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Religious-freedom groups mourn Kennedy, cite church-state views Print E-mail
By Robert Dilday and Robert Marus   
Wednesday, August 26, 2009

WASHINGTON (ABP) -- Religious-liberty advocates added their voices Aug. 26 to the thousands mourning the death of longtime Massachusetts Sen. Edward Kennedy after a battle with brain cancer.

Supporters of strong separation between church and state lauded Kennedy's longtime advocacy for a strong interpretation of both of the First Amendment’s religion clauses -- the Establishment Clause, which bars government advancement of religion; and the Free Exercise Clause, which bars government infringements on the religious freedom of individuals or groups.

The late Sen. Edward Kennedy at the 2008 Democratic National Convention (Senate.gov).

The late senator “was a great champion of church-state separation,” said Barry Lynn, executive director of Americans United for Separation of Church and State, in a prepared statement. “It’s not just that he consistently voted to support that principle -- he really got it. He deeply understood that only a high and firm wall of separation between church and state could protect our liberties. He knew the reasons why our Founders established church-state separation and why we need to preserve it. He got how church-state separation protects the rights of both religious and non-religious people.”

Lynn cited Kennedy’s fierce opposition to a famous attempt by his former colleague, the late Sen. Jesse Helms (R-N.C.), to push through the Senate a constitutional amendment enabling government-sanctioned school prayer. He also noted Kennedy’s crucial opposition to failed Supreme Court nominee Robert Bork, who was opposed by many religious-freedom activists because of his support for government endorsements of religion.

But, Lynn added, “At the same time, Sen. Kennedy was a consistent supporter of the free exercise of religion and deplored any effort to chisel away at this cherished right of the American people.”

Don Byrd, who blogs for the Washington-based Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty, said the scion of America’s most famous political dynasty was a “lion of religious liberty.” He cited a famous speech on church-state relations that Kennedy delivered at Liberty University (then known as Liberty Baptist College) in 1983.

The event paired two of the most disparate figures in American political life at the time -- Liberty founder and chancellor Jerry Falwell, whose Moral Majority was then racking up conservative victories across the nation, and Kennedy, an icon of the political left.

“Actually, a number of people in Washington were surprised I was invited to speak here -- and even more surprised when I accepted the invitation,” Kennedy told his audience on that October day. “They seem to think that it’s easier for a camel to pass through the eye of the needle than for a Kennedy to come to the campus of Liberty Baptist College.”

Ted Kennedy, at center in an undated photo, was raised with a strong emphasis on faith by his very large Irish Catholic family (Senate.gov).

Kennedy’s Catholicism alone might have put him out of sync with Liberty’s fundamentalist Baptist roots. But the senator was often at odds with his own church, usually over the very issues on which Falwell would have joined forces with Catholics -- embryonic stem-cell research, same-sex marriage and abortion rights.

Nevertheless, in his address at Liberty, which he titled “Faith, Truth and Tolerance in America,” Kennedy pleaded for respect among differing religious groups.

“I am an American and a Catholic; I love my country and treasure my faith,” he said. “But I do not assume that my conception of patriotism or policy is invariably correct, or that my convictions about religion should command any greater respect than any other faith in this pluralistic society. I believe there surely is such a thing as truth, but who among us can claim a monopoly on it?”

While advocating for a robust separation of church and state, Kennedy insisted, this “cannot mean an absolute separation between moral principles and political power.”

“The separation of church and state can sometimes be frustrating for women and men of religious faith,” he continued. “They may be tempted to misuse government in order to impose a value which they cannot persuade others to accept. But once we succumb to that temptation, we step onto a slippery slope where everyone’s freedom is at risk. Those who favor censorship should recall that one of the first books ever burned was the first English translation of the Bible.... Let us never forget: Today’s Moral Majority could become tomorrow’s persecuted minority.”

The vision Kennedy held out was of an “America where the power of faith will always burn brightly, but where no modern Inquisition of any kind will ever light the fires of fear, coercion or angry division.”

Jerry Falwell Jr., son of the elder Falwell who died in 2007, was in his third year at Liberty when Kennedy gave his speech.

“When he spoke ... he was well received and, even though the students did not agree with much of what he said, they were polite and kind,” the younger Falwell, now the school’s chancellor, wrote in a recent issue of Liberty Journal.

Falwell said the Massachusetts senator joined his family for dinner in their Lynchburg, Va., home and that ties between Kennedy -- famous in the Senate for his bipartisan friendships -- and the Falwells continued long after the speech.

“I applied [the next year] for admission to the law school at the University of Virginia, where Kennedy had attended,” said Falwell. “He volunteered to write a letter of recommendation for me. I am sure the faculty was surprised to see a Kennedy recommending a Falwell, but I guess it helped because I was admitted.”

Later, said Falwell, Kennedy asked Jerry Falwell to pray with Kennedy’s mother, then nearly 100 years old and in frail health. And in 2005, “when my father was hospitalized with severe pulmonary edema, one of the first letters he received was from Kennedy,” said Falwell. “The letter was heartfelt and encouraging, wishing my father a quick recovery.”

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This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it   is managing editor of the Virginia Baptist Religious Herald. This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it   is managing editor and Washington bureau chief for Associated Baptist Press.





