There is no dissonance in these declarations. There is a universal language pervading them all, having one meaning. They affirm and reaffirm that this is a religious nation. These are not individual sayings, declarations of private persons. They are organic utterances. They speak the voice of the entire people. While because of a general recognition of this truth the question has seldom been presented to the courts, yet we find that in Updegraph v. Comm., 11 Serg. & R. 394, 400, it was decided that, "Christianity, general Christianity, is, and always has been, a part of the common law of Pennsylvania; * * * not Christianity with an established church and tithes and spiritual courts, but Christianity with liberty of conscience to all men." And in People v. Ruggles, 8 Johns. 290, 294, 295, Chancellor KENT, the great commentator on American law, speaking as chief justice of the supreme court of New York, said: "The people of this state, in common with the people of this country, profess the general doctrines of Christianity as the rule of their faith and practice; and to scandalize the author of those doctrines in not only, in a religious point of view, extremely impious, but, even in respect to the obligations due to society, is a gross violation of decency and good order. * * * The free, equal, and undisturbed enjoyment of religious opinion, whatever it may be, and free and decent discussions on any religious [143 U.S. 457, 471] subject, is granted and secured; but to revile, with malicious and blasphemous contempt, the religion professed by almost the whole community is an abuse of that right. Nor are we bound by any expressions in the constitution, as some have strangely supposed, either not to punish at all, or to punish indiscriminately the like attacks upon the religion of Mahomet or of the Grand Lama; and for this plain reason that the case assumes that we are a Christian people, and the morality of the country is deeply ingrafted upon Christianity, and not upon the doctrines or worship of those impostors." And in the famous case of Vidal v. Girard's Ex'rs, 2 How. 127, 198, this court, while sustaining the will of Mr. Girard, with its provisions for the creation of a college into which no minister should be permitted to enter, observed: "it is also said, and truly, that the Christian religion is a part of the common law of Pennsylvania."
http://members.aol.com/TestOath/HolyTrinity.htm
>But one of our principle
[sic]
>Founding Fathers, Thomas Jefferson, elaborated about
>the history of common law in his letter to Thomas Cooper on February 10,
>1814:
Jefferson's views on this issue were wacky, and were not accepted by
anyone else, and had no impact on the Constitution or the Supreme
Court for generations. Only recently have his embarrassing views
been exhumed.
>"For we know that the common law is that system of
law which was introduced
>by the Saxons on their settlement in England, and altered from time to time
>by proper legislative authority from that time to the date of Magna Charta,
>which terminates the period of the common law. . .
What? "Terminates" the common law? The common law is in effect
to this day, unless superceded by statute. Notice the decision of
the US Supreme Court against the Mormons in 1890:
It is true, no formal declaration has been made by congress or the territorial legislature as to what system of laws shall prevail there. But it is apparent from the language of the organic act, which was passed September 9, 1850, (9 St. 453,) that it was the intention of congress that the system of common law and equity which generally prevails in this country should be operative in the territory of Utah, except as it might be altered by legislation. In the ninth section of the act it is declared that the supreme and district courts of the territory 'shall possess chancery as well as common-law jurisdiction,' and the whole phraseology of the act implies the same thing. The territorial legislature, in like manner, in the first section of the act regulating procedure, approved December 30, 1852, declared that all the courts of the territory should have 'law and equity jurisdiction in civil cases.' In view of these significant provisions, we infer that the general system of common law and equity, as it prevails in this country, is the basis of the laws of the territory of Utah. We may therefore assume that the doctrine of charities is applicable to the territory, and that congress, in the exercise of its plenary legislative power over it, was entitled to carry out that law and put it in force, in its application to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.
The common law was not "terminated" in the middle
ages.
>This settlement took place
>about the middle of the fifth century. But Christianity was not introduced
>till the seventh century; the conversion of the first christian king of
>the Heptarchy having taken place about the year 598, and that of the last
>about 686. Here then, was a space of two hundred years, during which the
>common law was in existence, and Christianity no part of it."
Big deal. After Christians threw out paganism and Christianized the
law system, the common law was and since then always has been
Christian. As the US Supreme Court held in 1890:
One pretense for this obstinate course is that their belief in the practice of polygamy, or in the right to indulge in it, is a religious belief, and therefore under the protection of the constitutional guaranty of religious freedom. This is altogether a sophistical plea. No doubt the Thugs of India imagined that their belief in the right of assassination was a religious belief; but their thinking so did not make it so. The practice of suttee by the Hindu widows may have sprung from a supposed religious conviction. The offering of human sacrifices by our own ancestors in Britain was no doubt sanctioned by an equally conscientious impulse. But no one, on that account, would hesitate to brand these practices, now, as crimes against society, and obnoxious to condemnation and punishment by the civil authority. The state has a perfect right to prohibit polygamy, and all other open offenses against the enlightened sentiment of mankind, notwithstanding the pretense of religious conviction by which they may be advocated and practiced. . Davis Beason, 133 U.S. 333, ante, 299
LDS v. US, 136 U.S. 1, 50
>". . . if any one chooses to build a
doctrine on any law of that period,
>supposed to have been lost, it is incumbent on him to prove it to have
>existed, and what were its contents. These were so far alterations of the
>common law, and became themselves a part of it.
Correct. The Christianization became part of the common law.
>But none of these adopt
>Christianity as a part of the common law. If, therefore, from the settlement
>of the Saxons to the introduction of Christianity among them, that system of
>religion
>could not be a part of the common law, because they were not yet Christians,
>and if, having their laws from that period to the close of the common law, we
>are all able to find among them no such act of adoption, we may safely affirm
>(though contradicted by all the judges and writers on earth)
an important concession.
>that
>Christianity neither is, nor ever was a part of the common law."
Jefforson is groping desperately.
>In the same letter, Jefferson examined how the error spread
about
>Christianity and common law. Jefferson realized that a misinterpretation had
>occurred with a Latin term by Prisot, "ancien scripture", in reference to
>common law history. The term meant "ancient scripture" but people had
>incorrectly interpreted it to mean "Holy Scripture," thus spreading the
myth
>that common law came from the Bible. Jefferson writes:
>
>"And Blackstone repeats, in the words of Sir Matthew Hale, that 'Christianity
>is part of the laws of England,' citing Ventris and Strange ubi surpa. 4.
>Blackst. 59. Lord Mansfield qualifies it a little by saying that 'The
>essential principles of revealed religion are part of the common law." In the
>case of the Chamberlain of London v. Evans, 1767. But he cites no authority,
>and leaves us at our peril to find out what, in the opinion of the judge, and
>according to the measure of his foot or his faith, are those essential
>principles of revealed religion obligatory on us as a part of the common
>law."
>
>Thus we find this string of authorities, when examined to the beginning, all
>hanging on the same hook, a perverted expression of Priscot's, or on one
>another, or nobody."
>
>The Encyclopedia Britannica, also describes the Saxon origin and adds: "The
>nature of the new common law was at first much influenced by the principles
>of Roman law,
Christianized by Justinian
>but later it developed more and more along independent
lines."
>Also prominent among the characteristics that derived out of common law
>include the institution of the jury, and the right to speedy trial.
>---------------------------------------
Jefferson's rant was thoroughly refuted in State v. Chandler, 2 Harr. 553, at
558ff. (Del.Sup.Ct. 1837). Cindy's article gives us no evidence that a single
Founding Father agreed with Jefferson on this issue. Jefferson's argument
had no influence on the Framers of the Constitution, as it appeared decades
after the Constitution had been ratified.
The opinion of Lord Mansfield, who was one of the brightest luminaries
of the common law, palpably misunderstood by [Jefferson], is by him
denounced as a "judicial forgery."
Mr. Jefferson endeavors to show that the maxim that Christianity is a
part of the common law of England is entirely derived from an opinion of
Prisot in the Year Book 34, H. 6, folio 38, (145-8.)
In a case quare
impedit a question was made, how far the ecclesiastical law was to be
respected in a common law court. And Prisot gives his opnion in these
words: "Prisot -- a tiels Leys que ils de saint Eglise ont en auncient
scripture covient pur nous a doner credence; car ceo est common Ley
sur quels touts manner Leys sont fondues," &c. (See Fitz. abr.
qu. im.
89. Bro. abr. qu. imp. 12.) The whole of Jefferson's complaint is,
that Finch has mistaken this passage, by translating "auncient
scripture"
holy scripture. Mr. Jefferson translates Prisot's Norman French so
as
to make him decide "that to such laws of holy church as have warrant
in ancient writing it is proper for us to give credence;"
while, says he,
Finch interprets the passage "to such laws of the church as have
warrant
in holy scripture our law giveth credence." . . .
According to what
Mr. Jefferson calls Finch's interpretation, the judge decided that the
sentence of the ecclessiastical tribunal when warranted by the
holy scriptures, shall be credited in a common law court as the
decision of a competent tribunal, provided the ecclesiastical tribunal did
not exceed its jurisdiction. According to Mr. Jefferson's version the judge
decided that the same sentence, when warranted by the "ancient written
laws" should be so acknowledged and credited. What these written laws
were, Mr. Jefferson does not inform us: but the common law was
emphatically the lex non scripta, or unwritten law as
contra-distinguished
from the statute law, and Mr Jefferson probably knew that he must have
intended either statutes of parliament or the written laws of the church.
The statutes of parliament could not have been intended, for they did
not regulate the ecclesiastical jurisdiction. . . . For how could
[the statutes
of parliament] be said to be the foundation of all human laws. If by
written
laws, Mr. Jefferson meant the written laws of the church at that day,
they, at that day, credited the holy scriptures and professed to be built
upon them. . . . But the common law judges by yielding up that
jurisdiction to the ecclesiastical courts, refusing to reverse or to revise
their decisions when incidentally or collaterally presented in a common
law court, thus simply recognizing those decisions as ecclesiastical
and not as common law, did no more intend by that to acknowledge the
laws of holy church as common law than they intended to acknowledge
admiralty law as common law when they gave faith and credit to an
admiralty decision. It is not within our knowledge that any common law
judge has cited this case in the Year Book, or referred to it in any manner
to prove his position in deciding a case of blasphemy that the malicious
reviling of Christianity was punishable at common law.
Long before Lord Hale declared that Christianity was a part of the laws of
England, the Court of Kings Bench, 34 Eliz. in Ratcliff's case, 3 Coke Rep.
40, b. had gone so far as to declare that "in almost all cases, the
common law
was grounded on the law of God, which it was said was causa causans,"
and the court cited the 27th chapter of Numbers, to show that their
judgment
on a common law principle in regard to the law of inheritance, was founded
on
God's revelation of that law to Moses.
State v. Thomas Jefferson Chandler, 2 Harr. 553 at 561 (Del.Sup.Ct.1837)
The basis for declaring that the Common Law is based on Christianity is not
the judicial fiat of one judge centuries ago. It is an inescapable fact evident
over centuries of law, recognized by all scholars (except those with severe
axes to grind).
I dare say that every single person who signed the Constitution agreed with
Locke's position:
[T]he Law of Nature stands as an eternal rule to all men,
legislators
as well as others. The rules that they make for other
men's actions
must . . . be conformable to the Law of Nature, i.e., to
the will of
God. [L]aws human must be made according to the general
laws
of Nature, and without contradiction to any positive law
of Scripture,
otherwise they are ill made. [Two Treatises on Govenment,
Bk II
sec 135.
Locke here was quoting Hooker's Ecclesiastical Polity which shows
the
influence of the Puritans. The pattern set by the Puritans was to insert the
Biblical references in the margins of the criminal and civil codes.
(See the 1641 code from Massachusetts, the "Body of Liberties.")
Jefferson was not infallible. He said many true things. His diatribe against
Christianity in the common law was not one of them.
The US Supreme Court is correct: Christianity is the basis of the
Anglo-American Common Law. The Constitution did not change that.
Kevin C.
http://members.aol.com/TestOath/HolyTrinity.htm
---------------------------------------------
And they shall beat their swords into plowshares
and sit under their Vine & Fig Tree.
Micah 4:1-7