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B**K
Reference Quality
The Founding Myth: Why Christian Nationalism Is Un-American by Andrew Seidel“The Founding Myth” exposes the myth that America was founded on Christian principles and it is an effective assault on the Christian nationalist identity. Constitutional and civic rights attorney at the Freedom From Religion Foundation (FFRF), Andrew Seidel, takes the reader on a hard-hitting tour de force as he meticulously dismantles the concept of a Christian nation. This important 354-page book includes twenty-six chapters broken out by the following four parts: I. The Founders, Independence, and the Colonies, II. United States v. The Bible, III. The Ten Commandments v. The Constitution, and IV. American Verbiage.Positives:1. A well-researched, well-organized written book.2. The fascinating topic of debunking the Christian nation myth. “The purpose of this book is simple, if lofty: to utterly destroy the myths that underlie this un-American political ideology.”3. Reference quality material, a very useful debate tool.4. Does a wonderful job of keeping the material accessible and defining key terms and concepts. ““Judeo-” is a sop, a fig leaf, tossed about to avoid controversy and complaint. It is simply a morsel of inclusion offered to soften the edge of an exclusionary, Christian movement.”5. The recurring theme of how religion is divisive. “History had proven to the framers of the US Constitution that religion is divisive. They separated religion from government to avoid the mistakes of past regimes.”6. Exposes Project Blitz. “Project Blitz encapsulates the problem Christian nationalism poses. First, it seeks to alter our history, values, and national identity. Then it codifies Christian privilege in the law, favoring Christians above others. Finally, it legally disfavors the nonreligious, non-Christians, and minorities such as the LGBTQ community, by, for instance, permitting discrimination against them in places of public accommodation or in employment.”7. Discusses the founders’ intention. “Two facts illustrate the founders’ intentions to build this wall. First, our Constitution is deliberately godless. There are no references to gods, goddesses, or divine intervention. The omission was not an oversight. Supernatural power was rejected in favor of the natural power contained in the first three words: “We the People.””8. Discusses the source of morality. “Religion gets its morality from us, not the other way around.”9. Provocative statements throughout. “In other words, what most religions label absolute morality is simply their personal morality given divine sanction.”10. A debunk fest. “The Golden Rule is not a Judeo-Christian principle. It is a universal human principle.”11. Compelling arguments. “The founding documents of the United States revere and protect freedom above all else. The bible worships and demands the opposite: obedience, submission, and servility.” “Blind obedience to and fear of an omnipotent being is tyranny, not freedom. At its core, Judeo-Christianity’s insistence on obedience and fear conflicts with America’s essential value.”12. Christianity in conflict with our founding principles. “The entire Christian religion is based on a singular claim that violates the principle of personal responsibility so critical to our systems: that Jesus died for your sins.”13. Discusses the foundation of our godless Constitution. “Our Constitution is the product of human thought and perseverance, not faith.” “Reason and experiment dispel error; faith propagates it.”14. Dissects the Ten Commandments and how they conflict with the Constitution. Take the third commandment. Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain. “Blasphemy laws and religious restrictions on speech are un-American. This commandment stands opposed to all that makes our country great.”15. Biblical passages that are incompatible with the Constitution or common sense. “Jesus himself lays down the most vile and controlling sexual law by making it impossible to obey the adultery commandment: “But I say to you that everyone who looks at a woman with lust has already committed adultery with her in his heart.””16. Discusses how capitalism is prohibited by the tenth commandment. “The particular thought the tenth commandment prohibits—covetousness—is itself a problem for the Christian nationalist. Even Americans with no historical or legal training should recognize that coveting is the basis of American capitalism and our consumer society. Both would fail without the desire to get what we don’t have. Coveting created America.”17. The distinction between a moral code and a religious one. “The alleged moral and ethical superiority of the Ten Commandments is important to the Christian Nation myth and, like the myth, is inaccurate. The Ten Commandments are not a moral code; they are a religious code. That distinction, often lost, is crucial. A moral code is a set of principles that help us analyze and reach moral solutions in the innumerable dilemmas life presents. A religious code is a set of rules based on divine authority—its only “morality” is to obey, to follow.”18. Great quotes. ““It is much easier to alarm people than to inform them.” — William R. Davie, delegate to the Constitutional Convention, in a letter to James Iredell, during the run-up to North Carolina’s ratifying convention, 1788”19. The evil of slavery. “Slavery is sanctified and permitted in the bible. Jesus even discusses the proper force with which to beat one’s slaves in Luke 12:45–49, a passage the Southern states often used to justify slavery.”20. Discusses the divisive motto. “The presidential tradition of troubling deaf heaven with bootless cries by closing presidential remarks with the phrase “God bless America” dates to Nixon and is rooted in one of the worst scandals to mar the presidency. Nixon used religion to distract Americans from Watergate.”21. Links to footnotes.Negatives:1. No visual supplementary material.2. No formal bibliography.3. Having to wait so long for such an excellent book.In summary, this is an important and reference quality book. We needed this book and Andrew Seidel provides a truly patriotic resource to fight back Christian nationalists that will stop at nothing to turn our country into a theocracy. A wonderful resource, I can’t tout this book enough. Get it, a high recommendation!Further recommendations: “Why the Religious Right Is Wrong about Separation of Church and State” by Robert Boston, “Nonbeliever Nation” by David Niose, “Atheists Can’t Be Republicans” by Cj Werleman, “The Dark Side of Christian History” by Helen Ellerbe, “Atheism for Dummies” by Dale McGowan, “Birth Control, Insurance Coverage, & the Religious Right” by A.F. Alexander, “50 popular beliefs that people think are true” by Guy P. Harrison, “Godless” by Dan Barker, “Freethinkers” by Susan Jacoby, “Republican Gomorrah” by Max Blumenthal, “American Fascists” by Chris Hedges, “Doubt” by Jennifer Michael Hecht, “Society Without God” by Phil Zuckerman, and “Why are you Atheists so Angry?” by Greta Christina.
