Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
4.2.12
WC: 191694
I also knew that our Constitution said some things about religion. In our Yeshiva we learned
mostly about the First Amendment’s protection of freedom of religion. But I started to read a
little more about the Constitution and quickly learned that there were three references to religion
in that great document of liberty. The first, in the body of the original Constitution, declared that
“no religious test shall ever be required” for holding office under the United States. Wow, is this
really true? I wondered, then why hasn’t there been a Jewish president? And why is there only
one “Jewish seat” on the Supreme Court? It sure sounded to me like religious tests were being
applied in fact, although it was unconstitutional to do so. This got me to thinking about the
difference between the law as written and practiced.
I also discovered that the First Amendment, in addition to guaranteeing freedom of religion, had
an awkwardly phrased guarantee which I did not understand: “Congress shall make no law
respecting an establishment of religion.” There were two words I didn’t understand. What does
“respecting” mean? I had always used it to suggest a positive attitude—respect—toward others.
Clearly it had a different meaning in the First Amendment, something like “regarding.” Second,
what did the word “establishment” mean? I simply had no idea and so I began to do some
research. The answer was anything but simple and the meaning of the term is still not completely
clear to me after 60 years of thinking, writing and teaching about it.
So there was some upside for me in the words “under God” being added to our pledge. It not
only got me thinking, it got me arguing with my friends and even with some of my teachers. It’s
an ongoing argument...
The downside, which was evident to me even back then, was that whatever the words prohibiting
an establishment of religion meant, they seemed incomparable with compelling every school boy
to declare his belief in a God inserted into the pledge by Congress. So, although I believed in
God (or more likely never thought about any alternative), I decided never to say the words. I
continued to recite the old pledge, confident that it was I, and not those who amended the pledge,
who were being patriotic and faithful to the meaning of our Constitution. I guess I was an early
Originalist in that regard, since my reading suggested to me that Jefferson and Madison would not
have approved of making young kids declare a belief in God.”
Flashing forward a generation, my oldest son Elon, had a similar epiphany in 1970, when my
family moved to California for a year so that I could take up residency in The Center For
Advanced Study of Behavioral Sciences at Stanford. We enrolled our kids in a Palo Alto Public
School and my 8 year old son Elon got into trouble for refusing to recite the words “under God”
in the pledge. When he came home from school, I asked him how come he had just noticed the
words under God, since his elementary school in Cambridge also required periodic recitations of
the pledge. He told me that we were at war in Vietnam and he thought the words—pronounced
with a Boston accent—were “under guard.” It was only a California teacher writing the words on
the blackboard that revealed to him that he was being required to take a pledge that included
God. By this time I knew that the Supreme Court had ruled that a religious objector could not be
required to recite the pledge, because, as the justices put it:
°° Nor would the composer of the original pledge who was an early socialist.
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