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The Real Meaning of Separation of Church and State

How Using God in the Pledge of Allegiance Does Not Violate Separation of Church and State

By Kassandra Calhoun, published Oct 05, 2005
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Driving to the public library, the DJ on the radio decided to spark some thoughtful conversation with his listening audience about the Pledge of Allegiance's phrasing "One nation under God." He wanted to hear people's opinions about making children in public school say this portion of the Pledge and wondered if it fell under the Separation of Church and State clause.

In a way, I'm glad I didn't have a cell phone else I'd be another person on the road who can't drive and talk at the same time.

Many of the callers didn't seem to understand the issue, or wanted to talk about something else entirely. Thankfully most of the callers had stopped calling by the time I left the library, headed for home.

Here's the key point most people don't seem to understand about God, The Pledge, and Separation of Church and State:

Church is not God; God is not church.

Church, in our government's legal documents refers to a specific religion or sub-set of a religion. Our government will not endorse any one religion; therefore, the government maintains Separation of Church and State. Our government is not Christian, Jewish, Muslim, or Wiccan. And neither is the Pledge of Allegiance.

God is a high deity of pure light. God is found throughout the world under different names like Allah, Buddha, Jehovah, Ra, Odin, and even holds generic female names like Mother Earth Below, and The Goddess. God is bigger than us, bigger than any church one cares to build, and encompasses everything from the smallest atom in a speck of dust to our Sun and beyond. We are each a spark of God, created from divine thought. We are one nation, under God. We are one people, under God. We are one with God, even if you believe there is no God.

The issue people, in their clouded vision, are allowing themselves to get caught up in seems to be semantics. Although the United States has no official religion, it's assumed the God in the Pledge of Allegiance is the Christian God, Jehovah. It's not. It's any God the person chooses to worship in their private life. It could be the Hindu God Brahman, or Allah, or Jesus, or nothing.

Takeaways
  • God is not church.
  • Church is not God.
  • God is all of us.
Comments
Comments 1 - 2 of 2
 
 
I mostly agree. THe term "God" is what we make of it, if we choose to make anything of it at all. I am a student who says the pledge every day, but there are people around me who choose to keep silent. It is not an issue at all, and the only requirement made by the teacher is that we stand in respect of our flag. What is the problem? Yes it is a symbol of our country, but our country has deep roots in religious faith. As long as it is not forced upon people, can we not each interpret the reference to "God" in our own way?

Posted on 05/06/2006 at 8:05:00 PM

 
Our government should have more important things to do rather than indoctrinate my children out of thiest religions. http://eclecticseminarian.blogspot.com/2006/03/and-never-twain-shall-meet-dilemma-of.html

Posted on 03/26/2006 at 10:03:00 PM

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