M**.
Very well presented research
Love the straight forward, in-depth, researched details to help ANYONE understand in simple terms how America got to the current situation we’re in now. This book is a MUST read. Not just for understanding the founding father’s intent and what life was like during the founding of America but to also combat the sheer ignorance threatening American democracy with religious extremism. Stay educated. It’s literally the only way we can protect democracy. GET THIS BOOK
A**X
Great presentation and excellent historiography
Seidel offers a meticulously researched and compelling examination of the United States’ origins, decisively debunking the notion that it was founded as a Christian nation. Seidel expertly contextualizes the Enlightenment influences and the Founding Fathers’ deliberate choice to separate church and state, drawing from a variety of primary sources to highlight their commitment to religious freedom and pluralism. His clear, engaging writing makes complex historical arguments accessible to those looking to understand the roots of secularism.
C**A
Enlightening, Thoroughly-researched, Accessible, and Well-written; a must-read!
I bought this book after finding Andrew Seidel via the content I watch on YouTube, and it did not disappoint. I had read the Constitution and knew that the free exercise and establishment clauses are designed to keep religion out of government as much as the reverse, but I had no idea just how convoluted and myth-based Christian nationalist ideas are. Seidel clearly, intelligently and methodically - as is his way - debunks every argument upon which Christian nationalists base their insistence that their brand of Christianity should infiltrate the US government. From the "Ten Commandments" (which turn out to not actually be a set of just 10 clear commandments, in the first place) to the supposed faiths of the Founding Fathers, to America's faith-based mottos like "in God we trust," Seidel explains how and why these became arguments for Christian nationalism, and why they are all either baseless or irrelevant.Seidel then ends with a call to action: we must fight for the separation of Church/church and State, and take alarm at the first encroachment on our liberties - in this case, our liberty to practice *or not practice* any religion, as we see fit. It is also easy for a layperson such as myself to read, so never fear that Seidel's language will be too difficult or confusing!This book is perfect both for those who believe that the United States is a Christian country, and for those (like me) who think it is not but don't have the words or the information to confirm that suspicion. I could not possibly rate this book any higher, nor write a sufficiently glowing review! Seidel sets out with a clear purpose, and he succeeds to the highest degree. A must-read!
M**F
One of the better reads of this genre
Cannot top previous positive reviews. However, if one is wants to get a good start on real nature of the constitution and its distinction as a secular work, this is the book. Fact filled, good arguments, and faces counterargument head on, much as a good lawyer would.You know you have a good book if it was burned, as it was.The only problem is the lack of novel solutions to the religious nationalists. Not that the author didn't present his arguments, but logic and rational thought do not get through to the nationalists. The author needed to step up his game. A chapter or two on something innovative to crack dangerous beliefs would have warranted five stars, maybe six.Mike Taleff
B**S
I love this book.
Over the years, I have had many discussions about why the US is NOT a Christian country, but a country with lots of Christians. Every argument why is in this book, and he has the receipts, from the founding father's words on. A great read!
W**Y
Well written and thought provoking
This very interesting lawyer does research and legal work for the Freedom From Religion Foundation. One of the more interesting facts found in this work is that the founding fathers of the nation tried to write a declaration that specifically stated that the Church and the State ,must remain as separate entities , that there is no requirement to subscribe to a religion to hold public office. He goes on to show how through misinterpretation and misunderstanding of the document , the original meaning of that declaration has been lost and manipulated by self interest groups. A book that explains the real meaning , and I think, one that folks in the United States need to read and begin to apply.
A**R
Unfortunately will not be read be enough Americans
Although this topic should be mandatory in high scholl level classes. Along with something like comparative religion!
D**Y
The creeping contamination of the US Constitution by religion now revealed.
Simply brilliant!A carefully researched analysis of the morality of the Christian bible v the American Constitution with copious reference sources. It's an eye opener for any student of the bible and any student of American politics and history. As a British reader, I found it a revelation particularly at this time of turmoil in British politics. The book carefully demolishes the arguments of Christian claims for the biblical basis of morality and confirms the quality of the work done by the Founders of the US Constitution.With numerous examples revealed in the book, christians should take note of activities of modern political "believers" who are prostituting their faith for political means. The true benefits of having a secular government insulated from the church are clearly demonstrated in this book.One can only hope that some of those intellects that are suppressed by their faith can be cracked open to see the real truth.
K**N
Great book. Very important.
This is by far the best book I've read on the subject. Other books that are critical of christian nationalism are a little bit too "woke" for my tastes. I just want the info, i can think for myself.
M**S
Like literary candy for this Canadian.
Wow. What a whirlwind tour de force analysis of the constitution and explanation of what America's forefathers intended. It will be my go to book if I ever have to challenge the notion that the US is a Christian nation. Fascinating and entertaining at the same time. Highly recommended.
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