rights and liberties of the people."
Continuing to Article 22 of the Delaware Constitution of 1776 mandated, "Every person who shall be chosen a member of either House, or appointed to any office or place of trust, before taking his seat, or entering upon the execution of his office, shall take the following oath, or affirmation, if conscientiously scrupulous of taking an oath, to wit: I _____, do profess faith in God the Father, and in Jesus Christ His only Son, and in the Holy Ghost, One God, blessed for evermore; and I do acknowledge the holy scriptures of the Old Testament and New Testament to be given by Divine Inspiration".
There isn't much room for religious freedom in that oath. This same Delaware State Constitution stated, "That all Persons professing the Christian Religion ought forever to enjoy equal Rights and Privileges in this State, unless, under Colour of Religion, any Man disturb the Peace, the Happiness or Safety of Society." Only Christians have full religious liberty and equality in the Christian reconstructionist crowd's colonial world. The Dominionists seek nothing less that to destroy diversity. There can be no equal rights for non-Christians. This the same way Islamists think. Delaware's Article 29 went on to end church establishment, a huge development, but you still had to be a Christian to enjoy equal Rights and Privileges in Delaware. On top of that, you had to believe in the - yes, the Nicene Trinity and the divine inspiration of the Bible to become a member of either House. Who wudda thunk it? It is abundantly clear that many early Constitutions were contaminated with contradictions regarding the liberties of conscience. Any degree of liberty granted by these governments still rested on protecting and perpetuating Christianity as they saw it. That's not true liberty of conscience. Liberty of conscience is here seen from such a diminished intellectual capacity that it entails barb-wiring the borders of freedom in order to keep people's conscience within the confines of Nicene Christian articles of faith. Your church could have a new name or an old name; a new litany or an old one, just as long as it's articles of faith complied with what the state considered Christian definitions of faith.
Yale's Avalon Project, which is an essential source for reading the documents of colonial and revolutionary America noted, "This constitution was framed by a Convention which assembled at New Castle, August 27, 1776, in accordance with the recommendation of the Continental Congress that the people of the Colonies should form independent State Governments. It was not submitted to the people but was proclaimed September 21, 1776." The people had little say in what the Delaware Constitution said.
The New Jersey Constitution of 1776, Article 19, declares that if you're a Protestant you can't be denied any civil right. What of others? This is still very English. It also declares clearly that Protestants only are eligible of being elected to the legislatures: "[T]here shall be no establishment of any one religious sect in this Province, in preference to another; and that no Protestant inhabitant of this Colony shall be denied the enjoyment of any civil right, merely on account of his religious principles; but that all persons, professing a belief in the faith of any Protestant sect, who shall demean themselves peaceably under the government, as hereby established, shall be capable of being elected into any office of profit or trust, or being a member of either branch of the Legislature, and shall fully and freely enjoy every privilege and immunity, enjoyed by others their fellow subjects."
No Catholics, Hindus, Buddhists, Jews, pagans, Muslims, or doubters allowed in our State! "Sorry sir, sorry ma'am, Protestants only, please."
Section Two of the Declaration of Rights in the Pennsylvania Constitution of 1776 stated, "nor can any man, who acknowledges the being of a God, be justly deprived or abridged of any civil right as a citizen, on account or his religious sentiments or peculiar mode of religious worship".
Section Ten of Pennsylvania's Plan or Frame of Government section requires this religious test-oath of all legislators, ordering that "before he takes his seat, shall make and subscribe the following: I do believe in one God, the creator and governor of the universe, the rewarder of the good and punisher of the wicked. And I do acknowledge the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament to be given by Divine inspiration. And no further or other religious test shall ever hereafter be required of any civil officer or magistrate in this State."
So, the law really does interfere with the liberties of conscience by disqualifying from holding office anyone who does not believe in the being of God. Someone wasn't thinking on the meaning of the rights of conscience. They were not walking any liberty talk, just keeping the status quo.
North Carolina's Constitution of 1776 declared, "That no person, who shall deny the being of God or the truth of the Protestant religion, or the divine authority either of the Old or New Testaments, or who shall hold religious principles incompatible with the freedom and safety of the State, shall be capable of holding any office or place of trust or profit in the civil department within this State."
OUCH!
Land of the free? Article 38 in the South Carolina Constitution of 1778 declared, "That all persons and religious societies who acknowledge that there is one God, and a future state of rewards and punishments, and that God is publicly to be worshipped, shall be freely tolerated. The Christian Protestant religion shall be deemed, and is hereby constituted and declared to be, the established religion of this State."
The law continued a little ways down with the requirements for anyone wishing to incorporate as a legitimate Protestant church in South Carolina:
"That all denominations of Christian Protestants in this State, demeaning themselves peaceably and faithfully, shall enjoy equal religious and civil privileges. . . . That every society of Christians so formed shall give themselves a name or denomination by which they shall be called and known in law, . . . each society so petitioning shall have agreed to and subscribed in a book the following five articles, without which no agreement or union of men upon pretense of religion shall entitle them to be incorporated and esteemed as a church of the established religion of this State:
First. That there is one eternal God, and a future state of rewards and punishments.
2d. That God is publicly to be worshipped.
3d. That the Christian religion is the true religion.
4th. That the holy scriptures of the Old and New Testaments are of divine inspiration, and are the rule of faith and practice.
5th That it is lawful and the duty of every man being thereunto called by those that govern, to bear witness to the truth."
Setting very strict limitations on free speech, Article 38 also declared, "No person whatsoever shall speak anything in their religious assembly irreverently or seditiously of the government of this State."
As backward and Medieval as these laws look, there was one good thing to come of this section that was a positive change: "No person shall, by law, be obliged to pay towards the maintenance and support of a religious worship that he does not freely join in, or has not voluntarily engaged to support."
Article Six of Georgia's Constitution of 1777 keeps to the old legal framework regarding faith by requiring that the representatives chosen from each county "The representatives shall be chosen out of the residents in each county, ...they shall be of the Protestant religion".
Chapter Six of the Massachusetts Constitution of 1780 required this discriminating religious test for officials:
"Any person chosen governor, lieutenant-governor, councillor, senator, or representative, and accepting the trust, shall, before he proceed to execute the duties of his place or office, make and subscribe the following declaration, viz:
I _____, do declare that I believe the Christian religion, and have a firm persuasion of its truth; and that I am seized and possessed, in my own right, of the property required by the constitution, as one qualification for the office or place to which I am elected".
Article 6 of New Hampshire's Bill of Rights in the Constitution of 1784 provided some rudimentary rights for every Christian denomination but still required one to be Protestant in order to get full liberties. (And to tax us in order to instruct us in Christian morality.) Still living in the ancient and misguided English church-state framework that caused so many problems, New Hampshire still believed in 1784 that pious evangelical principles gave the best and greatest security to government. The one thing good about this new constitution was that it gave liberties to every Christian denomination which went beyond the original requirements to be a member of the approved Church.
"Morality and piety, rightly grounded on evangelical principles, will give the best and greatest security to government, and will lay in the hearts of men the strongest obligations to due subjection; and as a knowledge of these is most likely to be propagated through a society by the institution of the public worship of the DEITY, and of public instruction in morality and religion; therefore, to promote those important purposes the people of this State have a right to empower, and do hereby fully empower, the legislature to authorize, from time to time, the several towns, parishes, bodies-corporate, or religious societies within this State, to make adequate provisions, at their own expense, for the support and maintenance of public Protestant teachers of piety, religion, and morality:
"Provided notwithstanding, That the several towns, parishes, bodies corporate, or religious societies, shall at all times have the exclusive right of electing their own public teachers, and of contracting with them for their support and maintenance. And no person, or any one particular religious sect or denomination, shall ever be compelled to pay toward the support of the teacher or teachers of another persuasion, sect, or denomination.
