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Many of you are well aware of the importance of the Virginia experience — Thomas Jefferson’s famous Statute and James Madison’s magnificent Memorial — in disestablishing the Anglican Church and in providing religious liberty for all; indeed, Virginia’s successes provided the foundation for the American experiment in religious liberty that finds full flower in the First Amendment. Some may not appreciate, however, the important contribution made by Baptists along with Jefferson and Madison and other Founders.
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In Colonial Virginia, Baptist preachers (along with other dissenters)
were required to obtain a license in order to preach. And if they
refused (as most did), they could be horse whipped, fined or forced to
cool their heels in one of Virginia’s dank and dingy jails. John
“Swearing Jack” Waller (a pre-conversion nickname no doubt) was
mercilessly whipped by authorities in Caroline County and spent 113 days
in four separate jails. James Ireland was jailed in Culpeper, Va.,
where he continued to preach through the bars while his hands were
blooded by knife-wielding detractors seeking to resist his
gesticulations. Elijah Craig was charged with disturbing the peace and
jailed in Orange County. (Later he moved to Kentucky where he adopted a
more peaceful work of distilling bourbon whiskey.) I could name many
more.
Why tell the stories of these courageous preachers? Because their
suffering inspired Madison to do something about what he called “that
diabolical hell-conceived principle of persecution….” It was the witness
of Baptist preachers in the face of horrendous persecution that gave
Madison the necessary genes to become the father of our Constitution and
oppose religious establishments and the persecution they wrought.
But it wasn’t just their example. Baptists also lobbied Madison to go
beyond disestablishing the Anglican church to spell-out protection for
religious liberty in a Bill of Rights to the Constitution he was siring.
John Leland, an itinerant Baptist evangelist preaching in Virginia
during that heady decade of the 1780s, played an integral role in
convincing Madison of the need for a provision in the Bill of Rights
protecting religious freedom. In fact, it is said that Leland and
Madison met just outside of Orange, Va., on the Fredericksburg Road and
made a bargain that bore fruit in the First Amendment. Leland agreed not
to oppose Madison’s bid to be a delegate to the Constitutional
convention if Madison would promise to seek specific guarantees for
religious liberty. (You can go to that very spot today and visit
Leland-Madison park.) Madison came through on his promise and two years
later wrote the first 16 words of the First Amendment: “Congress shall
make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof.”
It is in that tradition of promoting religious liberty and pressuring
the powers that be for a robust understanding of those two clauses that
the Baptist Joint Committee has labored seven and a half decades in our
nation’s capital.
This Baptist, Virginian and American commitment to these twin pillars of
our constitutional architecture — no establishment and free exercise —
has provided a remarkable degree of religious liberty at least when
compared to the rest of the world. The New Year’s Eve bombing of the
Coptic church in Egypt and the assassination of Salman Taseer in
Pakistan are stark reminders of how blessed we are to resolve our
religious differences through dialogue and debate, not with bombs and
guns. Still, we are far from perfect and sometimes miss the mark.
We have witnessed a watering down of these protections — by the courts,
Congress and culture — riddling them with qualifications and exceptions.
Georgetown University law professor David Cole penned in The Washington Post
what he heard as the 112th Congress read the Constitution when members
came to the First Amendment: “Congress shall make no law abridging the
Freedom of Speech, except where citizens desecrate the Flag …;
respecting an establishment of Religion, except to support Christian
schools … and the display of crosses in public places; or abridging the
free exercise of Religion, except to block the construction of mosques
in sensitive areas as determined by Florida Pastors or Fox News.”
In addition to ensuring that government does not meddle in religion in
that constitutional relationship, we need to accept and embrace our
religious diversity on the cultural level. It is not just how government
treats religious liberty; it’s how we treat each others’ religion. Ours
is not a Christian nation, as some contend, but made up of many faiths,
including now 17 percent who embrace no faith at all. Our plush
pluralism is something to be celebrated, not something to be feared. And
our biggest challenge today may be how we view Islam and treat our
Muslim friends.
It is my hope and prayer that we — in the tradition of Jefferson and
Madison, as well as Leland and Waller, and in partnership with the
Baptist Joint Committee — will lead out to fight for religious freedom
for everyone unaided and unimpeded by any government authority and to
learn to treat our fellow citizens as we would want them to treat us.
This is an excerpt from the speech Walker gave when receiving the Virginia First Freedom Award in January 2011.
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