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What Adams saw over Jefferson's wall
What Adams saw over Jefferson's wall

 

by Richard A. Samuelson

 

 

AMERICA IS in the midst of a war between the religious and the secular: so declared the right-wing presidential candidate Patrick J. Buchanan in 1992. In 1994, the liberal historian Alan Brinkley agreed. "Much of the history of the postwar United States," Brinkley wrote in the American Historical Review,

 

has been the story of two

 

intersecting developments. One is

 

the survival of fundamentalist

 

private values among people who

 

have in other ways adapted

 

themselves to the modern public

 

world. The second is the

 

unprecedentedly vigorous assault

 

on those values by liberal, secular

 

Americans.

 

Actually, however, today's "culture war" is as old as the Republic, and has waxed and waned ever since a temporary alliance forged between deists and more traditional Christians in the American Revolution broke down in the Revolution's immediate aftermath. From the beginning, that war has centered on a bitter feud between the intellectual children of the Enlightenment and the forces of conventional religion. But it has also, more interestingly, featured a more rarefied debate within and among the Enlighteners themselves--a debate over the nature of man, of truth, and of progress.

 

James D. Hunter, the leading scholar of today's culture war, hints at this debate when he remarks that in a certain sense "the relevant divisions in the American context are no longer defined according to where one stands vis-a-vis Jesus, Luther, or Calvin, but where one stands vis-a-vis Rousseau, Voltaire, Diderot, and Condorcet." In the 18th century, America's philosopbes were themselves torn along precisely that line. Some, like the French thinkers named by Hunter, clung to a radical desire to transform society root and branch. Others, however, held to a more moderate outlook, and sought less sweeping reforms. Within this debate, the place of religion was a central battleground.

 

The family feud within the American Enlightenment can be seen in high relief in the writings of Thomas Jefferson end John Adams, two Presidents who in retirement disagreed so thoroughly that an exasperated Adams wrote, "You and I ought not to die, before we have explained ourselves to each other." In this, at least, if in little else, Jefferson concurred.

 

Both men were Unitarians, but in matters religious shared little more than that label. Jefferson's brand of Unitarianism did not differ much from deism. In his scheme, God was the creator of the universe, of man, and of morality; but the idea that God was an active presence in the world he dismissed as mere superstition. As forJesus, although he was the greatest moral teacher, he was not divine, nor was he the anointed servant of the divine. Not surprisingly, the adultJefferson never uttered a word in prayer.

 

Like many other Enlightenment thinkers, Jefferson saw the sum total of man's religious past as one long line of crusades and persecutions piling abuse upon abuse and spewing rivers of blood. The only way to end such violence, he concluded, was to bring religion into line with reason, as he himself had done. Supposing "belief to be the assent of the mind to an intelligible proposition," he regarded those who based their beliefs on a faith or a sacred text as relics of a less enlightened time, and he simply refused to accord those beliefs any respect. "It is too late in the day," he scoffed at Trinitarians, "for men to sincerely pretend they believe in Platonic mysticisms that three are one, and one is three."

 

Jefferson's religious progressivism shared something else with the French Enlightenment: virulent anti-Judaism. To Jefferson, ancient Israel constituted a nasy sect, which

 

had presented for the object of

 

their worship a being of terrific

 

character, cruel, vindictive,

 

capricious and unjust. . . .

 

Moses had bound the Jews to

 

many idle ceremonies, mummeries

 

and observances, of no effect

 

towards producing the social

 

utilities which constitute the

 

essence of virtue . . . [and]

 

instilled into his people the most

 

anti-social spirit towards other

 

nations. . . . [Jesus had to contend

 

with] the priests of the

 

superstition, a bloodthirsty race,

 

as cruel and remorseless as the

 

being whom they represented as

 

the family God of Abraham, of

 

Isaac and of Jacob, and the local

 

God of Israel. They were

 

constantly laying snares, too, to

 

entangle him in the web of the

 

law.