"And every denomination of Christians demeaning themselves quietly and as good subjects of the State, shall be equally under the protection of the law; and no subordination of any one sect or denomination to another shall ever be established by law.
This last clause was a copy of Article 3 from the Massachusetts Constitution of 1780.
New Hampshire's Constitution of 1784 didn't allow anyone but Protestants to hold office. Article 6 had made clear the several towns raised funds for Protestant teachers only. In 1784, New Hampshire was very backward regarding religious liberty. Article 14 stated regarding the Senate, "Provided, nevertheless, That no person shall be capable of being elected a senator who is not of the Protestant religion,.." Article 29 stated regarding the House of Representatives, "Every member of the house of representatives shall be chosen by ballot, ... shall be of the Protestant religion,". In 1792, New Hampshire amended some of its constitution including the requirements for the Executive which were replaced by those for the Governor of the State in Section 42: "And no person shall be eligible to this office unless at the time of his election he shall have been an inhabitant of this State for seven years next preceding, and unless he shall be of the age of thirty years and unless he shall at the same time have an estate of the value of five hundred pounds,, one-half of which shall consist of a freehold in his own right within this State, and unless he shall be of the protestant religion."
Not only did you have to be a Protestant to be a Senator, a Representative, or the Governor, you had to be a property owner! New Hampshire was not the only state that had these feudal property laws but that is another major liberty topic in itself. It is a reminder of the Feudal laws and customs found in Medieval European societies. Like the Christianists of today, New Hampshire politicians and voters at the time of the revolution and ratification felt that since NH had always required office holders to be Protestants, why change things? Even though the US Constitution banned religious tests, New Hampshire fought to keep theirs intact. It was clearly unconstitutional. After the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment in 1868, the states finally starting to behave. One was New Hampshire. In 1877, the Protestant requirement for being a Representative and Senator was taken out of the NH Constitution. That is a period of 88 years in which New Hampshire had illegal articles in their constitution. Slow to catch on, NH also repealed the property holding requirements for those positions in 1852.
Pennsylvania's 1790 Constitution changed somewhat from its 1776 Constitution, but still held to the old framework's test-oaths in principle, stating in Article 9, Section 4, "That no person, who acknowledges the being of God and a future state of rewards and punishments, shall, on account of his religious sentiments, be disqualified to hold any office or place of trust or profit under this commonwealth."
This is a bit odd because right before this statement, Section 3 says, "..that no human authority can, in any case whatever, control or interfere with the rights of conscience; and that no preference shall ever be given, by law, to any religious establishment or modes of worship." Stranger still was that the US Constitution had recently been ratified and it stated that "no religious test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States." Right above that clause it states that the US Constitution is the Supreme Law of the Land and that no state, no constitution, no judge and no law can be contrary to the US Constitution. Many states did not get this or refused to comply. Slavery and religious tests still ran amuck and that required a Fourteenth Amendment in 1868.
So where did all these militant demands for uniform religious belief come from? How did the governments of Europe and then the colonies become the protectors and enforcers of a Christian doctrine's total authority in society? Where did these religious test-oaths come from? How did it come to be that the state supported the clergy and the building of churches? What the Roman government did with paganism was largely symbolic, not contributing much at all to policy making for most of Roman history. In Rome, with few exceptions, one had religious liberty. Manicheanism was one. Christians were persecuted because they attacked the public order of religious diversity and liberties by condemning all religions and demanding that all be Christians. This perception was correct because when Trinitarian Christians got their liberty after Emperor Galerius' Edict of Tolerance, they sought imperial power and then progressively outlawed all other religions, including variants of Christianity. Before that, one could still have the religion of your choice in your private life. At the time of Constantine, the oath at the Altar of Victory had been a custom for several hundred years. In the empire it was common to do things like honor another's deity when visiting their home or town. It built social capital and that is what the Roman public order sustained. Rome went from mutual respect to disrespect as social and religious virtues. The alliance of the Christian leaders and the state was a very different animal than the largely symbolic Roman government's use of religion. It was kind of on the same scale as our government's "ceremonial deism" which is still unconstitutional under our constitution. By the same scale I mean unlike Christianity, it isn't much of a coercive religious policy maker. The religious policies and laws these people enacted and enforced were laws that trampled down the freedoms of others. In fact, they trampled the religious rights of the vast majority. For their own good, of course.
Rome had succeeded with religious diversity for a thousand years, yet the clergy and the imperial court believed religious conformity was essential to a stable empire. Right under their noses, history had already proven this notion utterly wrong. Neither the clergy nor the Christian emperors embraced the ideals of Roman Republicanism, which was the guiding force in the framing of the United States Constitution. Christianity then and now, because it is based on the Bible, is thoroughly antithetical to republicanism. (Even during the revolution, people wore the Roman Freedom Cap to show support for the patriots.) So how did it come that you and your officials' civic responsibility was promoting the public worship and acknowledgment of God? When did the state become so ruthless and demanding regarding the advancement of Christianity and the recognition of God in the public square? When did the State and the Church start allying themselves together in such a dictatorial way and start mandating everybody and their elected official's religious belief? Almost 1700 years ago.
It all began with the Emperor Constantine's recognition, subsidization, and establishment of Trinitarian Christianity as taught by the Catholic Church. At that time catholic church was a term meaning universal church. It was not used in the same way as we now use the capitalized term Catholic Church. There were many Sees or Patriarchies that made decisions for their areas. During the fourth century the catholic church was empire wide, with centers in Rome, Alexandria, Antioch and when built by Constantine in the 330s, Constantinople. The Roman See liked to be first in primacy' but the catholic church was not just the Roman Church. Rome was full of pagan temples and Constantinople was a Christian city in its design and building by Constantine. The Byzantine Empire centered in Constantinople, not Rome, continued the Empire until Muslims invaded and captured Constantinople in the fifteenth century. Christians and the state turning pagan temples into Christian churches changed to Muslims and the state turning churches into Mosques.
The Protestant religious test was basically the same because the Reformation taught the Trinitarian creed of the councils of Nicaea (325), Constantinople (381), Ephesus (431), and Chalcedon (451) that defined late antiquity's church-state alliances. They created the same kind of religious tests based on the belief in the consubstantial Trinity. Like the Trinitarians of old, the Protestants claimed Jesus was no less God than the Father and no less human than any person. The Reformation started off telling the Church in the Confession of Augsburg of 1530 that it believed these same things and condemned the same heresies the church did. They were Trinitarians, too, who believed the heretics were idolaters and insulters of God. They wanted to reform the way the church operated, not create new creeds. Let's take a look at the fundamental events in late antiquity that gave rise to the religious tests of Europe, England and their colonies.
In 323, Emperor Constantine issued an edict, recorded as Codex Theodosianus 16.5.1. making sure that the privileges regarding the growth of religion were held by Catholics only, decreeing "It is necessary that the privileges which are bestowed for the cultivation of religion should be given only to followers of the Catholic faith. We desire that heretics and schismatics be not only kept from these privileges, but be subjected to various fines."
