THOMAS JEFFERSON, RELIGIOUS FREEDOM, AND THE SUPREM COURT
Edwin S Gaustad
5,919 words
1 December 1998
Church History
682-694
Volume 67, Issue 4; ISSN: 0009-6407
English
Copyright (c) 1998 Bell & Howell Information and Learning
Company. All rights reserved.
Most American scholars are reasonably well aware of the contributions
of Thomas Jefferson (and his younger colleague, James Madison)
to the establishment of the legal framework for religious
freedom in the United States.1 Perhaps many are less aware
of Jefferson's "second life" in the Supreme Court's
several encounters with Jefferson and with the religion clauses
of the First Amendment. This article will, first, review briefly
Jefferson's lifelong commitment to religious liberty, which
he regarded as the foundation of all liberties. Second, attention
will be given to Supreme Court decisions in this troubled
arena, with some comment on Jefferson's continued relevance-to
use a tame and tired word-within the contemporary American
scene.
Jefferson first burst onto the public stage-beyond the borders
of Virginia-in 1774 with the publication of his "Summary
View of the Rights of British Americans."2 Though the
thrust of this tract is undeniably political, one memorable
line-even set to music-hints at a broader stance. "The
God who gave us life gave us liberty at the same time; the
hand of force may destroy, but cannot disjoin them."
In this sentence, "liberty" has no qualifying or
limiting adjective. Liberty is of a piece, not segmented,
not compartmentalized (though, of course, with respect to
slavery, it tragically turned out to be).
The year 1776 stands alone in all American history, to be
sure, as recently highlighted in Pauline Maier's American
Scripture.3 The very next year, however, saw Jefferson's initial
effort to ensure religious freedom in his own "country"
(that is, Virginia) even before he had any assurance that
the Revolution would end in an American victory. Virginia,
of course, had an established church thoughout the colonial
period, the earliest ecclesiastical establishment in the country's
history. The Declaration of Independence demanded and the
logic of the Revolution required, first of all, a political
separation of the colonies from England. But separation of
the civil from the ecclesiastical order needed to be the equally
essential second step-this to be accomplished as swiftly as
possible. "Swift," however, is not a word readily
applied to the legislative process, then or now. Jefferson's
Bill for Establishing Religious Freedom lingered and languished
on or near or below the legislators' desks for nearly a decade
until, with some modifications, it finally passed in 1786.4
Why so much hesitation, even anxiety, about declaring what,
in Jefferson's view, the Revolution so clearly demanded? Just
as Americans were to be politically free, so they were to
be religiously free. It would be impossible to sustain one
without the other. To Thomas Jefferson, this truth was self-evident.
But if the prospect of political liberty terrified some, similarly
the prospect of religious liberty terrified others. The notion
of a civil society, and a brand-new one at that, launching
out on its own without the support and sanction of an official
church was frightening, if not irresponsibly reckless. Even
if one agreed, however reluctantly, that the Church of England
should no longer enjoy any special privilege, surely this
did not require that Christianity itself be demoted to the
status of simply another "also-- ran"-one sect among
many, all fighting for survival, if not some kind of place
in the public square.
With much support from the Tidewater region of Virginia, Patrick
Henry proposed a kind of halfway house between the colonial
pattern of Anglican establishment and the Jeffersonian /Revolutionary
pattern of a full and complete religious liberty-a religious
anarchy, if you will. Henry's Bill for Establishing a Provision
for Teachers of the Christian Religion (which intially seemed
destined to pass) called for making Christianity the official
religion of the new state, with all denominations that met
certain broad guidelines to receive tax monies for their livelihood
and expansion.5 James Madison's renowned "Memorial and
Remonstrance" emerged as the roadblock designed to thwart
Henry's proposal, so attractive to so many. Madison's petition,
bearing a great many signatures, especially from settlers
in the backcountry did its job magnificently well.6 Now the
bill of Patrick Henry was quietly set aside, as the long-delayed
bill of Thomas Jefferson was taken up and, at last, passed.
