JOIN US MAY 20-21 FOR RESTORE CONFERENCE

Mary
DeMuth

Scot
McKnight

Screenshot 2023-01-13 at 1.50.18 PM

Naghmeh
Panahi

Reporting the Truth.
Restoring the Church.

Opinion: Is the First Amendment Idolatrous?

By Mark Tooley
first amendment shover CREC
Rev. Michael Shover preachers at Christ the Redeemer Church in Pella, Iowa. (Video screengrab)

Recently an Iowa pastor denounced the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution as idolatrous, exciting support from professing Christian nationalists who want a confessional state.

That pastor, Michael Shover of Christ the Redeemer Church in Pella, Iowa, declared:

“What is the faulty crumbling foundation that Christians need to remove before we can rebuild our civilization? What are the old ruins that need to be swept away before we can rebuild? It is the First Amendment to the Constitution.”

His church belongs to the Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches (CREC), a small denomination of 130 congregations globally. Its doctrine is Reformed/Calvinist, and it is laissez-faire on infant baptism. Nearly all American Protestants advocating for a Christian confessional state are Reformed/Calvinist. Of course, the vast majority of Reformed/Calvinist Christians in America reject this concept. But the idea of a Christian government that restricts non-Christian religion is gaining traction among some “postliberal” Christians who cite magisterial Protestant teaching in the 1500s and 1600s.

The pastor’s defenders insisted he was not entirely renouncing the First Amendment but only later court interpretations that precluded blasphemy laws and church establishment.

Your tax-deductible gift helps our journalists report the truth and hold Christian leaders and organizations accountable. Give a gift of $30 or more to The Roys Report this month, and you will receive a copy of “Hurt and Healed by the Church” by Ryan George. To donate, click here.

In an earlier sermon, the pastor had declared:

“Christians have idolatrously put the Bill of Rights before the Bible. We even say things like, I might not agree with your faith, but I’ll fight to support your right to practice it. And in the name of religious freedom, we have opened up this land to be a place where any and all gods can be worshipped. And so, we have given ourselves to be oppressed by Demons! And our tolerance of false religion, and our tolerance of immorality, has led to Christians becoming oppressed in our land by those very same people we tolerated.”

The pastor cited the Satanic statue erected during a multifaith holiday display in the Iowa state capitol, which one legislator, who’s also a pastor, defended as an unfortunate necessity preferable to state control of speech. “Jesus and Satan are the same to our Christian government officials,” the troubled pastor alleged in response.

first amendment satanist
On Dec. 10, 2023, a display was erected at the Iowa State Capitol by the Satanic Temple of Iowa. (Photo: Rep. Jon Dunwell)

This religious neutrality was not the intent of America’s founders and the Constitution, the pastor preached. The First Amendment only intended to prohibit national churches, but not state churches. Oddly, he noted Virginia once established Anglicanism, which in fact was disestablished before the Constitution, in the Virginia Statue of Religious Freedom, foreshadowing the First Amendment, and crafted by James Madison, often deemed the “father” of the Constitution.

Irate over the satanic statue, this pastor in his sermon recalled personally confronting the Iowa legislator/pastor who had defended religious neutrality, who supposedly “doesn’t believe Jesus is the Lord NOW, only someday in the future, and so he rejects the notion of God’s laws reigning supreme over the government now.” The pastor called the legislator “gnostic” and warned:

By embracing secular neutrality, he avoids acknowledging Jesus Christ as the risen and reigning Lord of all, but he does not see that this reluctance to Crown Him Lord of All [and] emboldens the state to continue to promote more anti-Christian laws and practices.

In his sermon the pastor implored: “If only the state would be explicitly Christian again and uphold blasphemy laws that made it illegal to slander the Lord Jesus Christ and to promote anti-Christian beliefs and practices.” And he said that “traditional Protestant” teaching expects the government to “maintain true religion.” He noted that the American revised version of the Westminster Confession in 1788, which guides Presbyterians and other Reformed/Calvinists, ordains civil magistrates for the “encouragement of them that are good, and for the punishment of evildoers.” He omitted that the American version deleted the original language of 1647 calling for false teaching to be suppressed by the “power of the civil magistrate.”

Accordingly, the pastor regretted that the “foundations of our once great republic and even more our once glorious Protestant and Reformed Church, have been rotting away because Christian ministers and magistrates believe that “the First Amendment has more authority than the First Commandment.” So “there are certainly some idols that need to be toppled and cleared away first.”

cassidy first amendment
Alabama candidate Michael Cassidy (Photo: X)

The pastor saluted the aspiring Alabama politician, Michael Cassidy, who toppled the Satan statue in Iowa, provoking a publicized arrest. And the pastor concluded his sermon: “There is no place where Christ’s Lordship is checked at the door. There is no place for neutrality.”   