Not to be outdone by the church's religious intolerance, Protestants did the same thing when declaring their religion the true orthodox religion to be cultivated. Beginning with the magisterial Reformation when leaders embraced Protestantism, these leaders required Protestantism of their subjects just as Catholic leaders in league with the church had required Catholicism of theirs. Both required a belief in the Nicene Trinity. And much more so if a citizen wished to hold a public office or position of trust. That required public declarations in oaths of office. State promoted churches with government subsidies and protections went from being Catholic to being Protestant. England did it both as a Catholic nation and a Protestant nation. In 1669, Carolina's Constitution supported religious intolerance, claiming its state supported Protestantism was orthodox and true. Exactly like the special treatment of Trinitarian Catholics, when Protestants broke away, only Trinitarian Protestants could hold office in lands that were Protestant. Only official churches got funding. The same Carolina constitution also withheld protections of the law from anyone who did not make the necessary religious declaration which was required for church membership and entrance to a profession. It was the same thing in most of the colonies and the states for a long time. Papists, atheists and Jews were dogs in England and so they were in the colonies.
In 325, Constantine persuaded Bishops from around the empire to hold a Council in Nicaea to settle the Christological dispute of the time. There were 318 Bishops that met at Nicea. The Christological dispute regarded the very popular Arianism or Arian Christianity. The religious situation of the early fourth century is where all the Christian test-oaths have their roots. Roman Catholic, Orthodox/Byzantine, or Protestant, they are rooted deep in late antiquity's early Imperial Church. Presbyter Arius of the See of Alexandria taught that the Son was not co-equal and consubstantial with the Father because he was begotten. The Father was unbegotten, said the Arian Christian Church, so how could they be equals? This drove Nicenes crazy because the Arian arguments used scripture. Knowing that their attempts to use scripture to develop the Nicene Creed would be scoffed at, the Bishops just decreed it so and then Constantine put the laws in motion. (Jehovah's Witnesses are modern day Arian Christians and are today disrespected by Trinitarians in the same way, claiming that they are not Christians.)
When the Bishops were done at Nicaea, they issued hisory's first installment of what became the Nicene Creed. It declared the Trinity in no uncertain terms:
"We believe in one God the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth, and of all things visible and invisible. And in one Lord Jesus Christ, the only-begotten Son of God, begotten of the Father before all worlds, God of God, Light of Light, Very God of Very God, begotten, not made, being of one substance with the Father by whom all things were made."
"And we believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord and Giver of Life, who proceedeth from the Father and the Son, who with the Father and the Son together is worshipped and glorified, who spoke by the prophets."
After the Creed was issued, Constantine seized Arian churches and exiled their clergy. In a letter preserved in Socrates Scholasticus' Ecclesiastical Histories, Book 1, Chapter 9, Constantine eventually decreed that Arius should be executed and Arian literature be burned:
"Constantine the King to the Bishops and nations everywhere. Inasmuch as Arius imitates the evil and the wicked, it is right that, like them, he should be rebuked and rejected. As therefore Porphyry, who was an enemy of the fear of God, and wrote wicked and unlawful writings against the religion of Christians, found the reward which befitted him, that he might be a reproach to all generations after, because he fully and insatiably used base fame; so that on this account his writings were righteously destroyed; thus also now it seems good that Arius and the holders of his opinion should all be called Porphyrians, that he may be named by the name of those whose evil ways he imitates:"
"And not only this, but also that all the writings of Arius, wherever they be found, shall be delivered to be burned with fire, in order that not only his wicked and evil doctrine may be destroyed, but also that the memory of himself and of his doctrine may be blotted out, that there may not by any means remain to him remembrance in the world. Now this also I ordain, that if any one shall be found secreting any writing composed by Arius, and shall not forthwith deliver up and burn it with fire, his punishment shall be death; for as soon as he is caught in this he shall suffer capital punishment without delay."
Mind you, these Arians who believed in the Gospel just as much as the Nicenes did were evil, wicked, unlawful and enemies of God. The Arian Church thrived nonetheless, with two powerful Arian emperors as benefactors between Constantine and Theodosius. They were Constantine's son Constantius and Valentinian's brother Valens. Aside from persecuting all non-Christians, Arians treated Nicenes the same way Nicenes treated Arians. As sole owners of God's truth, they closed Nicene churches and exiled their leaders. Arians had more churches than the Nicenes did in many cities. Arian Churches were said to be richly decorated with gems and precious metals and Arians were a majority in many places. It took Emperor Justinian's (r. 527-565) Magister Militum Belisarius' invasion of Sicily, Italy, and North Africa to end the Arian domination. (When Rome fell in the fifth century, it was then ruled by the invaders from the north who were Arian Christians) Under Justinian, Arian Churches were once again seized, the clergy was punished, and the religion was outlawed by the state and enforced by Roman soldiers. Arianism was widespread throughout Gaul and Spain in the Fourth Century and it took a Nicene alliance with the state to suppress it. This Arian majority was also true in Constantinople when the devout Nicene General Theodosius became emperor. Arianism was hugely popular in the fourth century. If it hadn't been for the clergy being in bed with the imperial court, Arianism would have certainly thrived. Who knows which sect would have been the most successful if the Emperors and the Army didn't do the Nicene Church's dirty work?
So, in February, 380, Emperors Theodosius in the east and Gratian in the west issued their joint decree that sought to completely wipe out religious diversity and liberty in the empire. Recorded as Codex Theodosianus 16.1.2, the edict stated, "We desire that all peoples subject to Our benign Empire shall live under the same religion that the Divine Peter, the Apostle, gave to the Romans, and which the said religion declares was introduced by himself, and which it is well known that the Pontiff Damascus, and Peter, Bishop of Alexandria, a man of apostolic sanctity, embraced; that is to say, in accordance with the rules of apostolic discipline and the evangelical doctrine, we should believe that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit constitute a single Deity, endowed with equal majesty, and united in the Holy Trinity."
"We order all those who follow this law to assume the name of Catholic Christians, and considering others as demented and insane, we order that they shall bear the infamy of heresy; and when the Divine vengeance which they merit has been appeased, they shall afterwards be punished in accordance with Our resentment, which we have acquired from the judgment of Heaven."
In Theodosius: Empire at Bay, historians Williams and Freil write regarding the decree of Theodosius and Gratian:
"The decree was characterized by an absolute intransigence towards local traditions that can be compared to the one of a dictatorial atheistic regime which criminalized Easter eggs, the Palm, Christmas Cards, Halloween pumpkins and even some universal habits, as a toast".
That was just the beginning. In November 380, Theodosius ordered all Arian churches to be confiscated and their meetings banned. Patriarch Gregory of Naziaznus was given all of the churches confiscated by Theodosius, which he then turned into Nicene Churches. The decree stated that the Doctrine of the Trinity became the state religion and all of his subjects must adhere to it. And now, nobody could publicly teach otherwise regarding the consubstantiality of the Trinity. Outlawing speech on these matters didn't happen only once. This was a habit of the Nicene alliance of church and state. Religious tests were here to stay.
Sozomen in his Ecclesiastical Histories, Book VII, chapter VII, tells us that, "The emperor enacted a law, ordination on bishops or others. Some of the heterodox were expelled from the cities and villages, while others were disgraced and deprived of the privileges enjoyed by other subjects of the empire. Great as were the punishments adjudged by the laws against prohibiting heretics from holding churches, from giving public instructions in the faith, and from conferring heretics, they were not always carried into execution, for the emperor had no desire to persecute his subjects; he only desired to enforce uniformity of view about God through the medium of intimidation."