Jefferson's bill called not for toleration, but for freedom,
not for mere disestablishment, but for a full and complete
separation of the civil from the ecclesiastical. One should
now exchange the comfort of custom for the fresh and exhilarating
air of a revolution in the religious affairs of humankind.
The time had finally come for the creation of a society where
"our civil rights have no dependence on our religious
opinions, any more than our opinions in physics or geometry."7
When Madison wrote to Jefferson in Paris that his bill had
now become law in Virginia, the often cool and restrained
Jefferson was ecstatic. For centuries, he noted, the human
mind had "been held in vassalage by kings, priests and
nobles." But no more, thanks to the action of the Assembly
of Virginia. Furthermore, "it is honorable for us,"
he wrote Madison, "to have produced the first legislature
who has had the courage to declare that the reason of man
may be trusted with the formation of his opinions."8
A constitution was drawn up in 1787 and a bill of rights two
years later. As some justices of the U.S. Supreme Court have
recently taken pains to point out, Jefferson, since he was
the new nation's minister to France, played no direct role
in the drafting or ratifying of either. Yet, in his letter
to Madison responding to the work of the Constitutional Convention,
Jefferson's first objection was to the absence of anything
like a bill of rights. Madison had pointed out that some delegates
thought such a delineation of rights unnecessary since the
new central government held only those rights clearly spelled
out, and since many states had their own declarations. Jefferson
thought otherwise. "A bill of rights," he replied,
"is what the people are entitled to against every government
on earth, general or particular, and what no just government
should refuse, or rest on inference."9 Religious liberty,
to mention his first example of what such a bill should contain,
needed to be carved into the fundamental frame of Virginia's
government; so it needed to be carved into the nation's very
constitution.
Having seen Virginia enact his statute in 1786 and having
seen the United States ratify the first ten amendments to
the Constitution in 1791, Jefferson-one might suppose-would
now conclude that religious liberty was firmly secured. Jefferson
never so concluded. If he had been disposed to do so, the
passionate presidential campaign of 1800 would have persuaded
him otherwise. Religion emerged as the centerpiece in the
contest between John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, the latter
being portrayed as the enemy of all morality and religion,
of those morals (as one propagandist put it) that "guard
the chastity of our wives and daughters from seduction and
violence." For his part, Jefferson complained bitterly,
though privately, that the "eastern states" will
be the last to support him since they are under "the
dominion of the clergy, who had got a smell of union between
church and state." After leaving the presidency, he spoke
even more intemperately of how religious scholastics had perverted
the simple morals of Jesus into "an engine for enslaving
mankind. . . into a mere contrivance to filch wealth and power
to themselves."10
Once elected to the presidency, Jefferson welcomed the opportunity
afforded him by a congratulatory letter from the Baptist Association
of Danbury, Connecticut. He first explained to the group why
he, unlike his predecessors, Washington and Adams, would proclaim
no fast days or feast days. These were religious exercises,
to be left to the supervision and control of religious authorities,
not the province of those who held a purely civil office.
But this letter of Jefferson's holds a unique place in the
judicial history of the United States because of this single
long sentence.
Believing with you that religion is a matter which lies solely
between man and his God, that he owes account to none other
for his faith or his worship, that the legislative powers
of government reach actions only, and not opinions, I contemplate
with solemn reverence that act of the whole American people
which declared that their legislature should "make no
law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting
the free exercise thereof," thus building a wall of separation
between Church and State.11 Jefferson's final phrase has had
a shelf life of startling longevity, of course, and I shall
return to it below.
Before abandoning Jefferson's own involvement in the cause
of religious liberty, however, it should be noted that even
after leaving the presidency the remaining years of his life
(nearly two decades) demonstrate his unrelenting, unrelaxing
vigilance on behalf of religious liberty. Regardless of the
legal safeguards, public opinion, Jefferson noted, could itself
be an Inquisition.12 Therefore, one must be ever alert to
reinforce and revitalize the First Amendment, never trusting
to the law of inertia to preserve one's freedoms.
