In the Founding Fathers We Trust?
Kevin Schultz
"In God We Trust" first appeared on U.S. coins during the Civil War in 1864. Nearly a hundred years later, in 1956, an act of Congress made it the national motto. It began appearing on paper currency the following year, in 1957. So it's ascendancy is directly related to two wars, one hot, one cold, but both desperate. Perhaps "There are no atheists in foxholes" didn't have the right ring to it?
"E pluribus unum," on the other hand, was never the official motto, but it did appear on the official seal of the United States, and has since 1782. Interestingly, it's inclusion on the official seal emerged from a recommendation by a committee of Founding Fathers, who had gathered in 1776 no less to craft the symbols of the new nation.
So if we're going by strict constructionism, then, "E pluribus unum" wins the national motto game hands down. But of course our legal body is a flexible thing, changing with the times. So we've got "In God We Trust."
But "E pluribus unum" makes more sense in another historical way too. Most of the Founding Fathers were Christians of some sort or another, and most believed that a religion of future rewards and punishments was a vital part of 18th-century statecraft, but they almost to a man believed that there were more types of religion in the United States than could be described and upheld by a national body. After all, when Ben Franklin asked for a moment of prayer to help ease a particularly thorny debate in the Constitutional Convention, only three or four Founding Fathers thought it was a good idea. Instead, we got the First Amendment.
Perhaps last week's congressional vote to reaffirm the national motto as "In God We Trust" is just another reminder that those trying to prove America's distinct Christian heritage and mission are more interested in winning for souls for Jesus than in understanding the past. Or maybe the War on Christmas really is a real thing. Indeed, there are no atheists in the North Pole.
"In God We Trust" first appeared on U.S. coins during the Civil War in 1864. Nearly a hundred years later, in 1956, an act of Congress made it the national motto. It began appearing on paper currency the following year, in 1957. So it's ascendancy is directly related to two wars, one hot, one cold, but both desperate. Perhaps "There are no atheists in foxholes" didn't have the right ring to it?
"E pluribus unum," on the other hand, was never the official motto, but it did appear on the official seal of the United States, and has since 1782. Interestingly, it's inclusion on the official seal emerged from a recommendation by a committee of Founding Fathers, who had gathered in 1776 no less to craft the symbols of the new nation.
So if we're going by strict constructionism, then, "E pluribus unum" wins the national motto game hands down. But of course our legal body is a flexible thing, changing with the times. So we've got "In God We Trust."
But "E pluribus unum" makes more sense in another historical way too. Most of the Founding Fathers were Christians of some sort or another, and most believed that a religion of future rewards and punishments was a vital part of 18th-century statecraft, but they almost to a man believed that there were more types of religion in the United States than could be described and upheld by a national body. After all, when Ben Franklin asked for a moment of prayer to help ease a particularly thorny debate in the Constitutional Convention, only three or four Founding Fathers thought it was a good idea. Instead, we got the First Amendment.
Perhaps last week's congressional vote to reaffirm the national motto as "In God We Trust" is just another reminder that those trying to prove America's distinct Christian heritage and mission are more interested in winning for souls for Jesus than in understanding the past. Or maybe the War on Christmas really is a real thing. Indeed, there are no atheists in the North Pole.
Comments
Thomas Foster up at DePaul has sketched out a similar argument with a little more background detail over at HNN. Reinforces a lot of what you raise here.
http://hnn.us/articles/god-we-trust-or-e-pluribus-unum-founding-fathers-preferred-latter-motto
Thanks for the lead. And just so we're clear, I wrote my piece on the 7th, a day before his appeared! I swear!
Three Chicago guys, barking up the same tree,
Kevin
"In God We Trust" seems merely aspirational next to the swaggering assertion that "God has favored our undertakings"; "[A] New Order of the Ages" sounds like that American Exceptionalism that gives some people the willies.
Perhaps "In God We Trust" ain't so bad after all, and we could chill back on this.
Tom, I think chilling is a good idea on this issue, which is why I can't quite figure out why congress would feel the need to do this useless act when they could be, you know, governing. Perhaps "In God We Trust" should go the same irrelevant way as "Annuit coeptis"?
And Chris, you're right: there aren't many atheists in foxholes.
It certainly was a piece of political theater, a smoke-'em-out, although I'm not sure the president got the better of it by making the same objection as you do here.
What I was hoping for was Rep. Keith Ellison, our only Muslim, voting in the affirmative, but I see he voted only "present."
When it comes to the phrase "E Pluribus Unum", its vagueness can be interpreted by so many in different ways. One book we had to review for my Historian's Craft course this semester that discussed this simple motto was in Diana Eck's "A New Religious America" where she tries to make certain claims that suggest that this phrase was not to mean "From many religions, one religion." (pg.31)
An interesting take on what this motto means.
When it comes to the phrase "E Pluribus Unum", its vagueness can be interpreted by so many in different ways. One book we had to review for my Historian's Craft course this semester that discussed this simple motto was in Diana Eck's "A New Religious America" where she tries to make certain claims that suggest that this phrase was not to mean "From many religions, one religion." (pg.31)
An interesting take on what this motto means.