Nine Men Change America
By Bill Bright
Dear friends:
In the mid-20th century, all by themselves, nine men brought a
revolutionary change to America. These nine men were the members of the
U.S. Supreme Court.
For most of our nation's history, the justices recognized that they were
subject to a higher law found in God's Word. The Court viewed law as
President Calvin Coolidge did when he declared, "Men do not make laws,
they do but discover them. Laws must be justified by something more than
the will of the majority. They must rest upon the eternal foundations of
righteousness."
But in early 1947, an entirely new agenda gripped the Court. In Everson
v. Board of Education, the Supreme Court ruled that the First Amendment
erected a "wall of separation" between church and state which must be
kept "high and impregnable." Astonishingly, the Court cited no precedent
from previous rulings. The case was an official betrayal of America's
Christian heritage.
In this landmark decision, the Court lifted the words "separation of
church and state" totally out of context from a single Thomas Jefferson
letter, not even an official document, changed his intent, totally
ignored the context of the message, Jefferson's many other words, and
the many utterances of other Founding Fathers and all legal precedents,
and instituted this radically new concept in law.
Jefferson's letter was to a group of Baptists who were concerned about a
rumor that another denomination was about to be made the official
national denomination. He wrote to assure them that such would not
happen because the First Amendment has erected "a wall of separation
between church and state." This, however, was in the context of the
entire letter, emphasizing that God's principles would remain in
government, but that the government would not run the church.
The words "separation of church and state" do not appear anywhere in the
U.S. Constitution or amendments. The First Amendment merely states that
the Congress shall make no law that establishes a religion, or prohibits
its free exercise. The purpose of the First Amendment was to prevent
what the Founding Fathers had experienced in Great Britain: government
control by a single denomination. In those days, the word "religion"
was synonymous with the phrase "Christian denomination."
The record overwhelmingly proves that our Founding Fathers never
intended for biblical influence and principles to be excluded from
public life. Such a dramatic spiritual downturn in America began in
1947.