State of Religion
America has always lived in a dichotomy. It has been a nation that preaches freedom of religion, yet the nation still holds firm to its Christian roots. America has been a tightrope walker carefully trudging along the razor thin line, sometimes leaning left where the first amendment reads Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof and at other times leaning right towards the proud motto many statesmen and laymen swear by, one nation under God. Thankfully, the tightrope walker hasnt fallen towards either side, and keeps trudging on. Sure constitutionalists can argue that God has no place in the American Government, and they may be right, but the fact remains that God has been a major part of the American government. Why? Because the people have mandated it so.
Historically there has never been a president of the United States who did not believe in God, and in fact the Christian God (even many of the founding fathers, who are described as Deists, were raised as Episcopalians.) Today more than three quarters of the US population identify themselves as Christian, more than any other western nation. Although that shouldnt surprise any of you, a more important fact was discovered by the Gallup poll in 2006. The poll revealed that forty-six percent of Americans believe that the Bible should be a source of legislation while nine percent believe that it should be the sole source of legislation. This means that nearly half of America would want God in their government, would want legislation that came from the bible. A large portion of the American public would want a pseudo-theocratic regime!
But religion should not be feared, the brotherhood that arrives from Christianity is extremely lively today in American Culture. The charitable nature of America needless to say lies in the statement that my brother is my keeper. The bond that we share with our neighbors is not just coincidence; it has sprouted from Judeo-Christian values. We easily overlook the goodness of religion that we practice every day. Aphorisms that have sprung up and are preached about every day. The words turn the other cheekandgood Samaritan are rooted in those values, and we should recognize it to be it so.
However doubters of goodness of religion should not be worried. The Constitution of the United States will not be thrown out; we will still have freedom of religion. We will not start persecuting homosexuals, stoning adulterers nor will we stop the act of proselytizing another religion or no religion at all. However these facts may present us to keep ourselves in check. Who knows may be keeping the Electoral College is a good idea? Maybe we need to protect the American people from themselves, to preserve this great nation.
The only conclusion that one can derive, and be certain of, is that religion is a major influence in the United States, and that we should use this influence carefully. It can be used both to help and harm this wonderful nation-state. In moderation religion can be one of the most beneficial stimuli in an environment. However if we let it roam free then extremism and fundamentalism will rise up instead of the amiable and loving quality that religion holds at its core. Religion is a strong influence in this nation and will remain so for quite some time. Thus we should not oppose religion head on, it will create more fundamentalism, and would incite more conflict. America is a gorgeous valley, and religion is the river flowing through it. We should not build a dam to preserve the beauty of the valley, because the dam will agonize the water, and will eventually burst. Instead we need to redirect the river to not run right through the valley but around it, increasing its magnificence.

First, 46% is not a majority.
Second, the “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof” clause is one of the most grossly misinterpreted in the Constitution. The fathers intended it to have the narrow and limited scope–to ensure the US never codified an “official” religion, such as the Church of England. Nothing more.
Other than that, very insightful. I like the river and water analogy at the end.
I guess I didn’t make it clear that it’s 46% plus the 9% who want it as the sole source of legislation, making it 55%.
No I got that, but you can’t add the 9% to the 46%, that’s not how statistics work, they’re two different questions. It’s implicit that the 9% who believe that the Constitution should be the sole source of legislation are part of the group that believes that it should at least be one source.
I like the idea of a series of articles
Alex, I stand corrected, I looked at the data again, and I had misread it. Post fixed.
Jaskot, thank you for your enlightening comment, I mean it highlights so much of the post.
since we are in th business of honesty, i didnt actually read the post yet
Now I read the post. Very nice.