So obviously the First Amendment, from this perspective, has got to go. Neither it nor the rest of the Constitution mentions Christ or God, except with the dating “in the Year of our Lord.” So perhaps the entire Constitution should go?

It’s an odd and sclerotic, even pharisaical, confessionalism that claims Christ’s lordship must always be specifically stipulated, in civil statute, and perhaps in every arena of human life, even coercively, and implicitly interpreted by a select few. The Founders were overwhelmingly churchmen and yet omitted God from the Constitution, unlike in the Declaration of Independence, presumably because the Constitution was and is binding law.

If the government professes a particular religion, it then gets to define that religion. Perhaps Abraham Lincoln had this concern when, in 1864, he considered but ultimately declined to support a proposal to add God and Jesus to the Constitution’s preamble. The Constitution’s ban on religious establishment and religious tests for office are safeguards for religious freedom.

satanic first amendment
On Dec. 16, 2023, political candidate Michael Cassidy defaced a display erected at the Iowa State Capitol by the Satanic Temple of Iowa. (Photo: X)

For the Iowa pastor, this religious freedom means being “oppressed by demons.” He wants an explicitly Christian government that punishes blasphemy. Who would define it? The Westminster Confession of 1647 the pastor cited, a foundational statement for Presbyterians and other Reformed/Calvinists, calls the Catholic mass “most abominably injurious to Christ’s one, only sacrifice.”

Britain at that time criminalized Roman Catholicism. Would the pastor support the same now? If not, why not? There are over 70 million Catholics in America. There are perhaps, broadly defined, a few million Presbyterians in America. Advocates for establishing religion like to picture themselves in control, even when they are a small minority.

In a very different vein, the Catholic philosopher and co-founder of the Institute on Religion and Democracy, Michael Novak, in his The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism, noted that by intention a pluralistic society at its “spiritual core” has an “empty shrine.” This shrine is empty “in the knowledge that no one word, image or symbol is worthy of what all seek there.”

first amendment
A statue of Pope John Paul II stands outside Guam’s Dulce Nombre de Maria Cathedral-Basilica. (AP Photo/David Goldman)

From this perspective, “individuals are instructed thereby that the common good transcends their own vision of the good, however passionately held.” The domain of the “transcendent, of course, is mediated by literature, religion, family, and fellows. But it is finally centered in the silence in each person.”

This vision lacks the command-and-control clarity offered by a traditional or a socialist society, Novak noted. A democratic capitalist system cannot be a “confessional system” nor even suffused by “obligatory” Christian values. Instead, Christian individuals and institutions “work through democratic means to shape the will of the majority,” while observing the rights and respecting the consciences of others, which itself is a profoundly Christian concept.

Intending for religion to influence and even lead society through mediating institutions instead of through statute and coercion aligns with the Founders’ perspective. It also still reflects at least the intuitions of the vast majority of American Christians, few of whom want government to enforce religious dogma.

As institutional religion recedes in America, as much of secularism is more aggressive, and as the occasional Satanic statue rears its horned head, more Christians are tempted by dreams of a confessional state. It’s a distracting fantasy, at odds with founding American principles, at variance with the example of Jesus, goes against the trajectory of Christian teaching, and is not supported by any major Christian denomination.

But amid the tides of polarization and extremism, with religious individualism displacing institutions, its devotees likely will grow.

This commentary, which was originally appeared at Juicy Ecumenism and has been reprinted with permission, does not necessarily reflect the views of The Roys Report.

Mark Tooley is president of The Institute on Religion & Democracy. 

SHARE THIS:

GET EMAIL UPDATES!

Keep in touch with Julie and get updates in your inbox!

Don’t worry we won’t spam you.

More to explore
discussion

11 Responses

  1. Oh, the good old days of 17th century Massachusetts. Such an Edenic time, before those hippies ruined everything with their free-wheeling colonies like Rhode Island, Pennsylvania, and their ilk. It’s been chaos ever since.

  2. Another political puppet/mouthpiece masquerading as pastor. Sigh*

    1st question: was he preaching this sermon on Sunday? Because, that right there is violation of 4th commandment of Sinai. SMH.

    2nd question: which part of the 1st Amendment is he against again? ALL of it?? I’m not sure he’s read it at all.

    3rd question: does he know what idolatrous mean biblically?

    4th question: And pray tell, what will you replace the 1st amendment or constitution with again? The law of Moses (ie: the Torah?). Cause you don’t really want to go ‘there’, I’m certain of that.

    Correction: THE CHURCH system is the mega ruinous heap that needs extensive reforming.

    Yeshua did not tell HIS disciples to reform the laws of Rome in other to force (I mean make) converts.

