Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
For religion to be national, it must first be personal
For religion to be national, it must first be personal
Jan 4, 2026 11:41 PM

As vibrant personal faith in a Christian creed has been replaced by a vague spirituality or “harmless” universal ethic, the American public square has e more divided and self-obsessed, not less. Do we need a Third Great Awakening?

Read More…

What does it mean for a nation to be Christian? Does the United States of America fit the description?

At its founding, the United States was undoubtedly a Christian nation. To foster a society of religious freedom and pluralism, the Founding Fathers intentionally did not establish a national religion and took care to separate the domains of church and state in the founding documents of our country. Those very documents, however, express an adherence to the Christian faith that, while leaving room for the expression of different sects, was clearly almost universal among Americans. Religion provided the foundation for the rights and duties inherent in and incumbent upon all men, and the founders openly acknowledged it.

Some 250 years later, can we still call America “Christian”? How have religious belief, affiliation, and expression changed in our country across denominations? How would your average American Christian today differ from his counterpart in 1776? And what do those differences portend for the future of Christianity in the USA?

I don’t claim to answer all those questions, but to determine the trajectory of the Christian faith in America, let’s examine a few major historical figures’ impressions of it over time. First, consider a prediction from Elisha Williams in 1744 on the effect of religious freedom on the colonies’ diverse Christian denominations:

As the exercise of private reason, and free enquiry in a strict and constant adherence to the sacred scriptures as the only rule of faith and practice, is the most likely means to produce uniformity in the essential principles of Christianity as well as practice; so this is certainly the most sure method of procuring peace in the state” (emphasis his).

Williams seems to expect that the religious freedom offered by America will lead to a greater unity of faith and practice among denominations, in addition to providing a peaceful, stable society. Was he right?

A hundred years later, we get the following observation from Alexis de Tocqueville (1840):

I have seen no country in which Christianity is clothed with fewer forms, figures, and observances than in the United States; or where it presents more distinct, more simple, or more general notions to the mind. Although the Christians of America are divided into a multitude of sects, they all look upon their religion in the same light.

This again implies a certain unity of faith and practice between denominations, a positive e of pluralism. However, the lack of emphasis on external forms of religion and the simplifying of religious ideas in the minds of churchgoers noted by Tocqueville reveal the first seeds of a worrisome trend.

Another hundred years pass and Jacques Maritain provides more insight into the religious character of the American people (1958). He expresses this hopeful statement:

It is unlikely that, however powerful it may be, the antagonistic trend toward secularism will ever be able to tear away from American civilization the religious inspiration. (Maritain, 81)

Yet Maritain also gives a warning:

This same religious inspiration…appears rather as…a temporal projection of religious belief which holds, in actual fact, for a number of individuals who have slipped away from religious faith, though it can obviously preserve its vitality only if in many others it is not cut off from living religious faith. (82)

Thus, while acknowledging the fundamental Christian ethos of American society and even praising the unity between denominations, preserved from the founding era, Maritain is starting to see the danger of this “religion inspiration” departing from its source and retaining only a temporal, social character. He is warning against a breakdown of moral society in America that could result if “living religious faith” ceases to be cultivated.

Here I think we can point to a trend that has gone from hypothetical to real in the past 50 years. From sociologist Peter Berger, analyzing the effect of religious pluralism in 2008, we read: “Most Americans are somewhere in the middle on the cultural issues being fought over by the activists, professing… “golden-rule Christianity”––a somewhat vague and broadly tolerant form of religion” (12). He goes on to say: “In recent years…there has occurred a proliferation of ‘spirituality.’ People will say: ‘I am not religious. But I am spiritual.’ The meaning of such statements is not fixed. Quite often it means some sort of New Age faith or practice.… But quite often the meaning is simpler: ‘I am religious, but I cannot identify with any existing church or religious tradition’” (14–15).

Berger is identifying the threat Maritain foresaw as a fact of American Christianity today. Yes, the majority of Americans still say they believe in God, so there might be some nominal unity of belief, but there is widespread ignorance across denominations of the fundamental content of the Christian religion. We have lost contact with many of our faith traditions, perhaps for seemingly well-intentioned reasons such as making religion “accessible” or “modern” or “universal.” This has led to the watering down of religion in the name of toleration, so much so that much of America does not know what it means to be Christian anymore. The kind of faith vibrant among Christians of Williams’ America is dishearteningly rare, and no one can deny that morality has gone into a tailspin as a result.

What is the solution? Can the America of today, with such a rich heritage of religious and political freedom, rediscover authentic Christianity and revitalize a largely amoral culture?