When he and John Adams renewed their friendship and their
correspondence, they constantly compared notes on how religious
liberty was doing. It was not doing well in New England, Adams
sadly reported, where ecclesiastical establishments continued
in Connecticut, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire. He wrote
Jefferson that he should spend a year in Boston, listening
to the sermons and reading the clergy's publications so that
he could see for himself that "spiritual tyranny"
was gradually reasserting itself. Then in 1814 when the pope
renewed the Jesuit order, Adams grew more glum. "Shall
we not have swarms of them here?" he inquired of Jefferson.
Religious liberty requires us to give the Jesuits an asylum
in America, he conceded, but we must ever be on our guard.13
Not all the news was black, however. In 1817 and 1818, Connecticut
removed the last vestiges of the Congregational establishment.
"I join you," Jefferson wrote Adams, "in sincere
congratulations that this den of priesthood is at length broken
up and that a Protestant popedom is no longer to disgrace
the American history and character." About the same time,
New Hampshire took similar steps in the direction of religious
liberty, but both Jefferson and Adams bemoaned the failure
of Massachusetts to join in "the resurrection . . . to
light and liberality."14
Meanwhile, Jefferson was busy in Virginia fending off the
Presbyterians as he sought to establish a truly secular and
modern university, his University of Virginia. Not the laity,
but the Presbyterian clergy seemed determined to frustrate
Jefferson's plans and arouse his ire. That ire erupted in
his comment to William Short in 1820 that "[t]he Presbyterian
clergy are the loudest, the most intolerant of all sects,
the most tyrannical and ambitious, ready at the word of the
lawgiver, if such a word could now be obtained, to put the
torch to the pile, and to rekindle in this virgin hemisphere,
the flames in which their oracle Calvin consumed the poor
Servetus."15 The Jeffersonian vigil had not grown weak,
nor would it ever, even down to his last weeks in 1826.16
Yet Jefferson's religious rhetoric lay fallow through much
of the nineteenth century, at least so far as the federal
judiciary was concerned. In that century, the U.S. Supreme
Court had little occasion to turn its attention to the religion
clauses of the First Amendment or to Jefferson's comments
thereon. But the Mormon practice of polygamy did win the attention
of the Court as well as of the public in general. In the first
of the so-called "Mormon cases" in 1879 (Reynolds
v. United States), Chief Justice Morrison Waite spoke for
a unanimous Court in finding polygamy to be "odious"
and "an offence against society." He reached this
finding, however, only after reviewing Virginia's history
in the critical 1770s and 1780s, giving explicit attention
to Madison's "Memorial and Remonstrance" and to
Jefferson's Statute for Establishing Religious Freedom.17
So Jefferson stands at the beginning of the Court's consideration
of the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment.
He is not as central to succeeding free exercise cases, though
his words hover around the edges in opinions that, after 1940,
are rarely unanimous. (After 1940, the Court-by way of the
Fourteenth Amendment-applied the First Amendment to the states;
one effect of this action was to greatly multiply the number
of church-state cases reaching the Supreme Court.) In the
second of the well-known cases involving Jehovah's Witnesses
and the saluting of the flag in public schools (West Virginia
State Board of Education v. Barnette, 1943), for example,
Justice Frank Murphy in a concurring opinion declared that
the "trenchant words" in Jefferson's Bill for Establishing
Religious Freedom "remain unaswerable": "'all
attempts to influence [the mind] by temporal punishments,
or burdens, or civil incapacitations, tend only to beget habits
of hypocrisy and meanness."' Then Murphy added his own
rather trenchant words: "Any spark of love for country
which may be generated in a child . . . by forcing him to
make what is to him an empty gesture and recite words wrung
from him contrary to his religious beliefs is overshadowed
by the desirability of preserving freedom of conscience to
the full." He concluded: "It is in that freedom
and the example of persuasion, not in force and compulsion,
that the real unity of America lies."18
In what is probably the high point of free exercise guarantees,
Sherbert v. Verner in 1963, Justice William Brennan, speaking
for the Court (7 to 2) did not cite Jefferson.19 Quite likely
he felt that some twenty years of pursuing the Jeffersonian
path gave the Court a sufficiently strong record that enabled
him to appeal to decisions recent enough to be in the memory
of many of those then serving on the high bench. And, in fact,
he did appeal to a case, decided fifteen years earlier, in
which Jefferson figured prominently. That case had declared
that no state may "exclude individual Catholics, Lutherans,
Mohammedans, Baptists, Jews, Methodists, Non-believers, Presbyterians,
or the members of any other faith, because of their faith,
or lack of it, from receiving the benefits of public welfare
legislation."20 Brennan simply noted that "[i]t
is too late in the day to doubt that the liberties of religion
and expression may be infringed by the denial of or placing
of conditions upon a benefit or privilege."21
The spirit of neither Jefferson nor Brennan survived a generation
later in another free exercise case: Employment Division of
Oregon v. Smith (1990). Here, Justice Antonin Scalia for the
Court (6 to 3) stood Sherbert and much besides on its head.
