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Friday, December 22, 2006
Floyd Brown :: Townhall.com Columnist
Ronald Reagan and the War on Christmas
by Floyd Brown
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In recent weeks there has been much commentary about the “War on Christmas.” FOX News host Bill O’Reilly recently spoke up on November 18 saying, “It’s all part of the secular progressive agenda ... to get Christianity and spirituality and Judaism out of the public square.” He then added, “because if you look at what happened in Western Europe and Canada, if you can get religion out, then you can pass secular progressive programs, like legalization of narcotics, euthanasia, abortion at will, gay marriage, because the objection to those things is religious-based, usually.”

O’Reilly’s comments on his television show, The O’Reilly Factor, during a segment about “which American stores are using ‘Christmas’ in advertising this Christmas season and which are not.” O’Reilly’s comments have sparked outrage amongst liberal pundits.

There was an American president that not so long ago decried the same trends as O’Reilly. He believed Christmas was a special time that had grown too secular; the president about which I write is Ronald Reagan. He spoke and wrote passionately about the Christmas season, and all that it represented to him. He even believed that the Christmas spirit was the same as the American spirit.

Although President Reagan would have rather spent Christmas with his family at his beloved Rancho del Cielo in California, he stayed at the White House in Washington, D.C. He did this so that Secret Service agents and other aides could spend Christmas at home with their families. President Reagan was a very thoughtful and kind person.

One Christmas, in a letter to his pen pal of fifty years, he lamented the fact that his children no longer believed in Santa Claus and how he missed seeing their excitement on Christmas morning. Year after year he wrote a Christmas love letter to his wife Nancy.

Speaking in a 1977 radio address sponsored by Young America’s Foundation, Reagan criticized the Supreme Court’s decision to “expel” God from the classroom, saying:

"And yet a few years ago, egged on by an avowed Atheist, voluntary prayer was banned in our schools. Have we let some among us make Atheism a religion and impose that religion on those of us who believe in our Judeo-Christian traditions?

"There is a fundamental difference between separation of church and state and denying the spiritual heritage of this country. Inscribed on the Jefferson Memorial in Washington, D.C. are Jefferson’s words, 'The God who gave us life gave us liberty —can the liberties of a Nation be secure when we have removed a conviction that these liberties are the gift of God.'"

"Our coins bear the words 'In God We Trust.' We take the oath of office asking his help in keeping that oath. And we proclaim that we are a Nation under God when we pledge allegiance to the flag. But we can’t mention his name in a public school or even sing religious hymns that are non - denominational. Christians can be celebrated in the school room with pine trees, tinsel and reindeers but there must be no mention of the man whose birthday is being celebrated. One wonders how a teacher would answer if a student asked why it was called Christmas."

Clearly Reagan would have agreed with Bill O’Reilly and his sentiments. Continued...

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About The Author
Floyd Brown is the Reagan Ranch Presidential Scholar for Young America's Foundation.

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Read the Constitution
Words mean something, and the only place in the Bill of Rights that has anything like "Congress shall make no law . . ." is in the First Amendment -- in this discussion, about religion. _Congress_ shall make no law, but it's fine whatever the States and municipalities do. In fact, many (most?) states had established religions at that time.

I get so frustrated when I hear the "separation of church and state" argument when a local issue comes up -- a nativity scene on the town square, for example. Frankly, there shouldn't be a federal issue at all.

FOOD FOR THOUGHT IN THE WAR ON CHRISTMAS
The war on Christmas is another battle in the war on the Judeo-Christian culture.

As I look at most of Europe today, I see a has-been society of hedonists with a deep, uncurable, and pathological dislike of anything associated with a Judeo-Christian culture. Throughout their history, too often churches, whether Catholic or Protestant, have been anti-Semitic and closely allied with despotic monarchs and political leaders. In addition, the Enlightenment and the revival of humanist thought became an addiction that has lasted for generations.

The Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches have been the official state churches of most European nations. Lutheranism has been the official state religion of Scandinavian nations. The Church of England, aka Anglican in England and Episcopal in America, was the official state religion of England. Thus, people were required to belong to those churches and pay taxes to support them.

The Pilgrims left England seeking religious freedom and relocated to Leyden, Holland, for a time before they set sail for the New World.

America's deeply religious founding fathers wanted to create a society in which there was no state-sponsored religion.

The First Amendment to the United States Constition states, "Congress shall make no low with respect to establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. Nowhere in the Constitution are there the words "Separation of church and state". Nowhere in the Constition is there any clause requiring church subordination to the state as is the case elsewhere, including Mexico.

The words "Separation of church and state" were first used in a letter that Thomas Jefferson wrote to the Danbury Baptists.

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