The
crest of Cold War and Anti-Communist hysteria may have passed
by July 30, 1956, but there was still plenty
of residual energy. President Dwight D. Eisenhower, perhaps
somewhat reluctantly, signed a bill that designated the words “In God
We Trust” as the official Motto of
the United States.
The
year before Congress had acted to require that the phrase be put on all coins and bills.
Of
course the U.S. had a de facto motto which had long been
included on coins and currency—E Pluribus Unim, usually translated “out of many, one.” That
phrase was approved in 1792 for the Great
Seal of the United States. It did not satisfy fervid religionists.
Indeed
the Great Seal itself, which was filled with Masonic and Deist symbolism without a hint Christian piety, had been a bone of contention since the first struggles over the proper role of religion in the Republic. The largely Deist founders had purposefully omitted any reference to God in the Constitution and the Bill of Rights was silent on the subject except to prohibit Congress from the establishment
of any religion or interfering with
the religious observances of its citizens.
Practical men with a knowledge of history, they were concerned lest a favored religion or a defined
heresy create civil discord and perhaps civil war.
The Latin phrase E Pluribus Unnum was on the ribbon in the national eacgle's beak on the obverse of he Great Seal of the United States and was long considered the de facto motto of the United States. |
Washington and Jefferson occasionally invoked a vague Deity, most often referred to Providence, Nature’s God, or sometimes the God
of Creation, all common Deist
constructions for an original moving
force of the Universe. They avoided terms like the Lord God which invoked the patriarchal
deity of the Old Testament and
never invoked Jesus Christ.
John Adams, a true product of the Puritan tradition as it evolved eventually into Unitarianism, firmly believed
that organized religion was necessary to constrain the “passions”
of an innately sinful humanity.
Moreover he was politically
indebted to the support of the Black
Legion—the clergy of the New England Standing Order—against “atheistic” Jeffersonian Republicanism. Yet even he resisted considerable pressure to inject explicitly Christian prayer, practice,
and symbolism into official use.
A complex battle between the evolving
movement of Evangelical Protestantism and
republican secularism see-sawed back
and forth for the first decades
of the nation’s existence. Some compromises were unofficially reached,
but on the whole the government remained
resolutely secular, nor were Presidents even expected to make personal religious declarations.
Secretary of the Treasury Samuel Chase put in God We Trust on a Civil War era 2 cent piece. |
During
the crisis of the Civil War,
however, President Abraham Lincoln
needed the fervent support of the
Protestant clergy, particularly its avidly
abolitionist voices. Not a
personally “saved” Christian, and deeply
influenced by the Founder’s secular Deism, Lincoln non-the-less was a student of the Bible as literature and was adept at echoing its cadences and invoking powerful Biblical
language in his speeches. But he was
always being pressed by the clergy
to make more overt religious statements.
It
was in this context that Lincoln called
for national days of fasting and Thanksgiving. He also undoubtedly approved when his Treasury
Secretary, the devout Salmon P.
Chase, first directed the Mint to
inscribe the words “In God We Trust” on a two
cent coin issued in 1864. The approbation of the preachers far outweighed the slight protests of Freethinkers. Over the next decades most—but not
all—coins added the phrase as they were re-designed.
Government issued Greenback currency, however, contained no religious declaration, just a practical promise to pay the bearer in specie upon demand.
And
so the situation stayed until the dawn
of the Cold War. Then Catholics, who had long been reluctant to join with Protestants in
any religious demands on the government because they assumed, quite rightly, that the Protestants would insist on narrow language that excluded
Catholic worship, became particularly
alarmed at the rise of “atheistic
Communism” and the suppression of Catholic worship in the new Soviet Satellites in Eastern Europe. Leading anti-Communist Prelates launched a campaign to require “In God We Trust” on currency as
well as all coins and to make it an official motto.
Federal
authorities, who were eager to use those
same Bishops to influence the heavily
Catholic industrial working class against “Communist infiltration” of the labor movement, were more than glad to add religious arrows to their crusade against Reds.
When
leading Protestant Evangelicals fell
into line, the movement in Congress became
irresistible even to those who were squeamish. What Congressman
wanted to be painted as voting
against God?
Controversy over the motto
and its use on currency and coins has never
gone away. Church and state separation advocates, civil libertarians, and increasingly
vocal atheist activists have repeatedly challenged the motto and its
use on coins and currency in court. And
just as routinely have lost.
In
the case of Aronow v. United States in 1970, the Ninth
Circuit Court of Appeals ruled, “It is quite obvious that the national
motto and the slogan on coinage and currency ‘In God We Trust’ has nothing
whatsoever to do with the establishment
of religion. Its use is of patriotic or ceremonial character and bears no
true resemblance to a governmental sponsorship of a religious exercise.” The Supreme
Court declined to hear an appeal. In another case The Supreme Court upheld the motto in because it has
“lost through rote repetition any significant religious content.”
With public support of continued use of the motto on
coins and currency standing at 90% in a 2003 Gallup Poll it does not
appear that the phrase will be going away any time soon.
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