In January 381, Theodosius and Gratian issued another tyrannical decree aimed at closing the heretic Arianist churches and others that denied the consubstantiality of the Son with the Father and Holy Spirit. Here one can see an order for public worship and a government's shield around the consubstantial Trinity, both found in colonial charters. Parts of this decree read:
"Let no place be afforded to heretics for the conduct of their ceremonies, and let no occasion be offered for them to display the insanity of their obstinate minds."
"Let all bodies of heretics be prevented from holding unlawful assemblies, and let the name of the only and the greatest God be celebrated everywhere, and let the observance of the Nicene Creed, recently transmitted to Our ancestors, and firmly established by the testimony and practice of Divine Religion, always remain secure."
"Moreover, he who is an adherent of the Nicene Faith, and a true believer in the Catholic religion, should be understood to be one who believes that Almighty God and Christ, the son of God,"as well as the belief in the undivided substance of a Holy Trinity, which true believers indicate by the Greek word These things, indeed do not require further proof, and should be respected."
"Let those who do not accept those doctrines cease to apply the name of true religion to their fraudulent belief; and let them be branded with their open crimes, and, having been removed from the threshhold of all churches, be utterly excluded from them, as We forbid all heretics to hold unlawful assemblies within cities."
"If, however, any seditious outbreak should be attempted, We order them to be driven outside the the walls of the City, with relentless violence, and We direct that all Catholic Churches, throughout the entire world, shall be placed under the control of the orthodox bishops who have embraced the Nicene Creed."
Called by Theodosius and Gratian in May of 381, the Ecumenical Council of Constantinople met to address not only Arianism but the Macedonian heresy. That particular Christian belief did not see the Holy Spirit as God, So they didn't believe in any Trinity, either. This council revised the Nicene Creed, reiterating the Spirit's consubstantiality with the Father and the Son. The Exposition of the One hundred eighty Fathers reads:
"We believe in one God the Father all-powerful, maker of heaven and of earth, and of all things both seen and unseen. And in one Lord Jesus Christ, the only-begotten Son of God, begotten from the Father before all the ages, light from light, true God from true God, begotten not made, consubstantial with the Father, through whom all things came to be; for us humans and for our salvation he came down from the heavens and became incarnate from the holy Spirit and the virgin Mary, became human and was crucified on our behalf under Pontius Pilate; he suffered and was buried and rose up on the third day in accordance with the scriptures; and he went up into the heavens and is seated at the Father's right hand; he is coming again with glory to judge the living and the dead; his kingdom will have no end. And in the Spirit, the holy, the lordly and life-giving one, proceeding forth from the Father, co-worshipped and co-glorified with Father and Son, the one who spoke through the prophets; in one, holy, catholic and apostolic church. We confess one baptism for the forgiving of sins. We look forward to a resurrection of the dead and life in the age to come. Amen."
The First and Seventh Canons of Constantinople present a list of heresies not of the mind of God. Anathematized or simply described as not of the same mind as the church of God: The First states:
"The profession of faith of the holy fathers who gathered in Nicaea in Bithynia is not to be abrogated, but it is to remain in force. Every heresy is to be anathematised and in particular that of the Eunomians or Anomoeans, that of the Arians or Eudoxians, that of the Semi-Arians or Pneumatomachi, that of the Sabellians, that of the Marcellians, that of the Photinians and that of the Apollinarians."
The Seventh Canon adds the heresies of Macedonians, Sabbatians, Novatians, Cathars and Aristae, Quartodeciman or Tetradites, Montanists (or Phrygians, and the Sabellian belief, "which is not of the same mind as the holy, catholic and apostolic church of God." Later, many of these specific heresies of late antiquity will also condemned by the Protestants, too. The Augsburg and Belgic Confessions shows striking similarities in the condemnations regarding the heresies and the affirmation of the Trinity.
The emperors and the clergy worked well together in arranging councils that defined both church doctrine and civil law. After a council, at which most Emperors were participaters to some degree, the emperors issue edicts that reflected and enacted the declarations of the council. For instance, Constantine officiated the Nicaean council while Marcianus attended Chalcedon during the most important phases of the Council towards the end. The Catholic Encyclopedia article on the Council ends with this statement: "At the close of this council Emperor Theodosius issued an imperial decree (30 July) declaring that the churches should be restored to those bishops who confessed the equal Divinity of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, and who held communion with Nectarius of Constantinople and other important Oriental prelates whom he named"
Its a real treat to read some of the letters that went back and forth between the clergy and the emperors. In my separate and more detailed articles on Emperors Theodosius the Younger and Marcianus, I excerpt some very interesting and rather curious stuff from the letters of Pope Leo, the emperors, the empress Pulcheria, and the battling, complaining clergy. It shows us exactly what we don't want to become. It shows us the mind of those that have no tolerance for any other belief. And this was only the beginning of the long night. We haven't left the fourth century, yet. In those articles I track and excerpt the letters for several years before the Council of Chalcedon finally is ordered and convened.
From the Synodical letter of the Council of Ephesus about the expulsion of the eastern bishops, we see that Emperors Theodosius the Younger and Valentinian III are once again in league with the Nicene clergy.
"The holy and ecumenical synod, gathered together in Ephesus at the behest of the most pious princes [Emp Theodosius & Valentinian], greetings to the bishops, priests, deacons and the whole people in every province and city."
Behest means a command, decree or authoritative directive. In 431, the General Council of Ephesus convened to settle another Trinitarian argument about the Trinity and the nature of Christ. It concerned the teachings of Nestorius, the new Patriarch of Constantinople, whom Theodosius II had approved and consecrated. Nestorius was from Antioch and was not warmly welcomed in the See of Constantinople. Both Nestorius and his opponents wanted a council and both emperors Theodosius the Younger and Valentinian III encouraged it. Bishop Nestorius is said to have taught a creed which said Christ had two separate natures or persons. Not the fully God and fully human Jesus of the Nicene Creed. Nestorius also unsettled the Nicene fathers in the way he defined Mary. Nestorius attacked the growing Theotokos, or Mother of God movement. Tokos means giving birth to. Bishop Nestarius got into big trouble for saying "I cannot speak of God as being two or three months old," Instead, he referred to Mary as the Mother of Christ, not God. The Christ-bearer. This angered the Nicenes in just the same way the Arians did when they said, how can Christ the begotten of the Father be coequal to the unbegotten Father? Nestorius was condemned and deposed by the authorities of the church-state alliance. His teachings were condemned by the Council and Theodosius the Younger enforced it. Bishops were exiled, and their churches were taken and given to the Nicenes. Like most of these fellows, Nestorius was no saint. He received the nickname the incendiary for burning down heretic churches. This he began to do immediately after his own consecration by Theodosius as Patriarch of Constantinople. In his first sermon he sought a union of church and state with the imperial court, saying to the emperor, "Purge me, 0 Caesar, the earth of heretics, and I in return will give thee heaven. Stand by me in putting down the heretics and I will stand by thee in putting down the Persians."
One of the things that happened at the Council of Ephesus was the synod's acceptance of Cyril's Twelve Anathemas which came from Cyril's letters to Nestorius. I will list five that are important to this discussion.
2. If anyone does not confess that the Word from God the Father has been united by hypostasis with the flesh and is one Christ with his own flesh, and is therefore God and man together, let him be anathema.
3. If anyone divides in the one Christ the hypostases after the union, joining them only by a conjunction of dignity or authority or power, and not rather by a coming together in a union by nature, let him be anathema.