    And the same is true today, HE gave the commission “go ye into nations making disciples teaching them to keep the commandments, baptising in the Name of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit”.

    Which part of that great commission mandate included “by throwing down secular laws and rebuilding it into ????…..”.

    We are in the age of gentiles. The time is coming when ALL will learn and obey the Torah; that is when Yeshua returns; and HE will institute HIS laws on HIS own might and power (Isiah 2:2-4, Zech 14:16-21 and many more passages)

    For now, Just preach the gospel, for only the Holy Spirit has the power to change hearts and transform lives. But they won’t hearken. Obey the law of the Spirit, they refuse. Instead, they insist on fighting the wrong battles; majoring on minor; and minoring in the major as it were.

  3. Christian Nationalists seem to forget Church history, like the Spanish Inquisition. If they think abuses like that would not happen here, under Protestants, they’re sadly mistaken.

  4. The Westminster Confession also makes clear that Christians are to obey even the civil authorities that have differing religious views:
    WCF23:4
    “It is the duty of people to pray for magistrates, to honor their persons, to pay them tribute and other dues, to obey their lawful commands, and to be subject to their authority, for conscience’ sake. Infidelity or difference in religion doth not make void the magistrate’s just and legal authority, nor free the people from their due obedience to him: from which ecclesiastical persons are not exempted…”
    People who want to remove religious liberties from others are the first to holler when Christian liberties seem to them to be at risk.

  5. In order to have true freedom of worship there must be the freedom not to worship.

    This Iowa Pastor seems to have forgotten our world has been subjected to futility and no Declaration of Independence, constitution, bill of rights, or anyone’s reconstructionist nationalist ideology can change that in the now.

    Perhaps we need to also lay aside our “creed idolatry” and read all of the Bible for a change and not just our rabbit trail of favorite verses (like calvinists too often do) as well as the Nationalists’ whitewashed view of American history.

    1. “In order to have true freedom of worship there must be the freedom not to worship.”
      Truth. In fact the upon hearing the Gospel, one makes a choice to follow. It is foundational to Christianity that God has given us the freedom to choose and therefore to allow that people choose “not God”. Therefore allowing that other choices exist

  6. I am a Baptist who believes that the separation of church and state (both disestablishment and free exercise) is one of the greatest political inventions in the history of the world. It is tiring to hear otherwise well-meaning Christians insist that America was founded as a Christian nation. We were founded as a free nation. While it took time for some states to also disestablish state sponsored churches, the free exercise of religion which we all enjoy in some ways mirrors the freedom which God gives all humans.

    1. “I am a Baptist who believes that the separation of church and state (both disestablishment and free exercise) is one of the greatest political inventions in the history of the world.”

      Where do you stand on churches using the government provided not-for-profit 501c3 status?

  7. But, it is his rights under the First Amendment that allows him to preach these whacky theories in the first place.

  8. I do think it is an interesting idea – the concept of idolizing the Constitution. But – I would say many Christians in the US idolize the 2nd amendment vs the 1st and find far more ‘freedom’ in that man-made document and consquent deistic / humanist Enlightenment ideals than in the gospel.

    Every

    1. Not so much idolizing the Constitution (though there is that), but most of the MAGA followers do idolize “America” (as they see it and in their idealized view of the “good old days” of the 1950s), Patriotism, Nationalism, etc. To quote some thoughts from the late Tim Keller:

      “An idol is something we cannot live without. We must have it. Therefore it drives us to break rules we once honored to harm others, even ourselves, in order to get it.”

      “Anything in life can serve as an idol, or a counterfeit god.”

      “Anything can serve as a counterfeit god, especially the very best things in life.”

      “An idol is anything more important to you than God. Anything that absorbs your heart and imagination more than God. Anything you seek to give you what only God can give. Anything that is so central and essential to your life, that should lose it, your life would feel hardly worth living.”

      “It (idolatry) means turning a good thing into an ultimate thing.”

      The Christian nationalist, MAGA-loving, Trump cultists are idolators.

Leave a Reply

The Roys Report seeks to foster thoughtful and respectful dialogue. Toward that end, the site requires that people register before they begin commenting. This means no anonymous comments will be allowed. Also, any comments with profanity, name-calling, and/or a nasty tone will be deleted.
 
MOST RECENT Articles
MOST popular articles
en_USEnglish

Donate

Hi. We see this is the third article this month you’ve found worth reading. Great! Would you consider making a tax-deductible donation to help our journalists continue to report the truth and restore the church?

Your tax-deductible gift helps our journalists report the truth and hold Christian leaders and organizations accountable. Give a gift of $30 or more to The Roys Report this month, and you will receive a copy of “Hurt and Healed by the Church” by Ryan George.