The government, he argued, may "enforce generally applicable
prohibitions of socially harmful conduct" without making
obedience to such law dependent upon an individual's religious
beliefs. To find otherwise, he continued, "contradicts
both constitutional tradition and common sense." As America's
society becomes more religiously diverse, the attempt to accommodate
all religious points of view "would be courting anarchy."
It would also be to indulge in a "luxury" that a
strong government can ill afford. He concluded:
It may fairly be said that leaving accommodation to the political
process will place at a relative disadvantage those religious
practices that are not widely engaged in; but that unavoidable
consequence of democratic government must be preferred to
a system in which each conscience is a law unto itself.22
Not surprisingly, Justice Scalia does not quote Thomas Jefferson.
More surprisingly, the dissent likewise leaves Jefferson aside,
preferring to concentrate on the abandonment (as the dissenters
saw it) of the "consistent and exacting standard"
previously used "to test the constitutionality of a state
statute that burdens the free exercise of religion."
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor concurred in the result of the
Court's deliberation, but strongly objected to its line of
reasoning. "In my view," she wrote, "today's
holding dramatically departs from well-settled First Amendment
jurisprudence, appears unnecessary to resolve the question
presented, and is incompatible with our Nation's fundamental
commitment to individual religious liberty." She also
argued, as other justices before her had, that religious liberty
enjoyed "a preferred position" in the Constitution,
and the Court should not countenance any infringement "unless
required by clear and compelling governmental interest `of
the highest order."' After reviewing a large number of
previous free exercise cases, O'Connor observed: "The
Court today gives no convincing reason to depart from settled
First Amendment jurisprudence." With respect to the novel
notion that "those religious practices that are not widely
engaged in" may necessarily suffer some disadvantage,
O'Connor sharply responded that, in her view, "the First
Amendment was enacted precisely to protect the rights of those
whose religious practices are not shared by the majority and
may be viewed with hostility."23
After so strong a concurring opinion, little was left for
the three dissenters. Justice Harry Blackmun (joined by Justice
William Brennan and Justice Thurgood Marshall) expressed similar
shock that the line of defense for the free exercise of religion
had so suddenly shifted. The majority, Blackmun noted, managed
to conclude "that strict scrutiny of a state law burdening
the free exercise of religion is a 'luxury' that a well-ordered
society cannot afford." On the contrary, Blackmun asserted,
"I do not believe the Founders thought their dearly bought
freedom from religious persecution a 'luxury,' but an essential
element of liberty-and they could have thought religious intolerance
'unavoidable,' for they drafted the Religion Clauses precisely
in order to avoid that intolerance."24
The public at large shared the dissenters' dismay. For roughly
half a century, the Jeffersonian dedication to religious liberty
had guided the Court, and the Court in turn had educated the
citizenry to the principles, and even the passion, that underlay
Jefferson's zeal. Congress, in large part sharing the sentiment,
responded to the mood. In 1993 it overwhelmingly passed a
Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA), designed to undo
the damage-as it was widely perceived-- that the Smith decision
inflicted upon the First Amendment.25 Questions arose early
whether RFRA was constitutional, and lower courts gave some
encouragement to the new law's supporters. Early in 1997,
for example, the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld
the consitutionality of RFRA, arguing that the congressional
action only made "concrete" the liberty "assured
by the First Amendment." That the opinion was written
by Judge John T. Noonan only gave more encouragement to RFRA
backers, since Noonan was no stranger to Jeffersonian liberty
nor to church-state questions at large.26
Later that year, however, in a widely watched case (Boerne
v. P. F. Flores), the Supreme Court by a 6-3 vote found RFRA
to be unconstitutional. Speaking for the majority, Justice
Anthony Kennedy explained that the case turned not on religious
liberty directly but upon another constitutional principle
that Jefferson, along with the delegates to the Constitutional
Convention, had embraced: namely, separation of powers. The
Congress had taken upon itself the right to say what the First
Amendment really meant, and this was the prerogative of the
Court, not the Congress. "Our national experience teaches
that the Constitution is best preserved," Kennedy wrote,
"when each part of the government respects both the Constitution
and the proper actions and determinations of the other branches."