5. If anyone dares to say that Christ was a God-bearing man and not rather God in truth, being by nature one Son, even as "the Word became flesh", and is made partaker of blood and flesh precisely like us, let him be anathema.
6. If anyone says that the Word from God the Father was the God or master of Christ, and does not rather confess the same both God and man, the Word having become flesh, according to the scriptures, let him be anathema.
7. If anyone says that as man Jesus was activated by the Word of God and was clothed with the glory of the Only-begotten, as a being separate from him, let him be anathema.
The Council also agreed to a Definition of the Nicene Creed that began with the original Nicene Creed and then went on to say,
"It seems fitting that all should assent to this holy creed. It is pious and sufficiently helpful for the whole world. But since some pretend to confess and accept it, while at the same time distorting the force of its expressions to their own opinion and so evading the truth, being sons of error and children of destruction, it has proved necessary to add testimonies from the holy and orthodox fathers that can fill out the meaning they have given to the words and their courage in proclaiming it. All those who have a clear and blameless faith will understand, interpret and proclaim it in this way.
When these documents had been read out, the holy synod decreed the following.
1. It is not permitted to produce or write or compose any other creed except the one which was defined by the holy fathers who were gathered together in the holy Spirit at Nicaea.
2. Any who dare to compose or bring forth or produce another creed for the benefit of those who wish to turn from Hellenism or Judaism or some other heresy to the knowledge of the truth, if they are bishops or clerics they should be deprived of their respective charges and if they are laymen they are to be anathematized.
3. In the same way if any should be discovered, whether bishops, clergy or laity, thinking or teaching the views expressed in his statement by the priest Charisius about the incarnation of the only-begotten Son of God or the disgusting, perverted views of Nestorius, which underlie them, these should be subject to the condemnation of this holy and ecumenical synod. A bishop clearly is to be stripped of his bishopric and deposed, a cleric to be deposed from the clergy, and a lay person is to be anathematised, as was said before.
The Nicene Trinitarian Creed, the central Christological dogma of both Catholicism and Protestantism, was putting down roots and shutting everybody's mouth with the help of the State. This trend of defining and shielding Nicene Christianity while also demanding a belief in it is the foundation that gave western civilization its Christian religious tests in political oaths of office. Under persecution went more groups of Christians that didn't embrace the Nicene Creed version of Christianity. In Ephesus, Arians, Macedonians and Messalians were the main targets this time around the ecumenical merry-go-round. Those tests continued to be enforced for fifteen centuries by the alliances of Roman, Orthodox and Protestant churches with the state. There is no difference in the arrogance and obstinacy of each denomination when they are the ones in alliance with the state.
In 433, in an attempt to bring some unity in the church, especially between the Antiochan and Alexandrian Churches, the The Creed of Union was issued. It was drawn up by Cyril of Alexandria and signed by John of Antioch. John had opposed Cyril at the Council of Ephesus. John had deliberately shown up six days late and then called his own council nearby. John's council condemned Cyril, while Cyril's condemned Nestorian teachings and deposed its church leaders. Churches were confiscated after Ephesus but in doctrine, most held their ground. The Emperor wanted this situation remedied so with imperial coaxing, John and Cyril moved towards meeting or at least having representatives meet. Eventually Cyril drew it up and John signed it. When that happened the Antiochan's declared John fallen from the faith. John kept his job. He was moderately tolerant towards the Nestorians but did use troops once during a Nestorian uprising in Edessa.
The Creed stated:
"We confess, then, our lord Jesus Christ, the only begotten Son of God perfect God and perfect man of a rational soul and a body, begotten before all ages from the Father in his godhead, the same in the last days, for us and for our salvation, born of Mary the virgin, according to his humanity, one and the same consubstantial with the Father in godhead and consubstantial with us in humanity, for a union of two natures took place."
"Therefore we confess one Christ, one Son, one Lord. According to this understanding of the unconfused union, we confess the holy virgin to be the mother of God because God the Word took flesh and became man and from his very conception united to himself the temple he took from her. As to the evangelical and apostolic expressions about the Lord, we know that theologians treat some in common as of one person and distinguish others as of two natures, and interpret the god-befitting ones in connexion with the godhead of Christ and the lowly ones with his humanity."
"We confess, then, our lord Jesus Christ, the only begotten Son of God perfect God and perfect man of a rational soul and a body, begotten before all ages from the Father in his godhead, ...one and the same consubstantial with the Father in godhead and consubstantial with us in humanity, for a union of two natures took place."
Well, there they go again with consubstantiality. There was some important Mary business but the core of the creedal statement concerned defining the exact nature of God the Trinity.
Beginning in the 440s, a new controversy arose regarding the nature of Christ and God. It was the Trinity again. The very old Archimandrate Eutyches was a monophysite Christian. Monophysites preached Christ had one nature, not two. Eutyches headed a monastery of up to three hundred monks on the outskirts of Constantinople and was very well connected to the imperial court. He was afforded a degree of special treatment and protections, with the Emperor mostly looking the other way. Theodosius is said to have thought Eutyches was orthodox, but it sounds convenient given the players and the situation. Eutyches' Godson was Chrysaphius, the Emperor's closest advisor. With the untimely death of Theodosius from a fall off a horse, all that protection ended with the acclamation of Emperor Marcianus. Besides being an accomplished military leader from the top tier of power, Marcian was a devout Nicene. The Empress Pulcheria was Mad about Mary, too. The Empress and the military and the Empress had brokered a deal and arranged her marriage to General Marcian so things were about the change fast in Eutyches' world. Even though Aspar out ranked Marcian, Aspar was a Germanic Alani and Arian Christian, too, like most converts from the north. A heretic and a barbarian, he was not the one to continue the Theodosian line of emperors with. Aspar could protect the empire but he could not rule it. Arians and other heretics were supposed demented and insane. They had mental a illness. How else could you explain a mind that didn't believe the Nicene Creed of the Holy and Apostolic Church? The clergy was very pleased with the choice of Marcian. The Sees of Rome and Constantinople now had an ally sitting on the throne with Empress Pulcheria.
To monophysites of this period, Christ had one nature; it was divine. Period. Like the Arian, Macedonian and Nestorian controversies, the arguments were centered around the Trinity and the nature of the Incarnation. To the Monophysites, the Nicene bishops, Nestorius, and Arius had lost their way in heresy. The people with an alliance with the state won. And like the previous Trinitarian disputes, the church and state allied to repress the other beliefs even if they were the majority belief in an area. Monophysites made up the majority of Christians in Palestine and Egypt. These militant demands for uniformity 'throughout the kingdom' continue into Protestant Confessions (definitions of faith), colonial charters and state constitutions prior to the first ratifications of the Constitution.
On May 17, 451 Emperor Marcian issued an edict ordering a General Council in Nicaea with the intention of clearing up the festering Eutychian controversy. Because of rumblings on the Persian front, the Emperor changed the venue to Chalcedon. Due to the violence of the so-called Robber Council at Ephesus in 449, Chalcedon's proceedings were under the watchful eye of imperial troops and commissioners. A panel of imperial commissioners had the job of keeping order, bringing consensus, and ratifying the council's declarations at the end of the sessions. Some representatives were separated from the main mass of the 600 Bishops for their own safety. Like the Robber Council at Ephesus, which was called because of timult at a previous local synod in Constantinople, this was again all about the Trinity and the Incarnation and people were steaming about it. It was a loud and tumultuous affair but the troops managed to keep violence from breaking out. At the Robber council people were beaten and threatened and it was reported that Constantinople's aged Patriarch Flavian died of his wounds after three days. The Monophysites at Ephesus had shouted that they who want to cut Christ in two should also be cut in two. The troops at Ephesus were also responsible for some of the violence. You can a detailed story of the how and why these three councils Marican Chapter of the section on the Rise of Church-State Alliances.