 

Though in principle a proponent of tolerance, Jefferson was thus hardly free of bigotry. Faith, especially orthodox faith, had no place in his world. How could it, indeed? Arguing by syllogism, Jefferson postulated that if God had given man a moral sense and sufficient reason to understand His will, and if men turned instead to sacred texts and traditions, then they were suffering from what in a later age would be called false consciousness. The blame lay in the power wielded over men's minds by religious establishments, and the answer lay in disestablishment.

 

Hence Jefferson's famous "wall of separation." In an officially godless state, issues of belief would be uncoerced. Good religion would drive out bad religion--"I trust," Jefferson wrote enthusiastically, "there is not a young man now living in the United States who will not die a Unitarian"-and peace would ensue as man's naturally harmonious and benevolent passions ceased to be corrupted for violent ends.

 

JOHN ADAMS'S Unitarianism was of a markedly different stripe. Adams came to Unitarianism from Calvinism. Rejecting the latter's doctrines of predestination and salvation of the elect, he concluded instead that God granted free will and would save or damn each individual according to the merits of his deeds on earth. In other words, Adams became a Unitarian because he found the idea of original sin irreconcilable with the idea of moral freedom.

 

Adams's disagreement with Jefferson centered on their respective conceptions of human nature. Where Jefferson placed his hopes in a future free of religious fanaticism, Adams thought this was a utopian pipe dream. Science, both natural and political, could advance, and so could human knowledge and understanding, thus making the world more livable; but moral progress was something else again. "Human Reason, and human Conscience," he lectured his friend, "though I believe that there are such things, are not a Match, for human Passions, human Imaginations and human Enthusiasm."

 

Adams believed in, for want of a better term, the sufficiency of human nature. God endowed man with certain attributes that could not be changed, but were good or bad depending upon the ends to which they were put. Looking to the past, he saw an unending story not only of religious wars--Adams was second to none in his disgust at the abuses performed in the name of religion-but of genuine piety and faith. Since the religious impulse was inherent in man, trying to uproot it was misguided on two counts: it could not be done without gross tyranny, and it would wreck something with much potential good in it. Nor was fanaticism itself to be dismissed altogether. Adams's Puritan ancestors had been religious zealots, but

 

far from being a reproach to them,

 

[it] was greatly to their honor: for

 

I believe it will be found

 

universally true, that no great

 

enterprise, for the honor and

 

happiness of mankind, was ever

 

achieved, without a large mixture

 

of that noble infirmity.

 

Significantly, Adams also appreciated Judaism in a way precluded by Jefferson's zealous desire to crush infamy. The leading general of Alexander the Great, he reminded Jefferson, "was so impressed with what he learned in Judea, that he employed 70 learned Men to translate the Hebrew Scriptures into Greek, nearly 3 00 years before Christ." In a striking passage written to his friend F. A. Vanderkemp, Adams declared:

 

. . . in spite of Bolingbroke and

 

Voltaire, I will insist that the

 

Hebrews have done more to

 

civilize men than any other

 

nation. If I were an atheist, and

 

believed in blind eternal fate, I

 

should still believe that fate had

 

ordained the Jews to be the most

 

essential instrument for civilizing

 

the nations. If I were an atheist of

 

the other sect, who believed or

 

pretended to believe that all is

 

ordered by chance, I should

 

believe that chance had ordered

 

the Jews to preserve and to

 

propagate to all mankind the

 

doctrine of a supreme intelligent,

 

wise, almighty sovereign of the

 

universe, which I believe to be

 

the great essential principle of all

 

morality, and consequently of all

 

civilization.

 

Conventionally portrayed as something of a curmudgeon and misanthrope, Adams was actually more tolerant than Jefferson. Precisely because he did not expect to be able to remake religion, he held it in a more sympathetic regard. But there was more to it than that. Unlike Jefferson, who believed that in practice God's will was relatively simple to grasp, once one liberated the moral sense from the shackles of faith, Adams stressed the inscrutability of God's ways. For him, the most important lesson to be gleaned--from reason--was that "there is [not] now, never will be, and never was but one being who can Understand the Universe. And that it is not only vain but wicked for insects to pretend to comprehend it." Thinking God's will unfathomable, but convinced as well that man desired nothing so much as to know the ultimate truths, Adams sympathized with the varied human attempts to understand the deity, and searched for the good in all of them.

