Updated: 4:59 p.m. ET May 20, 2005
May 20 -
A Jewish friend after making her
first trip to Israel said, “This
would be a great place if they
could figure out how to separate
government and religion.” I was
reminded of her sentiments this
week as the U.S. Senate began
debate on two of President Bush’s
judicial nominees, Priscilla Owen
and Janice Rogers Brown, hostages
in the ongoing culture war between
born-again religionists and the
more-or-less secular society the
Founding Fathers envisioned.
When
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist
accuses Democrats who oppose Owen
and Brown of wanting to “kill, to
defeat, to assassinate these
nominees,” he transforms political
rhetoric into an apocalyptic
vision that is better suited to
Bible class than the floor of the
Senate. What’s behind his passion
is naked ambition. He wants to be
president and he’s courting the
religious right. The scary part is
that this over-the-top wooing of
God-obsessed Christians is
embraced by a growing number of
Republican senators, all
apparently sincere in their
religiosity and some, like Frist,
with presidential aspirations.
Stripping
Senate Democrats of their right to
filibuster judicial nominees is a
prelude to a broader assault on
the judiciary known as “court
stripping.” Alabama Republican
Richard Shelby last year
introduced The Constitution
Restoration Act of 2004 to
acknowledge God as the sovereign
source of law and threaten judges
with impeachment should they
uphold separation of church and
state. Former Alabama Chief
Justice Roy Moore appeared with
Shelby at the press conference
announcing the legislation. Moore
is now touring the country with
the granite block depicting the
Ten Commandments that he was
ordered to remove from the state
court house.
Shelby
reintroduced the bill in March of
this year when the Terri Schiavo
case was in the headlines. His
press secretary says the two
events were unrelated, yet if
anything like Shelby imagines
comes to pass, it would turn our
constitutional democracy into a
theocracy.
The legislation says no court
has jurisdiction to rule on issues
surrounding God, the flag,
separation of church and state and
establishment of religion. The
wording is broad enough to remove
from civil law all matters of
personal status, like whom you can
marry and issues related to child
custody and child support.
“We’re lulled into thinking it’s
too ridiculous to pass,” says
Judith Lichtman with the National
Partnership for Women & Families.
“But it’s the genius of the right
to make what is really radical
accepted in the mainstream.”
My friend who visited Israel got a
sense of what it would be like to
live in a state where religion
rules. In Israel, there is no
civil law. The country is a
theocracy. If you want to marry,
only an Orthodox rabbi can perform
the ceremony, not Reform or
Conservative, or priests for that
matter. In issues of divorce
within this religious context, men
are strongly favored. In Muslim
cultures, the mullahs rule with
some allowing the husband to
repeat three times, “I divorce
thee,” and the bond is broken.