After over a month of sessions in the cathedral, the clergy crafted their declarations, the imperial commissioners ratified them, and in February the Emperor put his stamp of approval on them, making them the law of the land. The Chalcedonian Definition of Faith stated:
"So, following the saintly fathers, we all with one voice teach the confession of one and the same Son, our Lord Jesus Christ: the same perfect in divinity and perfect in humanity, the same truly God and truly man, of a rational soul and a body; consubstantial with the Father as regards his divinity, and the same consubstantial with us as regards his humanity; like us in all respects except for sin; begotten before the ages from the Father as regards his divinity, and in the last days the same for us and for our salvation from Mary, the virgin God-bearer as regards his humanity; one and the same Christ, Son, Lord, only-begotten, acknowledged in two natures which undergo no confusion, no change, no division, no separation; at no point was the difference between the natures taken away through the union, but rather the property of both natures is preserved and comes together into a single person and a single subsistent being; he is not parted or divided into two persons, but is one and the same only-begotten Son, God, Word, Lord Jesus Christ, just as the prophets taught from the beginning about him, and as the Lord Jesus Christ himself instructed us, and as the creed of the fathers handed it down to us. "
"Since we have formulated these things with all possible accuracy and attention, the sacred and universal synod decreed that no one is permitted to produce, or even to write down or compose, any other creed or to think or teach otherwise..."
Forbidden to think otherwise? What kind of people are these? The last General Council in Ephesus issued similar demands, making it illegal to "produce or write or compose any other creed....". This is the worst kind of authoritarianism and can be observed in dictatorships and theocracies. This religious test stuff is getting damn serious, wouldn't you say? It was one thing if this was the rule for members who chose to be a part of this association of believers, but its not. The plan is to have the imperial court ratify and promulgate the council's definitions as civil society's law. And at this point in our story, 125 years after the Nicene Creed was first defined, the Christian test-oath story has just started its long trek through most of the next two millenniums.
Soon after the Council adjourned, on November 12, 451, the emperor issued a decree that made reopening closed pagan temples a capital crime. The decree included the crimes of burning incense, offering libations (ritual 'pouring out' offerings of their best Wine or Olive Oil), and decorating the temples with flowers, inside or out. Valentinian in the West had already decreed non-Trinitarian and pagan views to be treason to the state.
Then on February 7, 452, the emperors issued an edict which enforced Chalcedon and made its creed the civil law of the empire. This didn't mean the mundane things like church expenditures would effect you; it meant the correct belief in God the Trinity because that is what the fight was almost always about. Early colonies like Virginia, New Hampshire, Connecticut, and the Massachusetts Bay closely resembled these early models of religious doctrine as law. If you had to believe rightly to be saved, it followed, after a millennia and a half of habit, that you had to believe correctly to be a full citizen or serve the citizenry. Error can't be allowed to destroy society. One had to religiously correct in order to live unmolested. Together, the church and the government insisted you believed rightly.
The next emperor was Leo I. Leo's coronation was the first instance of an emperor being crowned by a major leader of the Church. This was a logical outcome of the loss of borders between such a demanding, 'exclusivist' religion and the state. In the courts of Protestant nations, monarchs were also crowned by religious leaders. Powerful figures still had to have the blessings of religious leaders in order to be acclaimed Emperor. On February 7, 457, Emperor Leo the First was crowned by Constantinople's Patriarch Anatolius in the presence of the Senate, government officials, the clergy and the Scholarian Guard of Constantinople. After Leo was crowned, the assembly exclaimed, "God will keep thee. A long reign! God will protect the Christian Empire!" Leo was also involved in the debates about the Trinity and the consubtantiality of Christ. JB Bury noted in his tome, The Later Roman Empire (Vol I, Ch 11, pg 358):
"Throughout the reign of Leo I the dispute over the incarnation led to scenes of the utmost violence in Alexandria and to occurrences hardly less scandalous in Antioch"
As soon as the news of Marcian's death reached Palestine and Alexandria, riots broke out in the streets as the Monophysites reclaimed their churches. People died. Marcian had used troops to force Nicene beliefs on an unhappy majority in the Antiochan and Alexandrian Sees and they took their chances as soon they heard he had died. But alas, the Nicene clergy had a friend in Leo, who sent troops to put the right bishops and the right beliefs in the churches. Well, for now at least. Leo didn't persecute heretics only. In his desire to repress Judaism and make the Nicene life the only choice left even for Jewish people, he declared in Constitution LV (55) of The Constitutions of Leo:
"Therefore We, desiring to accomplish what Our Father failed to effect, do hereby annul all the old laws enacted with reference to the Hebrews, and We order that they shall not dare to live in any other manner than in accordance with the rules established by the pure and salutary Christian Faith. And if anyone of them should be proved to, have neglected to observe the ceremonies of the Christian religion, and to have returned to his former practices, he shall pay the penalty prescribed by the law for apostates."
Like the Medieval England that didn't let Jews into the country for the longest time because they were Christ killers and blasphemers of God, Leo and the church afforded Jews few rights of conscience. Before Christians took over the throne of the Monarchy, Judaism was an officially accepted religion in the Empire. And Jew who was a Roman Citizen was equal to other Romans under the law. But that changed with the Christianized empire. Between Emperors Leo I and Justinian, the Monophysites and the Nicenes still fought it out in the marketplaces, in the churches, at the imperial court and sometimes violently in the streets. After Leo died, Emperor Zeno crafted the Henotikon. The Henotikon was an attempt to unify the church through a compromise between the monophysites and the Nicenes. But neither the leading Nicenes and Monophysites would have none of it. They were not going to compromise their values.
Because Leo had Aspar, Marcian's closest advisor, murdered along with his sons, Leo earned the nickname the butcher. Aspar had wielded a great deal of power for a long time. Aspar was the Magister Militum of the Empire, as was his father before him and son afterward, both named Arbaduras. Marcian was Arbaduras' and then Aspar's right hand man in the military leadership. Aspar became Marcian's. Aspar the military and political power-broker was responsible for not only Marcianus' rise to imperial power, but Leo's rise instead of the next in line, Anthemius. Anthemius eventually became emperor in the west. Before that incident, Leo had made one of Aspar's son Caesar. Mobs of fanatics and monks rioted in the streets, bringing death and destruction to Constantinople because they could not bear the idea that an Arian and~! a barbarian was in line for the throne. The Monophysites still had power and influence to be reckoned with and Arians were still on the loose. Emperor Anastasius was a Monophysite even though he declared the Chalcedonian faith. He too, was bitten by the intractable Monophysite problem when in 511, he replaced the Patriarch of Constantinople with a Monophysite and riots broke out in the streets of Constantinople. After that, Emperor Justin, ruling 518-527, joined other emperors in decreeing heresy illegal. Justin targeted Arians the most. After 523, Arians were watched and actively persecuted much like police states do. Between Leo and Justinian, with reigns of Zeno, Anastasius and Justin, the Trinity again played center stage again in the doctrinal battles of the clergy, the court, homes and the streets.
