Title: Establishment Clause
1Establishment Clause
- Compare the 1st and 2nd Great Awakenings
2Establishment and Free Exercise Clause often
conflict with each other
- In schools, the religion issue is most prevalent
- If a student raises his hand and asks, Teacher,
can we say an opening prayer before this test?
3Establishment and Free Exercise Clause often
conflict with each other
- If the teacher says
- Yes! It looks like establishment of
religion. - No! It is denying a student free exercise.
4The Establishment Clause
- A government cannot promote religion
- What is the purpose of the Establishment clause?
5The Establishment Clause
- Governments can
- Teach about religions in school
- Allow voluntary prayer in many examples
- Transport students to a religious school
- Read Bible for culture or literacy content
6The Establishment Clause
- Governments cannot
- Set a state religion
- Government cannot order a prayer
- Teach religious doctrine in the school
- Pay seminary teachers
- Teach creationism
7The Supreme Court and the Establishment Clause
- The Supreme Court has held fast to the rule of
strict separation between church and state when
issues of prayer in public school are involved.
8Establishment Clause - The Free Exercise Clause
- Congress shall make no law prohibiting the free
exercise thereof (religion) is designed to
prevent the government from interfering with the
practice of religion. - This freedom is not absolute.
- Several religious practices have been ruled
unconstitutional including - Snake handling
- Use of illegal drugs
- polygamy
- Nonetheless, the Court has made it clear that the
government must remain NEUTRAL toward religion.
9Establishment Clause See you at the Pole!
- Student participation in before-or after-school
events, such as see you at the pole, is
permissible. - School officials, acting in an official capacity,
may neither discourage nor encourage
participation in such as event.
101st vs. 2nd G.A. vs. Civil War Revivals (3rd GA)
111st Great Awakening
- Emphasize the individual
- Call back to RELIGION
- all men are equal,
- the true value of a man lies in his moral
behavior, not his class - that all men can be saved
12GREAT AWAKENING PART DEUX
- Growing liberalism starting in the early 1800's
- Revivals on Southern Frontier
- Second Great Awakening introduced new sects
- Second Great Awakening
- camp meetings occurred
- thousands would become saved
- Revivals stimulated
- church membership
- variety of humanitarian reforms
13GREAT AWAKENING PART DEUX
- Evangelicalism became emphasized during the time
of the Second Great Awakening - A belief in the need for personal conversion (or
being "born again") - Actively expressing and sharing the gospel
- A high regard for biblical authority, especially
Biblical inerrancy - An emphasis on teachings that proclaim the death
and resurrection of Jesus.
14Idealism in the Second Great Awakening
- Emotionalism not as high as 1st GA
- Religion began to influence other ideals such as
- freedom from cruelty of war
- discrimination
- intoxicated drinking
- slavery
- There were increased plantation missions held for
slaves - Methodists and Presbyterians divide on the issue
of slavery in 1830's-1840's - Idealistic religion on a utopian socialism, moral
reform, and other ideas came to Christianity
15Important Sects and Ideas
- Two other sects that were born were Methodists
and Baptists - Encouraged women to pray aloud in public and
denounced both alcohol and slavery - Both these sects stressed personal conversion and
explored a democratic control of church affairs
16Divisiveness Caused by the Second Great Awakening
- Second Great Awakening widened lines between
class and region. - This split between North and Southern Faith and
ideals in religion - considered the first sign of splitting
- followed by a split in politics and the Union.
- Protestants encouraged increase in educational
learning and also importance of education in
every household
17More religious movements
- Unitarianism - emphasized reason as the path to
perfection faith in the individual - Transcendentalist - emphasized that truth could
be discovered intuitively by observing nature and
relating it to ones own emotional and spiritual
experience. - Mormons
- African American Church Similar to Moses and
releasing Jews from Egypt
18Second Great Awakening and Abolition
- Second Great Awakening later affected the
Abolitionist Movement - Second Great Awakening now inflamed the hearts
of many abolitionists against the sin of
slavery. (Bailey). - Supporting abolitionist movement, Protestant
beliefs displayed a variety of humanitarian
reform - Church Attendance decreased later in the later
1800's compared to the ¾ of 23 million Americans
living in the country - Overview Religion in the 1800's was greatly
influence by the Second Great Awakening, and
became more liberal and divided in North and
South and Class Status