THE HUMAN AFFAIRS PAMPHLETS THE TWILIGHT OF GOD by Clare Boothe Luce HENRY REGNERY COMPANY CHICAGO 1949 THE HUMAN AFFAIRS PAMPHLETS THE TWILIGHT OF GOD by Clare Boothe Luce HENRY REGNERY COMPANY CHICAGO 1949 ( PAMPHLET NUMBER 44-45 JULY-AUGUST, 1949 Copyright 1949 By CLARE BOOTHE LUCE Quotation in part is permitted only if credit is given to the author and to Henry Regnery Company, Publishers, Chicago, . Illinois Manufactured in the United States of America THE TWILIGHT OF GOD I Is the United States a Christian Nation? THE STRUGGLE that shakes our world was recently de- scribed by Charles E. Wilson, president of the General Electric Company, and chairman of the National Conference of Chris- tians and Jews, as a contest between the "God fearing power of Democracy and the God-hating power of Communism." That Communism hates God is a matter of official record. But that Democracy-American Democracy-fears God is a matter not so easily proved. In Civilization on Trial, Arnold Toynbee sums up his view of the condition of Christianity in the West. (By Christianity Toynbee means, of course, the belief in the Incarnation and Di- vinity of Jesus Christ, His Crucifixion and Resurrection, and the consequent acceptance of His moral and spiritual teach- ings.) Toynbee observes that our civilization has been "living on spiritual capital; I mean, clinging to Christian practice with- out possessing Christian belief-and practice unsupported by belief is a wasting asset, as we have suddenly discovered, to our dismay, in this generation."l To what extent is Christianity a wasting asset in America? The overwhelming majority of our Founding Fathers were ar- dent and devout Christians who believed passionately in church institutions and Christian education. Although their Protestant interpretations of the Bible may have differed, once they had interpreted it to their own satisfaction, its authority was then accepted without diffidence or doubt. They made, or tried to 1 Arnold Toynbee: Civilization on Trial (New York, Oxford University Press, 1948), p. :137. Italics ours. 1 make, their decisions, both public and private, in the light of their Christian faith. To say that they often failed to live up to it, is only to say that they were human. Here is a far too infrequently quoted part of the Farewell Address of George Washington: Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable supports. In vain would that man pay the tribute of patriotism who would labor to subvert these great pillars of human happiness, these firmest props of the duties of men and citizens .. . . And let us with caution, indulge the sup- position that morality can be maintained without religion. What- ever may be conceded to the influence of refined education on minds of peculiar structure, reason and experience both forbid us to expect that national morality can prevail in the exclusion of religious principles. John Adams, in his inaugural address of March 4, 1797, offered as part of his qualifications to occupy the office vacated by Washington ". . . a love of science and letters and a wish to patronize . . . every institution for promoting knowledge, virtue and religion among all classes of people . . . a.s the only means of preserving our Constitution from its natural enemies." Alexander Hamilton often declared in his State papers that God blesses a nation in proportion as it adheres, in its public acts, to the divine law of morality and justice. Like Washing- ton, he felt certain that any attempt to substitute a secular morality for a religious one must result in the death of religion, and with it, of all morality. James Madison and James Wilson were two other signers whose writings were full of a most ardent devotion, and a sound understanding of Christian doctrine. They were especially convinced of the paramount importance of religion as the only means of inculcating morality in the citizen. Of the fifty-six signers of the Declaration of Inde- pendence, almost all of them were in accord with Washington, Adams, Madison, Wilson and Hamilton.1 The notable exception to the devout Christianity of the Signers 1 Robert C. Hartnett, S. J., "The Religion of the Founding Fathers," in Well Springs of the American Spirit (New York, Harper and Bros., 1948), PP·49-5 2 • was Thomas Jefferson, who claimed to be a "deist," but who has been called, by a recent specialist, "a conservative materialist."! Possibly the reason the American Communist quotes Jeffer- son almost to the exclusion of the other Founding Fathers is his explicit anti-Christian bias. No great American has ever been more deliberately, provocatively, anti-Christian in politics than Thomas Jefferson. Nevertheless, as his private papers show, some of his own political reasoning was taken from the works of St. Robert Bellarmine and indirectly from St. Thomas Aquinas; and he insisted to the end that he was "a real Chris- tian," according to his own understanding of the teachings of · a mortal Jesus. "An atheist I can never be," he wrote to John Adams.2 Dr. Witherspoon, another signer, and the first president of Princeton, was a devout Presbyterian. He also maintained that the foundations of popular government, as well as morality, were laid in a strong belief that "God governs the affairs of men."3 It would be interesting to be able to bridge the centuries, to hand Dr. Witherspoon a copy of the Atlantic Monthly for September, 1948, and ask him to read aloud to the other signers