In 527, Emperor Justinian decreed (Codex Justinianus 1.5.12) that non-Nicenes could not hold political office, rise in the military or enter the profession of law. The Colony of Carolina in 1669, was also clear about a religious test-oath before entering a professional career. It was the same religious test you needed to swear to in order to join a church in the Carolina colony. Justinian's rather fascist decree states:
"It is our intention to restore the existing laws which affect the rest of the heretics of whatever name they are, (and we label as heretic whoever is not a member of the Catholic Church and of our orthodox and holy faith); likewise the pagans who attempt to introduce the worship of many gods, and the Jews and the Samaritans, we have resolved not only to reinforce them with this present law, but also to enforce other measures which will provide those who share our shining faith with greater security, order and honor... We forbid any of the above mentioned persons to aspire to any dignity or to acquire civil or military office or to attain to any rank."
"It is more than enough for them merely to be alive. Heretics are all such as do not belong to the Catholic faith including Jews. They are not to hold any office; or follow profession of law"
It is more than enough for them merely to be alive.
In 528, recorded as Codex Justinianus 1.11.9-10, he ordered the execution of those who practice sorcery, divination, magic or idolatry. In one translation, Justinian refers to them as "the ones suffering from the blasphemous insanity of the Hellenes". Theodosius the Great called heretics, 'demented and insane'. This was a very common way of talking about your opponents in those days. Pope Leo's letters are must-reads in this regard. He patronizes the imperial court and uses untrue or exaggerated statements and ad hominem attacks against heretics and Manicheans. In this decree of 528, Justinian demands that
"All those who have not yet been baptized must come forward, whether they reside in the capital or in the provinces, and go to the very holy churches with their wives, their children, and their households, to be instructed in the true faith of Christians."
The true faith, according to Nicenes, is exclusive to the Nicene faith. Everyone else is in error and should be treated differently. Muslims tell others the same thing about their exclusive hold on the truth. Shia and Sunni Muslims tell each other that only their belief is the truth just as Protestants and Catholics did. Millions died due to this madness from the realm of the superstitious and the supernatural. Here we see the church-state foundations that evolved into the religious requirements found in Europe and its colonies. The Church and state worked hand in had to make it exceedingly difficult for anyone to 'live unmolested' if they held a different religious belief. Justinian continued with the state's threats, warning of the punishments if they should disobey, "let them know that they will be excluded from the State and will no longer have any rights of possession, neither goods nor property; stripped of everything, they will be reduced to penury, without prejudice to the appropriate punishments that will be imposed on them"
The colonies did similar things. England didn't even let Jews into their country at one time during the Middle Ages. It was all about the correct religious declaration and oath. How could anyone but a Protestant rule Protestants? Above, I showed that the 1669 Carolina laws prohibited anyone not professing a belief in God any rights to live in, or own property in that colony. You could not be a freeman in Carolina if you didn't believe in God.
In the Early 530s, Justinian decreed in Codex Justinianus 1.5.17, that "The synagogues of the Samaritans shall be destroyed, and if they dare to build others, they shall be punished. They may have no testamentary or other legal heirs except Orthodox Christians".
In this law, nobody could inherit any property except those with the proper beliefs about the Son and the Trinity. In Protestant England after the Glorious Revolution of 1688 and the Constitution of 1689, Catholics had no testamentary rights. The Protestant state decided where things went. There were even laws that prohibited one from marrying a Catholic. This kind of church doctrine goes all the way back to the Council of Elvira around 306 that forbade marrying, socializing or even eating with a Jew, heretic or Pagan. In the world of Elvira, it was Catholic girls and boys who were being told who they couldn't marry. Catholic girls couldn't marry the last available male in the region if he was a pagan.
In 535, Justinian kept up the pressure on dissident beliefs and issued what is called Novella Six in the Justinian Code. This Novella not only decreed the rules on church hierarchy and operation, but further legitimized the church-state alliance by further linking the Priesthood and Kingdom, for the purpose of guarding the true dogmas of God. It stated:
"The greatest blessings granted to human beings by God's ultimate grace are priesthood and kingdom, the former taking care of divine affairs, while the latter guiding and taking care of human affairs, and both, come from the same source, embellishing human life."
"Therefore, nothing lies so heavy on the hearts of kings as the honour of priests, who on their part serve them, praying continuously for them to God. And if the priesthood is well ordered in everything and is pleasing to God, then there will be full harmony between them in every thing that serves the good and benefit of the human race."
"Therefore, we exert the greatest possible effort to guard the true dogmas of God and the honour of the priesthood, hoping to receive through it great blessings from God and to hold fast to the ones which we have".
Following the Emperor Marcianus' example in 545, Justinian issued Novella 131. In Chapter 1, it declared the canons of the first four ecumenical councils to be the law of the empire:
"Concerning Four Holy Councils: Therefore We order that the sacred, ecclesiastical rules which were adopted and confirmed by the four Holy Councils, that is to say, that of the three hundred and eighteen bishops held at Nicaea, that of the one hundred and fifty bishops held at Constantinople, the first one of Ephesus, where Nestorius was condemned, and the one assembled at Chalcedon, where Eutyches and Nestorius were anathematized, shall be considered as laws. We accept the dogmas of these four Councils as sacred writings, and observe their rules as legally effective." OUCH! Church doctrine as the Supreme law of the land!
In 553, the Council of Constantinople was called by the order of Justinian. The disputes regarding the Trinity and Incarnation still dominated the proceedings. Once again, defining the nature of the Trinity and the Incarnation. The Monophysite controversy was still a big problem for Rome and Constantinople. And there were always Arians lurking about. Justinian is also targeting those that follow what was being called Origen's teachings. In the end the Council issued 14 Anathemas.
In Anathema 1, we are told "If anyone shall not confess that the nature or essence of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost is one, as also the force and the power; a consubstantial Trinity, one Godhead to be worshipped in three subsistences or Persons: let him be anathema.
Anathema 2 threatens, "If anyone shall not confess that the Word of God has two nativities, the one from all eternity of the Father, ..let him be anathema.
Anathema 3 warns, "If anyone shall say that the wonder-working Word of God is one and the Christ that suffered another; or shall say that God the Word was with the woman-born Christ, or was in him as one person in another, but that he was not one and the same our Lord Jesus Christ, the Word of God, incarnate and made man, and that his miracles and the sufferings which of his own will he endured in the flesh were not of the same: let him be anathema."
Anathema 11 adds, IF anyone does not anathematize Arius, Eunomius, Macedonius, Apollinaris, Nestorius, Eutyches and Origen, as well as their impious writings, as also all other heretics already condemned and anathematized by the Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church, and by the aforesaid four Holy Synods and all those who have held and hold or who in their impiety persist in holding to the end the same opinion as those heretics just mentioned: let him be anathema.
Origen? Speaking of demented and insane! Origen castrated himself for God because he hated the flesh!
During the period of Constantine through Justinian, the first to the fifth General Council, the Nicene Creed increasingly dominated civil law on matters of religion. This was the foundational period for the religious test-oaths of the future. Over the centuries the alliance worked towards destroying past religions, traditions and conventions and replacing them with their religion. It was the conservative religious politicians in the Roman Senate that fought the changes the most. "It is our tradition. It is our heritage. It is our duty. This is the way its always been. We can't turn our backs on the Gods who have blessed Rome with so much.". History is going through another religious change because this sounds like Jay Sekulow, Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson. Heritage this, tradition that. Never mind the written law.
When Martin Luther came on the scene a millennium later, belief in the Nicene Creed had been the standard for a very long time. It had been tradition for so long people knew of nothing else except through legend. Nobody would dare question the doctrines of consubstantiality and if they did, they were in a world of trouble. After the Reformation it remained as the dogmatic standard to both. Nobody was arguing over anything in the Nicene Creed during the Reformation and nobody was arguing about it when Protestants finally broke from Rome.
From the start, Protestants organized their churches used the same kinds of religious tests and government alliances that were created before the Reformation. The names of churches had changed, the litanies changed some, and the church hierarchy's relationship with both God and the people definitely changed. But one thing didn't change. It was the same militancy regarding the Nicene Trinity Creed vs other Christological beliefs. It was the same militancy that decreed and required assenting to, that your church was spreading God's word and the others weren't. All these alliances seek Nicene tests for oaths of office regarding public service and positions of authority, secular and religious because they are Nicenes and are making the laws. Making it so nobody but Nicenes could serve government puts the government in the hands of the Nicenes. This is the loathsome combination of church and state Jefferson spoke of in his letter to Charles Clay on January 29, 1815. If you were a heretic who didn't believe in the Trinity as defined in the Nicene Creed you would be in as much danger in a Protestant society as you would be in a Catholic one. Let's start with the
In 1530, the Augsburg Confession was presented by Protestants to Holy Roman Emperor Charles V at the Diet (Assembly) of Augsburg. It was a response authored mainly by Luther's ally, Phillip Melanchthon, addressing the condemnation of Martin Luther by the imperial decree after the Diet of Worms, held in 1521. Charles had stated, "We want him to be apprehended and punished as a notorious heretic". The Diet of Worms was another assembly of church and state allies seeking to silence religious dissent. Because Jan Hus had been burned alive by a lying and conspiring council that never intended to honor a safe passage gurantee to and from the council, Luther had a powerful benefactor that protected him and sped him away after the Diet. They knew how empty those promises could be when it came to religion. The clergy did anything they could to stifle dissent and any change and that's just what the reformers wanted. In a hall full of civil magistrates and clergymen, Luther was prosecuted by an attorney who was an assistant to the Archbishop. Not learning the hard lessons of history, Protestants did just the same when they achieved power in the governments. In some places, saying Mass became a capital offense. Churches were plundered. When Sweden went Protestant, the state confiscated all Catholic property. This is exactly what early Nicene orthodoxy had done to pagans, Jews and heretics to establish a uniform religious society. Demolition, arson, and plunder joined religious tests and the state's official religion in establishing conformity.
The purpose of the Confession of Augsburg was to show the church and the authorities that Luther, his friends, and his followers believed the same important doctrines as the Catholic Church did. Protestants denied the temporal authority of the Papacy over the world's body of believers and rejected the corruption of the priesthood and the magistrates. They didn't want to start a new church; they wanted to clean the old one up. Simply put, they were Catholics without the clutter of the Papacy. In the preface of the Confession, it sounds very much like the communications between religious leaders and the Roman imperial court. Similar to the situations surrounding the General Councils, it was the Emperor Charles who called for the assembly at Augsburg in 1530. With the Preface, the Protestants began their case:
"Most Invincible Emperor, Caesar Augustus, Most Clement Lord: Inasmuch as Your Imperial Majesty has summoned a Diet of the Empire here at Augsburg to deliberate concerning measures against the Turk, ...and then also concerning dissensions in the matter of our holy religion and Christian Faith, that in this matter of religion the opinions and judgments of the parties might be heard in each other's presence; ..."
"Of God" the Confession states "Our Churches, with common consent, do teach that the decree of the Council of Nicaea concerning the Unity of the Divine Essence and concerning the Three Persons, is true and to be believed without any doubting; that is to say, there is one Divine Essence which is called and which is God: eternal, ...and yet there are three Persons, of the same essence and power, who also are coeternal, the Father the Son, and the Holy Ghost."
"They [the Lutherans] condemn all heresies which have sprung up against this article, as the Manichaeans, who assumed two principles, one Good and the other Evil- also the Valentinians, Arians, Eunomians, Mohammedans, and all such. They condemn also the Samosatenes, old and new, who, contending that there is but one Person, sophistically and impiously argue that the Word and the Holy Ghost are not distinct Persons, but that "Word" signifies a spoken word, and "Spirit" signifies motion created in things."
In the Article,"Of the Son of God", it states, "Also they teach that the Word, that is, the Son of God, did assume the human nature in the womb of the blessed Virgin Mary, so that there are two natures, the divine and the human, inseparably enjoined in one Person, one Christ, true God and true man,...".
Later, after Catholic writings attacked the Augsburg Confession, Melanchthon presented Emperor Charles with the Defense of the Confession of Augsburg, or Defense of Augsburg which again tried to point out their unity on what is important:
"Article I: Of God. The First Article of our Confession our adversaries approve, in which we declare that we believe and teach that there is one divine essence, undivided, etc., and yet, that there are three distinct persons, of the same divine essence, and coeternal, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. This article we have always taught and defended, and we believe that it has, in Holy Scripture, sure and firm testimonies that cannot be overthrown. And we constantly affirm that those thinking otherwise are outside of the Church of Christ. and are idolaters, and insult God."
The First Act of Supremacy was issued by Henry in 1534. King Henry declared that he was "the only supreme head on earth of the Church in England" and that the English crown shall enjoy "all honours, dignities, preeminences, jurisdictions, privileges, authorities, immunities, profits, and commodities to the said dignity."
After the Act of Supremacy of 1534, the Treason Act of 1534 made it a crime of treason, punishable by death, to disagree with the Act of Supremacy. Thomas More, a loyal Catholic before a loyal Brit, was executed under this Act. Valentinian III's decree of treason if one didn't see the Roman See's primacy over all the rest of the Patriarchies. The Acts were Repealed by Catholic Queen Mary I.
The Act of Uniformity 1549 established the Book of Common Prayer as the sole legal form of worship in England. Up until 1549 the churches in England had uses the Latin-language missal with slight alterations to separate is from the Catholics. The law was very controversial led to rioting in some areas of England. By 1552 a new Act of Conformity was passed and it came with a revised Book of Common Prayer.
In 1559, the Act of Supremacy made Queen Elizabeth the Supreme Governor of things spiritual and ecclesiastical. The oath stated:
"I, A. B., do utterly testify and declare in my conscience that the queen's highness is the only supreme governor of this realm and of all other her highness's dominions and countries, as well in all spiritual or ecclesiastical things or causes as temporal, and that no foreign prince, person, prelate, state, or potentate hath or ought to have any jurisdiction, power, superiority, pre-eminence, or authority, ecclesiastical or spiritual, within this realm; and therefore I do utterly renounce and forsake all foreign jurisdictions, powers, superiorities, and authorities, and do promise that from henceforth I shall bear faith and true allegiance to the queen's highness, her heirs, and lawful successors, and to my power shall assist and defend all jurisdictions, pre-eminences, privileges, and authorities granted or belonging to the queen's highness, her heirs, and successors, or united or annexed to the imperial crown of this realm: so help me God and by the contents of this Book"
In 1563, the Church of England presented The Thirty-nine Articles. They were based on the Forty-two Articles of 1553, which were primarily authored by Thomas Cranmer. Like the Forty-two, the Thirty-nine deliberately made life less than free for Anabaptists and Catholics. It began with "Of faith in the holy Trinity. There is but one living and true God, everlasting, without body, parts, or passions, of inf |