John Adams on Atheism
Jonathan Rowe on Mar 27th 2006
I was going to save this John Adams quotation for a later time, but since Andrew Sullivan has taken to defending the rights of atheists and invoking the Founders to boot, I figured I’d feature John Adams’s thoughts on the matter (taken from James H. Hutson’s book of quotations on the Founders and religion).
“Government has no Right to hurt a hair of the head of an Atheist for his Opinions. Let him have a care of his Practices.”
John Adams to John Quincy Adams, June 16, 1816. Adams Papers (microfilm), reel 432, Library of Congress; as seen in Hutson, p. 20.
This is important to note: The Founders largely followed Locke whose teachings on religious liberty were revolutionary for their time. However, for our time, Locke may not seem so liberal. He wouldn’t extend (at least not in his textual arguments) religious rights to atheists or Catholics. Yet, our Locke imbibed Founders took Locke’s principles to their logical conclusion and did believe in extending the full rights of conscience to atheists, polytheists, heretics and infidels. Or in Jefferson’s words, “the Jew and the Gentile, the Christian and Mahometan, the Hindoo, and Infidel of every denomination.”
Filed in The Basement, The Belfry
[...] Finally, regarding what exact rights atheists have under the Constitution, the letter of the Constitution protects “religion,” not Christianity, but “religion.” The relevant clauses state government shall “make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof,” and that “no religious test shall ever be required as a qualification to any office or public trust under the United States.” Thus, whatever rights or restrictions apply to “religion” apply to all religions, not just Christianity. And if atheism qualifies, in the constitutional sense, as a religion, atheism is equally protected under all of those clauses. That is the strict letter of the law, regardless of the spirit (which preferred citizens to be religious, but didn’t care what religion, even if non-Christian). In terms of natural rights, the Founders thought atheism too was protected. As John Adams once put it: [...]