One Nation Under God is a book that should be of interest to a lot of people. One can gather from the subtitle, How Corporate America Invented Christian America, that it’s approaching the topic from a left-leaning point of view, but don’t let that put you off - Kruse’s coverage of the issue is surprisingly even-handed.
The book paints a fairly ugly picture of how a cabal of shrewd, rich, white men commandeered American Christianity and forcibly injected a new, strident, politically loaded flavor of it into public life for their own ends, leaving inconvenient portions of the faith on the cutting room floor along the way. Middle America, hungry for a religious revival, or at least willing to believe they should be, jumped aboard without looking too closely at what they were buying into, and readily accepted the new brand of public religion without noticing that it came with some pretty heavy political baggage. The new religion-infused form of American politics, and the politics-infused form of American Christianity, snowballed from there.
Kruse doesn’t editorialize much while telling this story. He doesn’t have to – the real outrage is not so much, “look what those right-wingers did,” but the simple fact of how religion was intentionally politicized and how the new Christian brand was aggressively (and successfully) marketed to the nation. It would be an equally ugly story no matter who did it. It makes me extra mad that right-wingers did it to advance a right-wing agenda that I don’t remotely agree with, and it also makes me extra mad that in the process of politicizing religion, they stirred up religious division that harms religious minorities like me, but it should make anyone mad, including Christians. It’s not in any way anti-Christian, but a lot of the story may be hard for Christians to accept… because who wants to hear that the version of their religious faith they’ve been taught all their lives is very likely a product that was carefully and expertly edited, packaged, and marketed to the public for someone else’s political gain?
Viewed another way, One Nation Under God is simply a history of a certain aspect of American politics. Many of us, including many of my conservative friends, have noticed that the modern Republican party seems to consist of a couple of different elements whose messages sometimes get mixed and even seem to conflict: There are the fiscal conservatives who believe in hands-off government, and that the government should be less involved in telling people how to live their daily lives. And then there is the religious element who have very firm ideas about how people should live from a religious moral perspective and don’t mind legislating their religious principles into law. More than one of my conservative friends have told me, “I’m a real conservative, and to me that means less government intrusion in people’s lives – I don’t really think all of this religious and moral stuff should be in politics at all.”
If you’ve ever wondered how these two disparate elements came to be represented under the same banner, One Nation Under God tells the story of how those two very different factions got in bed together and founded today's religious right. The link between religion and right-wing politics is a shorter history than you might think because it doesn’t start with the Founding Fathers, as the belief is commonly cultivated today. It starts in the 1930s, during the Great Depression and the era of Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal. A little surprisingly to me, Kruse doesn't delve deeper. I suspect he decided he didn't need to. Once you hear the story of what happened in the 1930s and 1940s, it's obvious enough that this was an utterly new development in American history, regardless of arguments about whether America was intended to be a “Christian” nation from its founding. Even as the orchestrators of the new religious right were building it, they were busily telling themselves and everyone else that they were only reviving the public religiosity that the nation's founding fathers had always intended.
The new religious right slipped “under God” into the pledge of allegiance and “In God We Trust” onto the money almost before anyone could notice, and within twenty years most people willingly forgot what recent developments those had been and quickly came to consider them cornerstones of the American way. They defined taxation as a violation of the eighth commandment (“thou shalt not steal”) and any support for government programs designed to help the poor as a violation of the tenth (“thou shalt not covet”), and thus buried the Social Gospel under a wave of libertarianism, with a thin frosting of religion.
This history of political religion in the 20th century is also necessarily a history of fighting over it. It quickly became apparent that there had been good reasons to keep religion out of politics. While simple things like “under God” in the pledge and “In God We Trust” on the money smacked of a vague and relatively inoffensive “ceremonial deism” that only atheists and pagans could object to (and who cares what they think, riiiiight???[/sarcasm]), things quickly became more complicated when it came to actual religious observances like prayer and Bible readings in public schools. In the new, ultra-pious environment, a popular push sprang up for more and more public demonstrations of faith, and schools became a major target. Just about everyone wanted more religion in schools, but funnily enough, Catholics, Jews, and Protestants couldn't seem to agree on exactly what form prayer and Bible readings should take.
Surprisingly enough, the ones who complained the loudest were the Catholics. By papal decree, the King James Bible was and still is considered non-authoritative, and Catholics refused to even hear of their children reading from it at school. But out of the ensuing infighting, they got a result that made Catholics, Jews, and Protestants all co-equals in unhappiness – NO official prayers or Bible readings in public schools. The hilariously ironic thing about this outcome is that they hoisted themselves with their own petards - prayer and Bible readings in schools had been going on basically forever, sporadically and determined at a local, school-by-school level, and no one had ever thought to fight over it because each school (and individual schools were generally pretty homogeneous in those days) did what worked for it. But the new religious right was so keen to legislate religion on a statewide or even national basis that they drove too hard to the basket and fouled. And yet they've been loudly blaming other people for “expelling God from public schools” ever since. So next time someone bitches about how the "godless heathens" or whatever kicked God out of school, you can point out with confidence that in fact it was primarily Christians who kicked God out of school because they couldn't agree on exactly what form God should take in a public school.