By Mark Tooley on 11.26.08 @ 6:08AM
And let us not forget California's Proposition 8.
The several dozen Pilgrims who celebrated the first Thanksgiving
in Massachusetts in 1621 would later fold their Plymouth Colony
of religious Separatists into the nearby Massachusetts Bay Colony
of Puritans. The arch-Protestant Separatists had quit the Church
of England, while the theologically similar Puritans had
originally hoped for Calvinist reforms within the state church.
Once in America, the Puritans established their own new church
system, into which the Pilgrim Separatists merged, that was
Congregationalist in polity and Reformed in doctrine.
This Congregationalist Church of New England essentially became
the state church for much of New England. It produced imposing
preachers like Cotton and Increase Mather, and fostered
widespread literacy, thrift, spiritual devotion and industry. The
Congregationalists founded the great colleges of their region,
which were originally Calvinist seminaries, and which would
dominate the intellectual life of early and later America.
Jonathan Edwards, author of "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry
God," was arguably the last great Puritan preacher and
theologian, helping to ignite The Great Awakening of the
mid-1700s that spiritually congealed the American colonies.
By the late 1700s, much of Congregationalism was trending towards
Unitarianism. But most retained the orthodox Calvinist doctrine,
and the Congregationalists of New England were the American
Revolution's main political and intellectual instigators. Their
faith was ascetic, rationalist and focused on conforming the
world to their view of God's will. The Congregationalists were
both soul savers (to the extent that Predestination would allow
it), and social reformers. In the 19th century they were among
the earliest abolitionists and proponents of women's rights.
In the 20th century, the Congregationalists eventually merged
with theologically similar religious bodies to become what is
today the 1.2 million member United Church of Christ (UCC). It is
one of America's most liberal and fastest declining
denominations, having lost over 40 percent of its membership
since the 1960s. Until recently its most famous member was Barack
Obama, who very publicly resigned from the only church to which
he ever belonged, thanks to the verbal intemperance of the Rev.
Jeremiah Wright, the UCC's most famous preacher.
How did the Pilgrims evolve into Jeremiah Wright? The progression
was not a straight line. But the Congregationalist elites of the
early 20th century followed other established Mainline Protestant
church elites in abandoning Christian orthodoxy about human
salvation in favor of a Social Gospel that emphasized political
transformation. That progressive Social Gospel, which originally
emphasized labor reforms, later came to champion centrist liberal
causes such as civil rights and anti-war causes. But eventually
it morphed into the liberation theologies of the 1970s, which
portrayed America as a moral travesty, in contrast to the early
Pilgrims and Puritans, who aspired that America should be a "city
on a hill."
The Rev. Wright has been portrayed as a populist black preacher.
Unusually in the nearly all white UCC, Wright's Trinity Church
was a nearly all black congregation. But his theology is more
tied to UCC/Mainline Protestant liberation theologies than to
more traditional black church beliefs, which still adhere to
Christian orthodoxy and center on salvation, not political
redemption.
After 20 years of membership at Wright's church, which Obama
joined after a largely non-religious childhood, Obama is now one
of the few incoming presidents without a formal church
affiliation. The UCC still regards him as one of its own. Obama
in 2007 spoke to the denomination's national synod. After Obama's
election in November, the UCC's president extended the church's
"hospitality" to Obama through its 7 congregations in Washington,
D.C., two of which have previously hosted regular worship by an
American president.
Oddly, despite the prominence of Congregationalists among
America's founders, Obama, if he retains his UCC affiliation,
would be only the second president firmly in that tradition. John
Adams was raised by New England Puritans, but his
Congregationalist church in what is now Quincy, Massachusetts,
evolved into Unitarianism, to which Adams largely adhered. His
presidential son, John Quincy, also was a member there (both are
entombed in the church), although he attended a wide spectrum of
churches while in Washington. And, unlike his father, which whom
he debated religious points by correspondence, the son had more
orthodox beliefs about Christ's deity and the Trinity.
Teddy Roosevelt was Dutch Reformed and attended a German Reformed
church in Washington as president. That church now belongs to the
UCC. Calvin Coolidge was the only truly Congregationalist
president. His taciturn silence, thrift, impatience with foolery,
and quiet wit all neatly fit the accurate stereotype of New
England Puritans. The old sanctuary of First Congregational
Church in downtown D.C. that he attended is now gone. A more
modern church has also been recently knocked down in favor of a
new office building, in which the current liberal and gay
friendly UCC congregation plans to worship starting in 2010.
Gay issues are paramount to UCC national elites. The UCC is the
only major national denomination that is formally asking the
California Supreme Court to overturn recently ratified
Proposition 8, which defines marriage as man and woman. (Two
Episcopal bishops and the California Council of Churches have
also petitioned, along with the Unitarians.) "The United Church
of Christ is honored to join other religious bodies in this
challenge to Proposition 8," the UCC's president declared. "In
2005 our church's General Synod called for the extension of
marriage rights to all couples. We believe our communities are
strengthened and our religious freedoms protected by providing
equality in marriage, rather than by erecting barriers to
marriage."
It's tempting to say that the Pilgrims, Puritans, the Mathers,
and Jonathan Edwards would be appalled. But unlike their
spiritual descendants in the more utopian modern UCC, they
emphasized human depravity and the intractability of human
nature. So likely they would not be surprised. Fortunately, the
tradition of Thanksgiving, and the even more important traditions
of lawful and limited government bequeathed by the New England
Puritans, stand as more lasting spiritual legacies for America.