 

Finally, when it came to church-state relations, Adams, building on the expectation that religion would remain in the future what it had been in the past, sought a creative balance of power. "Checks and Balances, Jefferson, however you and your Party may have ridiculed them," he wrote to his Virginia friend,

 

are our only Security, for the

 

progress of Mind, as well as the

 

Security of Body. Every Species

 

of these Christians would

 

persecute Deists, as soon as

 

either sect would persecute

 

another, if it had unchecked and

 

unbalanced Power. Nay, the

 

Deists would persecute

 

Christians, and the Atheists

 

would persecute Deists

 

[emphasis added], with as

 

unrelenting Cruelty, as any

 

Christians would persecute them

 

or one another. Know thyself,

 

human Nature!

 

Though a strong disestablishmentarian, Adams did not invest millennial hopes in disestablishment. Whereas Jefferson hated establishments because in the past they had led to religious wars, Adams hated them because they were prima facie immoral, forcing one man to contribute to the support of another man's religion. But he did not think disestablishment would end religious strife.

 

On the contrary, the attempt to separate religious discourse from public life seemed to Adams nothing but a stalking horse for a new orthodoxy, no less absurd than that of the sternest Bible-thumping Calvinist. If Jefferson's brand of intolerance and anti-religious bigotry had its way, it would surely provoke an equal and opposite reaction, destroying civic peace. Real civic peace, Adams thought, would emerge only when deists and atheists could have it out publicly with religionists, not when the latter were made to sit quietly in their churches and stay out of the public square.

 

WHILE THE argument between Adams and Jefferson has been around since the nation's founding, our age features a particularly intense version of it. This is the result of two long-term trends, of which the first is the secularization of the American intelligentsia. According to a recent report by James D. Hunter and Carl Bowman, America's

 

social elites are the most negative

 

of all social groups toward words

 

like "traditional," "conservative,"

 

and "Christian." Moreover, they

 

are the most positive of all social

 

groups toward terms like "ethnic

 

diversity," "multiculturalism, "

 

"tolerance," and "empowerment."

 

. . . Social elites are the least likely

 

to say they believe m God.

 

This represents a real change from the time when America's cultural and social elites, whether or not they attended church, freely and openly had recourse to a religious perspective in apprehending and interpreting reality.

 

The second trend is the growth of the American state. In an earlier era of limited federal government and a restrictive understanding of the Bill of Rights, states and localities offered wiggle-room in which politics could more easily accommodate belief. As government has expanded and federal courts have drawn an ever stricter separation between church and state, we have made it increasingly more difficult for orthodox believers and those who side with them on moral questions to put their opinions into law in any manner short of a constitutional amendment. In response, orthodox believers have become increasingly angry and resentful, and have either withdrawn into a parallel culture of their own or declared "war" on the social and legal system erected by America's secular elite.

 

COULD IT be that Jefferson's aggressive prescription for churchstate relations, the prescription we follow today, has led us down a blind alley? In the age of the centralized megastate, the wall of separation has indeed become what Jefferson intended it to be--a means of favoring a certain set of values at the expense of others. But just as Adams predicted, this has threatened civil peace. What if Adams was right in contending that the notion of religious consensus was a dangerous fantasy, and that as long as people continued to believe, religious opinion would and, more importantly, should play an important role in public debate?

 

It is, in short, past time for us to recall that our founding fathers were not all of a single mind on the issue of church-state relations, and that, even among the Enlightened, wisdom on the matter did not reside in one quarter alone. To the contrary, on this question as on others, the greater part of wisdom is undoubtedly to be found among those who wished to make a virtue of necessity by designing a system that would seek to accommodate eternal conflicts, rather than, once and for all, to win them.

 

Richard A. Samuelson, a new contributor, is a doctoral candidate in history at the University of Virginia, where he is working on an intellectual biography of the Adams family.
 
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