The "federal balance" must be preserved?27
As might well be expected, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor dissented
most vigorously. "I remain of the view," she stated,
"that Smith was wrongly decided, and I would use this
case to reexamine the Court's holding there." We need,
she pointed out, to get "First Amendment jurisprudence
back on course." To that end, she provided a long review
of the nation's history, with particular attention to Madison
and Jefferson. Similarly, she carefully reviewed the Court's
precedents in the area of free exercise. Both the history
of the nation and the history of the Court prove, she concluded,
that "Smith is demonstrably wrong" and that the
case cried out to be reheard.28
The supporters of RFRA, surely encouraged by O'Connor's words,
cast about for some way to get Jeffersonian jurisprudence
back on track. Meanwhile, with respect to free exercise, the
sage of Monticello is not doing as well by the century's end
as he had done in the nineteenth and most of the twentieth
century.
The other religion clause, having to do with the establishment
of religion, has seen Jefferson nearer the center of the Court's
decisions, sometimes with the majority, sometimes with the
dissenters, and sometimes with both. Modern jurisprudence
in this area begins with a 1947 case coming out of New Jersey
and having to do with the busing of parochial school students
at public expense (Everson v. Board of Education). Speaking
for a bare majority (5 to 4), Justice Hugo Black cited Madison's
"Memorial and Remonstrance" as well as Jefferson's
Bill for Establishing Religious Freedom. He then quoted from
President Jefferson's letter to the Danbury Baptists and seemed
to be leading inexorably to the conclusion that public monies
must not be used for private school purposes. His four-sentence
conclusion is a zinger: "The First Amendment has erected
a wall between church and state. That wall must be kept high
and impregnable. We could not approve the slightest breach.
New Jersey has not breached it here."29
The four dissenters could believe neither their ears nor their
eyes. Justice Jackson offered the most pointed observation:
"The case which most irresistibly comes to mind,"
he wrote, "as the most fitting precedent is that of Julia
who, according to Byron's reports, 'whispering, "I will
ne'er consent,"-consented."' The longest dissent,
written by Justice Wiley Rutledge and joined in by the other
three, not only cites Madison and Jefferson but at great length
reviews Virginia's and the nation's history in the critical
decades at the end of the eighteenth century. Rutledge observes:
"For Madison, as also for Jefferson, religious freedom
was the crux of the struggle for freedom in general."30
That truth seemed clearer in the age of the Revolution than
it does in our own time. In Everson v. Board of Education,
all nine justices paid homage to Jefferson; our third president,
however, would clearly have found the position of the four
dissenters far more congenial.
The next year, 1948, in a "released time" case out
of Illinois (McCollum v. Board of Education), the dissenters,
now in the majority, were happier. Citing Jefferson once again,
they (under the leadership of Justice Felix Frankfurter) averred:
"Separation means separation, not something less. Jefferson's
metaphor in describing the relation between Church and State
speaks of a 'wall of separation,' not of a fine line easily
overstepped."31 Mr. Jefferson could perhaps rest easily
in his grave-though he surely knew better. The single dissent,
registered by Justice Stanley Reed, hinted at a small cloud
on the horizon. "A rule of law," Reed wrote, "should
not be drawn from a figure of speech."32 Fifteen years
later (Abingdon v. Schempp), another solitary dissenter, Potter
Stewart, in dismissing the Jeffersonian wall as a "sterile
metaphor" made that cloud a little larger and a little
darker.33
In a private school case in 1968 (Board of Education v. Allen),
the majority found that the State of New York could lawfully
purchase textbooks for students in private schools, grades
7 through 12. One of three dissenters, Justice Hugo Black,
thought that the Court took a small step leading down a long
road: a road that linked "state and churches together
in controlling the lives and destinies of our citizenship."
He added that "[i]t was to escape laws precisely like
this that a large part of the Nation's early immigrants fled
to this country." Noting that America is "composed
of people of myriad religious faiths, some of them bitterly
hostile to and completely intolerant of the others,"
Black sought refuge in the metaphor (not sterile for him)
of the Jeffersonian wall. "I still believe," he
wrote, "that the only way to protect minority religious
groups from majority groups in this country is to keep the
wall of separation between church and state high and impregnable
as the First and Fourteenth Amendments provide."34 Church-state
controversy for the next thirty years often revolved around
the question of whose religious rights most needed protecting:
those of the feeble minority, or those of the powerful majority.
By 1985, the complexities of private school aid had the justices
"concurring in part and dissenting in part" as the
path through that thicket grew ever more obscure (see, for
example, School District of the City of Grand Rapids v. Ball,
a "shared time" case). But it was a public school
case in that same year that called forth the most thunderous
rejection of the role of Jefferson and Madison in earlier
Court decisions. The Alabama case (Wallace v. Jaffree) concerned
a state law that provided for a period of silent meditation
in the public school classroom. The Court by a 6-3 vote found
Alabama's law to be unconstitutional since its legislative
history made clear that the law intended to bring prayer into
the public school. This Court, Justice John Paul Stevens declared,
"has unambiguously concluded that the individual freedom
of conscience protected by the First Amendment embraces the
right to select any religious faith or none at all."35
The opinion was strong, but it was not unanimous.
Chief Justice Warren Burger dissented from "today's curious
holding." Justice Byron White dissented, a bit peevishly.
But the lengthy and passionate dissent of Justice William
Rehnquist suggested that a new day might be dawning for Jeffersonian
intent and Jeffersonian language in the deliberations of the
Supreme Court. Justice (now Chief Justice) Rehnquist declared
that "unfortunately the Establishment Clause has been
expressly freighted with Jefferson's misleading metaphor for
nearly forty years." For several pages, Rehnquist proceeded
to unload as much of that freight as possible. America's early
history is held up for scrutiny: Madison and Jefferson in
Virginia, Madison in Philadelphia, the First Congress, the
first four presidents, Justice Joseph Story of the Supreme
Court during much of the first half of the nineteenth century-and
so on. It was true, Rehnquist acknowledged, that the Court
in the 1940s and beyond had often relied on Jefferson for
its decisions, but in the process it had also relied on bad
history.
"Stare decisis may bind courts as to matters of law,"
he declared, "but it cannot bind them as to matters of
history." Finding in his review of history no demand
that government be neutral between religion and irreligion
and certainly finding "no historical foundation for the
proposition that the Framers intended to build the 'wall of
separation,"' Rehnquist announced that the time had come
for Jefferson's metaphor to "be frankly and explicitly
abandoned." The framers, he agreed, did prohibit the
establishment of a national church. Beyond that, however,
we have moved in ways and to degrees that they would never
have intended, Rehnquist stated. The time had come to return
to the original purposes of the constitutional framers, of
whom Jefferson-- away in Paris-was not one. "Any deviation
from their intentions frustrates the permanence of that Charter
and will only lead to the type of unprincipled decisionmaking
that has plagued our Establishment Clause cases since Everson."36
If Jefferson is not doing too well with the Free Exercise
Clause as the twentieth century ends, he likewise suffers
severe challenge with respect to the Establishment Clause.
Overall, the First Amendment does not enjoy the best of health,
as latter-day amendments are proposed to "clarify"
the language of the late eighteenth century.
Currently, the Religious Freedom Amendment (H.R. 78) proposed
by Representative Ernest Istook of Oklahoma further threatens
the Jeffersonian and Madisonian understanding of the First
Amendment. This amendment provides that "[t]he people's
right to pray and to recognize their religious beliefs, heritage
or traditions on public property, including schools, shall
not be infringed."37 While doing violence to the even-handedness
of the First Amendment, the Istook proposal paves the way
for the majority to set the religious agenda everywhere, including
in the public schools. If Jefferson's views protected religious
minorities in the mildly pluralistic America of his day, that
protection is more urgently required in the abundantly pluralistic
America of today.
The thousands of visitors who each year flock to the Jefferson
Memorial read these words inscribed around the inside of the
dome: "For I have sworn on the altar of God eternal hostility
against every form of tyranny over the mind of man."38
Few will realize that the tyranny that Jefferson had clearly
in mind was religious. As he explained in this letter to Benjamin
Rush, written in the midst of a bitterly partisan political
campaign, most of his opponents still hoped to secure "an
establishment of a particular form of Christianity thro' the
U.S.. . . especially the Episcopalians and Congregationalists."
They believe me, said Jefferson, to be an enemy to their schemes,
and, he added, "they believe truly."39 The final
words may most properly belong to the late Justice William
Brennan. Writing in dissent, he observed in 1986 (Goldman
v. Weinberger) that "[t]hrough our Bill of Rights, we
pledged ourselves to attain a level of human freedom and dignity
that had no parallel in history. Our constitutional commitment
to religious freedom and to acceptance of religious pluralism
is one of our greatest achievements."40 With respect
to any amending of that Bill of Rights, let the buyer-and
the citizen-beware.
Edwin S. Gaustad is professor emeritus of history at the University
of California, Riverside.
Footnotes: An earlier version of this paper was presented
to the American Historical Association, Seattle, Washington,
10 January 1998. 1. The bibliographical resources here are
so rich that only a few examples must suffice. The fascinating
letters exchanged between Madison and Jefferson can be found
in James Morton Smith, ed., The Correspondence between Jefferson
and Madison, 3 vols. (New York: Norton, 1995). For more focused
treatments, see Robert S. Alley, James Madison on Religious
Liberty (Buffalo: Prometheus, 1985); Edwin S. Gaustad, Sworn
on the Altar of God: A Religious Biography of Thomas Jefferson
(Grand Rapids, Mich.: Eerdmans, 1996); and William Lee Miller,
The First Liberty: Religion and the American Republic (New
York: Knopf, 1986). For wide-ranging bibliographical assistance,
see John F. Wilson, ed., Church and State in America, 2 vols.
(Westport: Greenwood, 1986, 1987). 2. This can be conveniently
found in Merrill Peterson, Jefferson: Writings (New York:
Library of America, 1984), 105-122; quotation from 122. Pauline
Maier, American Scripture: Making the Declaration of Independence
(New York: Knopf, 1997). Merrill D. Peterson and Robert C.
Vaughan, eds., The Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom:
Its Evolution and Consequences in American History (New York:
Cambridge University Press, 1988). The modifications, some
of which represented a stylistic improvement, aimed chiefly
at toning down Jefferson's extravagant embrace of rationalism.
See Thomas E. Buckley, S. J., Church and State in Revolutionary
Virginia, 1776-1787 (Charlottesville: University Press of
Virginia, 1977). The text of Madison's "Memorial"
has been repeatedly reprinted, including often by the Supreme
Court itself. For text and context, see Alley, Madison on
Religious Liberty. For text and context, see Peterson and
Vaughan, Virginia Statute. Smith, Correspondence, 1: 458-59.
9. Smith, Correspondence, 1: 512-13. The sixteen words relating
to religion in the First Amendment are these: "Congress
shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion,
or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." The Court
regularly distinguishes between (and capitalizes) the Establishment
Clause and the Free Exercise Clause. 10. Most of Jefferson's
correspondence pertaining to his own religious views may be
found in the extraordinarily valuable volume edited by Dickinson
W. Adams, with introduction by Eugene R. Sheridan, Jefferson's
Extracts from the Gospels (Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 1983). The first volume in the second series of the
Papers of Thomas Jefferson, this book also contains the best
exposition of the "Jefferson Bible." Quotations
are from 324 and 345 (hereafter, Extracts). 11. Peterson,
Jefferson: Writings, 510 (the letter is dated 1 January 1802).
In the final version of his letter, he omitted, on the advice
of his attorney general, his explanation for proclaiming no
fasts or feasts. 12. Adams, Extracts, 375, 401, 402. 13. Lester
J. Cappon, The Adams-Jefferson Letters (Chapel Hill: University
of North Carolina Press, 1959), 2: 474. 14. Cappon, Adams-Jefferson
Letters, 2: 512. 15. Adams, Extracts, 393. 16. See his final
letter, written to the mayor of Washington, D.C., 26 June
1826, and the commentary of Douglass Adair thereon in Trevor
Colbourn, ed., Fame and the Founding Fathers (New York: Norton,
1974). 17. Decisions of the Supreme Court are found in any
governmental depository library under the title of U.S. Supreme
Court Reports. For the briefs of selected major cases, see
Landmark Briefs and Arguments of the Supreme Court of the
United States, an ongoing series issued by University Publications
of America, Bethesda, Maryland. For convenient reference,
see Robert T. Miller and Ronald B. Flowers, Toward Benevolent
Neutrality: Church, State, and the Supreme Court, 5th ed.
(Waco, Tex.: Baylor University Press, 1996). Reynolds ti.
United States, 98 U.S. 145 (1879); quotations, 164,165. 18.
West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette, 319 U.S.
624 (1943); quotation, 646. 19. Sherbert v. Verner, 374 U.S.
398 (1963). 20. Sherbert v. Verner, 410; the case alluded
to here, Everson v. Board of Education, is discussed below.
21. Sherbert v. Verner, 404. 22. Employment Division of Oregon
v. Smith, 494 U.S. 872 (1990); quotations, 888, 890. 23. Employment
Division of Oregon v. Smith, 891, 901, 902. 24. Employment
Division of Oregon v. Smith, 908909. 25. For valuable analysis,
see Douglas Laycock and Oliver S. Thomas, "Interpreting
the Religious Freedom Restoration Act," Texas Law Review
73 (1994). Also see the symposium on "The First Amendment
after Boerne," Nexus: A Journal of Opinion 2 (1997);
and Christopher L. Eisgruber and Lawrence G. Sager, "Congressional
Power and Religious Liberty after City of Boerne v. Flores,"
in Supreme Court Review 1997. 26. See especially his valuable
compendium, The Believer and the Powers that Are: Cases, History,
and Other Data Bearing on the Relation of Religion and Government
(New York: Macmillan, 1987). 27. City of Boerne v. P F. Flores,
117 Sup. Ct. 2157 (1997); quotation, 12. 28. Boerne v. Flores,
15,16. 29. Everson v. Board of Education, 330 U.S. 1 (1947);
quotation, 18. 30. Everson v. Board of Education, 19, 34.
31. McCollum v. Board of Education, 333 U.S. 203 (1948); quotation,
231. 32. McCollum v. Board of Education, 247. 33. Abingdon
v. Schempp, 374 U.S. 203 (1963); quotation, 309. 34. Board
of Education v. Allen, 392 U.S. 236 (1968); quotations, 251,
254. 35. Wallace v. Jaffree, 472 U.S. 38 (1985); quotation,
53. 36. Wallace v. Jaffree; quotations, 92, 99,107,113. 37.
New York Times, 25 March 1997. 38. Adams, Extracts, 320. 39.
Adams, Extracts, 320. 40. Goldman u Weinberger, 475 U.S. 503
(1986); quotation, 523.
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