an article by a present member of Princeton's philosophy de- partment, Professor W. F. Stace. The article is called "Man Against Darkness." The following quotations would surely give our Founding Fathers reason to wonder whether Christianity were even a wasting asset in Dr. Witherspoon's Princeton. Thus writes Professor Stace: For my part, I believe in no religion at all .... Since the world is not ruled by a spiritual being, but rather by blind forces, there cannot be any ideals, moral or otherwise, in the universe outside us. Our ideals, therefore, must proceed only from our own minds; they 1 Adrienne Koch, The Philosophy of Thomas Jefferson (New York, Columbia University Press, 1943), p. 34. • Jefferson to John Adams, Apr. 11, 1823. • Cf. Proceedings of the Presbyterian Synod, 1788. Dr. Witherspoon was one of the leading framers of the Presbyterian Assembly. ' 3 are our own inventions. Thus the world which surrounds us is nothing but an immense spiritual emptiness. Nature is nothing but matter in motion ... governed, not by any purpose, but by blind forces and laws .... Religion can get on with any sort of astronomy, geology, biology and physics. But it cannot get on with a purpose- less and meaningless universe. . .. The life of man is meaningless, too. Everything is futile, all effort is in the end worthless. A man may ... still pursue disconnected ends, money, fame, art, science ... but his life is hollow at the center. Hence the dissatisfied, dis- illusioned, restless spirit of modern man .... The picture of a mean- ingless world, and a meaningless human life is, I think, the basic theme of much modern art and literature. Certainly it is the basic theme of modern philosophy .... Belief in the ultimate irrationality of everything is the quintessence of what is called the modern mind.1 Our Founding Fathers, being educated men, would not be astounded by this atheistic view, knowing atheism to be as old as antiquity. But what would probably shock them is the fact that so little attention has been paid to Professor Stace's credo in educational or journalistic circles. Concern for the fate of the nation would no doubt overcome our Founding Fathers were they to learn that in our times it is no longer news that a prominent American educator professes to be an atheist, and asserts publicly the worthlessness, futility, hollowness, meaning- lessness and amorality of all human life. Yale's original charter states as its purpose the training of men "for the service of Church and State." Today one of Yale's most brilliant and popular teachers, Professor F. S. C. Northrop of . the philosophy department, clearly shows in his voluminous published writings that he appreciates the need and desire of mankind for faith.2 The pragmatic case for religion is brilliantly made by Dr. Northrop, who believes with Edmund Burke that "Man is by his constitution a religious animal."3 On the other hand, he 1 W. F. Stace, "Man Against Darkness," Atlantic Monthly, September, 1948. • F. S. C. Northrop, The Meeting of East and West (New York, The Macmillan Company, 1946), p. 61. • Reflections on the Revolution in France. III. 1790. 4 also makes it abundantly clear to his readers (and, one assumes, to his students) that Christianity, the predominant religion of the West, is inadequate to present-day world spiritual needs, especially the spiritual needs of the East. He insists that a new religion, "with transforming power," must be constructed, if . the world is to be reintegrated culturally. The question of the possibility of "constructing," or discover- ing, or inventing, a new worldwide religion-a wholly mechan- istic concept-is not the point here. Once again the point is that an influential, respected, and popular American professor in a great university is teaching his students that Christianity-the basis of their own ethics and morals-is inadequate, partial to mankind's needs, and therefore outdated. Evidence could be multiplied into volumes to show that many of our secular American universities and colleges are dominated by educators who are either positive atheists, negative deists, or indifferent Christians. . Certainly no one doubts that at the topmost levels of educa- tion-in the great endowed universities which were almost all envisioned, at their inception, as institutes for the formation of Christian leaders-a disbelief in Christianity can be taught in the name of science, philosophy, democracy, or even religion itself, without effective criticism from any quarter. But if edu- cators were to suggest that Negroes be admitted equally with white students (a positive Christian proposal) one can imagine that, before a wholesale withdrawal of students and money took place, the educators would probably be requested to withdraw. Most of the leaders in all fields of American life are college graduates. Today, the potential leaders of the American people are being treated to an educational fare that is less and less Christian. In the public field of lower education, it is no different. The Supreme Court opinion on the McCollum case, which declared released-time religious instruction in the public schools to be unconstitutional, seems to many merely a re-emphasis on the 5 separation of Church from State. It was more than that: it made official the separation of the State from God. In America, a child can now complete twelve full years of public schooling without ever having had, in the formative en- vironment