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Comments (10)Add Comment
M.Div., Midwestern Baptist Theolocial Seminary
written by Gene Garman, August 27, 2009
For clarification, I would suggest the words "church and state" are not in the Constitution and are a distortion of what the Constitution actually says: it is "religion" which shall not be established, that is, the whole subject of "religion," not just a church.

Further, the Free Exercise Clause word "prohibiting" is defined as totally forbidding, which means all actions are, therefore, subject to law and not a license for anarchy. All actions are subject to the laws of the land, regardless of religion beliefs.

Even though I used to be on the Americans United staff, we separationists would be much further ahead in the constitutional struggle if proper wording of the religion commandments were taught and applied as written. My expanded discussion of this point is recorded in the book The Religion Commandments in the Constitution: A Primer.

My point is simple and hopefully helpful, words mean things and an accurate use of the Constitution's wording in respect to religion provides a potentially better understanding and result in Court and in the public square.

Powerful Man, but Great??
written by mcskinny, August 27, 2009
I did not like the idea of government health insurance when medicaid and medicare were first proposed.
I did not like the idea of adding prescription drugs to both of these government insurance programs.
I did not like the idea of abortion as a method of contraception and especially abhor late-term abortions and those who vote to keep these practices alive.
I did not like the idea of obtaining stem cells for research from aborted human fetus.
I did not like the idea of anyone who leaves the scene of an automobile accident involving a death receiving only a 60 day probation because of who he is.
I did not like the idea of anyone showing up for work on numerous occasions so impaired that they slur their speech, even if it is the US Senate.

I am sorry, I suppose the glowing remarks about such an individual are another indication of just how out of step I am with so many of the actions of Southern Baptists Leadership of today.
Charlie Mac

Heath Care - From everyone who has been given much, much will be required...
written by bbagbygrose, August 27, 2009
Wow Charlie Mac, that's a LOT of "I do not like" statements.

It doesn't seem fair that senior citizens in America receive three dollars for every dollar they put in and then that they are the folks who are most opposed to socialized medicine. And socialized medicine is exactly what they enjoy every day. Medicare is social medicine. Medicare is government-run health care. I have not heard of any senior citizens refusing the benefits of Medicare, benefits for which they did not pay. It is those of us in the younger generations who are paying for senior citizens to have health care, all the while they oppose the same for us.
We spend more on health care than any country in the world and yet we have millions who do not have access to health in the his country.
That is a sin!
"From everyone who has been given much, much will be required; and to whom they entrusted much, of him they will ask all the more."
Senator Edward Moore Kennedy was a great man!
written by bbagbygrose, August 27, 2009
He will be remembered for his selfless service to the underprivileged.

This is someone who had the financial resources to live his entire life without working a day.

And yet he dedicated himself to working to improve the lives of the "least of these."

Thank God for people like Senator Ted Kennedy!
Best Yet
written by mcskinny, August 29, 2009
You know, I think the Pope said it best.
Charlie Mac
Wall of Separation?
written by tenor1, August 30, 2009
Just one question: Now that this "wall of separation" has been canonized by those who feel that our government and religion in general have no common issues or ancestry, just what was our government, from the president on down, doing in advancing religious exercise via a weekend-long televised extravaganza worthy of a pharoah? Where was the ACLU when needed to just step in and say this cannot be a government function since the taxpayers are paying good money to maintain a secular government? Perhaps the ACLU has too busy figuring how to get the thousands of crosses, an offensive religious symbol so some, removed from Arlington National Cemetary. Okay that was two questions.
Crosses at Arlington???
written by mcskinny, August 30, 2009
Please either visit Arlington National Cemetery or at least go to a web site with pictures of Arlington Cemetery and count how many crosses you see. Why do Christians fall for so many of the false rumors that spread so quickly across the web? Far too often we do not think for ourselves, we simply believe whatever another Christian sends. (or says from the pulpit)
There are very few white crosses marking graves at Arlington. Anyone know, or willing to guess, whose graves are so marked?
Charlie Mac
Great is as great does
written by tenor1, August 30, 2009
And if you want to call a habitually drunk, womanizing, born-rich liberal "great", that is your privilege. It is easy to be a liberal when you were rich the day you were born, never held a job, never had to balance your finite salary check and resources with government's ever-increasing, voracious appetite for taxes.
Yes, Christian Crosses
written by tenor1, August 31, 2009
Virtually every marker is permanently engraved with either a Christian cross, a Jewish star, or no symbol at all according to the religious preference of the individual. Military chaplains have further options. Been there and wept.
My most vivid memory of Ted Kennedy...
written by Ken, September 04, 2009
I remember seeing an editorial cartoon in 1986. At the time, William Rehnquist was being considered for Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. Senator Kennedy was leading a massive smear campaign to derail the nomination.

The cartoon depicted Kennedy sitting at his desk in the Senate. He was dripping wet, covered with fish and seaweed. On one side of him was a steering wheel; on the other side was a sign that said "Chappaquiddick." Kennedy was saying, "Frankly, Justice Rehnquist, I don't think a man with your past history is qualified to be Chief Justice!"

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