So there's a great book by Michael Walzer called What It Means to Be an American.
And one of the things that he says is that for centuries, really from the time of the
Greeks, political philosophers believed that the only way to have diversity in a society
was for it to be an empire or a dictatorship.
If you wanted a democracy it had to be homogenous—one ethnic group, one racial group, and especially
one religion.
And then he ends that section and he begins the next section with the line: "…Until
the United States of America."
We are the first mass-scale religiously diverse democracy, and I think that's a remarkable
thing.
And when a religiously diverse democracy works well it's a sight to behold.
You have low levels of prejudice, you have strong social cohesion, you have high levels
of social capital, you have respect for different identity communities, you have the narrative
of a diverse society that binds that society with a sense of unity.
And a lot of what Interfaith Youth Core is about is helping America continue to be a
religiously diverse democracy that we all ought to be proud of.
So, what strikes me most about the founding fathers (and a set of important figures before
the founding fathers, people like Roger Williams and the people who drafted the Flushing Remonstrance,
that's 140 years before the founding fathers), was that this set of characters imagined a
religiously diverse democracy.
And a big part of that is the separation of church and state, and a part of that, of course,
is to protect the state from the church and to protect religious communities from undue
interference by the state.
And it is also, significantly, about the welcoming of contributions from diverse religious communities.
And so it's not like the founding fathers were principally very devout people, but they
recognized the importance of the civic contributions of religious communities and they certainly
wanted those communities to flourish.
Let me give you a couple of examples of this.
So Benjamin Franklin when he lived in Philadelphia made proactive donations to the building funds
of every religious community that he could find in Philadelphia, different communities
of Christians, a Jewish community, and he built a hall so at the pulpit of this hall
would be open to the preaching of anybody.
If the Grand Mufti of Constantinople wants to send somebody preaching about Islam this
pulpit is here for his service.
That's not just freedom of religion, that's welcoming the contributions of diverse religious
communities.
George Washington, when a Jewish leader in the late 18th century says to him, "What's
going to happen to my community, to us Jews now that we have a new nation, a constitution,
and you are the president?"
And George Washington writes, in a famous document in American history called the Letter
to the Hebrew Congregation of Newport Rhode Island, he writes, "This government will
give to bigotry no sanction and to persecution no assistance.
May the children of the stock of Abraham sit in safety under their own vine and fig, and
let there be none to make them afraid."
So where is the sense that these different religious communities are going to help make
up the civil society that is the United States of America.
I think about it as a potluck nation, and of course, that's a play on the term "melting
pot."
And what I don't like about "the melting pot" is obviously this notion that you have
to kind of melt away your identity or your distinctiveness.
I think what makes America strong is not that different communities melt away their identities,
it's that they bring their identities to the common table in the way we think about
a potluck.
And a potluck is boring if everybody brings Wonder Bread and peanut butter.
A potluck is wonderful and nutritious and festive when people bring the various dishes
that are distinctive to their identity.
That's how I think about interfaith: America is a variety of communities, a variety of
orientations around religion, as I said it from Atheists to Zoroastrian, are contributing
the best of who they are for the commons.
If different communities don't contribute, the nation doesn't feast.
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