of school, a word of instruction about God or the Christian religion. Only a completely prejudiced and unhis- torical mind could believe that this situation would be accept- able to the founders of this Republic. The historic and proper relationships of State to Church, of Christianity to Democracy, are matters of endless and fruitful debate among students of American history and politics. But that a relationship existed, because both existed, was the important fact. Today, the rela- tionship ceases to be a matter of deep concern largely because of the shrunken power of the churches to inform and animate the opinions of our citizens. Clearly, the bias of government and law today is increasingly in the direction of substituting secular education for religion as a means of inculcating ethical and moral principles in the citizen. It is useful here to consider the implications of the now famous opinion of the Federal Communications Commission known as the Scott opinion.1 This opinion may well mark the historic moment when our nation began its official acceptance of atheism. The opinion suggests that atheists areconstitu- tionally entitled to equal time on the air with believers in super- natural faiths, in view of both the first and second clauses of Article I of the Constitution, which guarantee religious free- dom and forbid abridgment of free speech. A petitioner, Mr. Scott, asked the Federal Communications Commission to revoke the license of three California coastal stations for refusing to make time available to him for a broad- cast denying the existence of God. The memo issued by the department is, perhaps, the first governmental excursion into the realm of theology. It asserts that the existence of God, or any transce~dent Being, is a legitimately controversial public question, and that "freedom of belief necessarily carries with it 1 Federal Communications Commission Memo 96050 in re: Petition of Robert Harold Scott. Signed by T. J. Slowie, July 19, 1946. 6 freedom to disbelieve" and freedom to express these disbeliefs on the air, however abhorrent they may be to the majority of listeners or however at variance with commonly accepted ideas of morality. There is no explicit mention of God in the Constitution, but this document was composed by the same minds that dictated the Declaration of Independence. Did the writers of the FCC memo display ignorance of it or did they consider the Declara· tion totally irrelevant to the spirit of the Constitution? The Declaration states that all the rights of our citizens, and our own right to nationhood, are those "to which the laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them" ... and that "men are endowed by their Creator" ... with these rights; that a people's final court of appeal is "The Supreme Judge of the World"; and that their entire destiny is in the hands of "Divine Providence." The FCC, an official government agency created by act of Congress, advocates in the name of freedom of speech, and of religious freedom, radio debate on the validity of the only au- thority, set forth by the Declaration of Independence, for the existence of all our freedom. Perhaps the time has come for our lawmakers to clarify the religious issue as it impinges on laws affecting radio, movies, education. This could be done by offering an amendment to our Constitution similar to that in Article 124 of the USSR Constitution which reads, in part: "Freedom of religious worship and freedom of antireligious propaganda is recognized for all citizens . . ." Such an amendment would make it plain that the time had come in America when atheism was to be considered of equal validity with religion-and that Americans could no longer be called a God-fearing or a Christian people. The Scott and Mc- Collum decisions to the contrary, our Constitution does not make it plain that freedom of worship includes the additional right to undermine or destroy the worship of others. There is much incidental evidence of our nation's betrayal of its Christian heritage. Let us consider the controversial, 7 divisive, and distressing issues that plague this country today, and measure the proposed solutions (if any) against our his- torically professed devotion to Christian ethics. There is, for one example, the matter of the breakup of the home as viewed in the light of the unequivocal words of Jesus on the subject of divorce and marriage: "Whom God hath joined together, let no man put asunder." For hundreds of years, these words were invoked as infallible authority for the indis- solubility of marriage among Christians. Today in the United States of America one out of three marriages ends in divorce. In marriage, the most important of all communal relationships, America is certainly becoming less and less Christian. America stands scarcely touched by the horrors of war, yet it is with considerable reluctance that many of our people have come to the aid of Europe. And in order to put the Marshall plan over, to many groups, the emphasis was largely placed on an appeal to self-interest. There has been 'no really effective volun- tary curtailment of food, or sacrifice of luxuries by the majority of our citizens in behalf of the starving "foreigners" who are, according to Christian principles, our brothers and sisters. Here is the poem carved on the base of the Statue of Liberty in the 1880'S. It is a Christian Uncle Sam-aritan's political inter- pretation of Matthew 25:35-36: