by jimwalton » Thu Dec 14, 2017 1:13 pm
There is no such thing as a Christian nation. I think that the people who use that phrase mean that our nation was formed on the basis of Christian principles, and that is correct to a limited extent. It was formed on Christian principles and there was a biblical worldview underlying American society, but I'm not sure there were ever a majority of people in the USA who were true Christians.
I guess the same label could be put on most of the European countries through the Christian era: England, France, Germany, etc. Their governments were, to a limited extent, founded on Christian principles, and there was a biblical worldview underlying their cultural values and perspectives. But I don't know if anyone considered England or France in the, say, 15th century, a "Christian nation."
"Christian" is most accurately a label for someone who loves Jesus Christ, obeys him, and follows his example. "Christian" is a noun, not an adjective. There are no Christian books, Christian music, Christian paintings, etc. There are books written by Christians, music written and performed by Christians, and paintings painted by Christians.
Ancient Israel was supposed to have been a theocracy, but America has never gotten close to such a concept (with clear directives that the government not be involved in establishment), and with good reason. The writers of our constitution had in mind a democratic republic, not a theocracy.
America is not a Christian nation. It never has been. There really is no such thing.
There is no such thing as a Christian nation. I think that the people who use that phrase mean that our nation was formed on the basis of Christian principles, and that is correct to a limited extent. It was formed on Christian principles and there was a biblical worldview underlying American society, but I'm not sure there were ever a majority of people in the USA who were true Christians.
I guess the same label could be put on most of the European countries through the Christian era: England, France, Germany, etc. Their governments were, to a limited extent, founded on Christian principles, and there was a biblical worldview underlying their cultural values and perspectives. But I don't know if anyone considered England or France in the, say, 15th century, a "Christian nation."
"Christian" is most accurately a label for someone who loves Jesus Christ, obeys him, and follows his example. "Christian" is a noun, not an adjective. There are no Christian books, Christian music, Christian paintings, etc. There are books written by Christians, music written and performed by Christians, and paintings painted by Christians.
Ancient Israel was supposed to have been a theocracy, but America has never gotten close to such a concept (with clear directives that the government not be involved in establishment), and with good reason. The writers of our constitution had in mind a democratic republic, not a theocracy.
America is not a Christian nation. It never has been. There really is no such thing.