The key is to start seeing our Christian faith less as a rubric for “how to be a nice fella” (as the late Norm MacDonald observed) and more in its true sense––a gift from God, transcendent, redemptive, foundational, and, yes, universal. The salvific and sacrificial content of Christianity cannot be overlooked or underemphasized. Only when we embrace the full significance of what it means to follow Christ on an individual level, only if the faith is truly alive in our hearts, can the expression of that faith in the public square contribute to and preserve a moral society.

In the words of Maritain: “Temporalized religious inspiration runs the risk of terminating in a failure…if, in the inner realm of human souls, faith in supernatural Truth and obedience to the law of God, the fire of true love and the life of divine grace are not steadily growing.”

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Mohler on Making Manimals
Albert Mohler weighs in on the chimera phenomenon, “The Chimeras Are Coming.” He links to a WaPo article from yesterday, “Making Manimals,” by William Saletan. Saletan, a writer for , concludes with this advice: “If you want permanent restrictions, your best bet is the senator who tried to impose them two years ago. He’s the same presidential candidate now leading the charge against evolution: Sam Brownback, a Kansas Republican. He thinks we’re separate from other animals, ‘unique in the created...
NY Times Reports That Americans Ages 17 to 29 Are Increasingly Leaning Left
The New York Times reports today that: More than half of Americans ages 17 to 29 — 54 percent — say they intend to vote for a Democrat for president in 2008. They share with the public at large a negative view of President Bush, who has a 28 percent approval rating with this group, and of the Republican Party. They hold a markedly more positive view of Democrats than they do of Republicans. Young Americans are more likely than...
The Cause and Cure of Poverty
What causes poverty? The question presently plagues many serious Christian thinkers and leaders. The answers vary but the proposed solutions are the stuff of our political campaigns every four years. We can already hear the discussion from the various candidates for the presidency in 2008, both Republican and Democrat. One candidate, John Edwards, actually wants to make poverty a major issue in the next election, maybe as important as the Iraq War. He openly presents his version of a solution...
The Great Bible Reef – Is Green VBS Good VBS?
This year’s hot vacation bible school package is called The Great Bible Reef – Dive Deep Into God’s Word. The folks at BretherenPress are advertising The Great Bible Reef this way: Dive into the ‘Great Bible Reef’ for an incredible VBS! Kids experience Bible stories through an bination of music, art, science, games, worship, and drama in an underwater adventure. The ‘Great Bible Reef’ will have your kids swimming with delight as they explore all of God’s creation under the...
The Least Advantaged and Closed Society
Here’s more from David Schmidtz’s Elements of Justice, in which he is engaging Rawls’ thought experiment on original position that presumes a closed society as the basis for his social thought. In a closed society we only enter by birth and leave by dying. Schmidtz observes that as a matter of historical record the least advantaged have always been better off in open societies, societies where people are free to move in search of better opportunities. if we are theorizing...
Closing the Credibility Gap
If denominations want to demonstrate leadership over social issues like the environment they must have a good track record leading folks in spiritual matters within their own congregations. After all, if they can’t handle the Great Commission, how effective can their mission work possibly be? ~ If you read history you will find that the Christians who did most for the present world were just those who thought most of the next. The Apostles themselves, who set on foot the...
You’ve Heard It Before…
You’ve heard it from us before: Good intentions are not enough. Now hear it from a piece in the Columbia Journalism Review, “The Obscured Continent,” which takes a look at the special issue of Vanity Fair devoted to Africa (HT: Poynter Online). The piece begins by depicting the two major approaches to international development (compare to my “Henderson” model). “In the end, it’s hard to avoid the feeling that the only thing it actually achieves is to convince us of...
A New Poverty Poll from Barna
There’s lots to digest and consider in a new Barna report on poverty: A new national survey by The Barna Group regarding people’s perspectives on poverty shows that Americans are quite concerned about what they perceive to be a significant and growing challenge facing the nation. The survey also showed that most people are actively involved in trying to alleviate poverty, although they typically believe it is primarily the government’s job to do so. The religious faith of adults appears...
Americans Giving at Record Numbers
Charitable giving in America has risen for the third consecutive year. The picture behind this recent report is rather interesting. Due to the absence of natural disasters, both nationally and internationally, large giving to major relief projects declined. Giving to human services also fell. The giving of corporate America rose only 1.5%. But in a shift from previous years giving to the arts and to cultural and humanities organizations grew rather significantly. The lion’s share of giving is still done...
The Abject Failure of the U.N.
The idealism and the goals of the United Nations are laudable. The results, at least in recent years, have often been nothing short of a disaster. One example will suffice—the recently created U.N.’s Human Rights Council, begun a year ago this past week. This council is sadly typical of the modern collapse of the U.N. The Human Rights Council consists of 47 members, almost half of which are "unfree" or "partly free" nations, at least as ranked by Freedom House....
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved