Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Church Contribution Letter Can Someone Please Quote The Constitution Where It Says "separation Of Church And State"? I Haven't Found It.

Can someone please quote the Constitution where it says "separation of church and state"? I haven't found it. - church contribution letter

Please cite the section and row where you will find these words.

Letters from individuals are not counted.

For those of you who did not know that, Thomas Jefferson did not contribute to the drafting of the Constitution.

5 comments:

jwziolko... said...

BDZot true, but that does not mean that the values and ideals of the religion that is one thing above all the choice in this country, now in its creation, can not help the way the country treats its own citizens and people abroad . The values of religion can certainly not dictating to influence policy simple. Each is separation of church and state means in any context, that the Americans can not have a state-backed church, that all citizens are obliged to belong. This is .. them. Sorry for all of you out there who have a chip on his shoulder about this or that church, but if you want it or not, that's all it says. I want to drop its cargo of soap and to accept everything, do not prescribe how we live, is part of the fabric of American culture. Some important than you might be comfortable, but the same thing. If you believe or not.

BDZot said...

You do not know the words to appear in the Constitution, like the rest of us.

The concept is, however, the phrase "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion .." to do.

EDIT: It has been interpreted time and again taken up by the Supreme Court. Here is the web address for the event: http://www.firstamendmentcenter.org/facl is .... Please consult the appropriate decisions.

bluerose said...

because you can not find exact wording is not in him. The separation of church and state is a legal principle and political results of the first amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which states: "Congress shall make no law establishing religion or prohibiting the free exercise ..." The term "separation of church and state" does not appear in the Constitution itself, which is usually sent to a letter followed in 1802 by Thomas Jefferson to the Danbury Baptists, where Jefferson spoke of the combined effect of the Establishment Clause and the free exercise clause of the First Amendment. Since then he has been quoted in several opinions issued by the Supreme Court of the United States.

cmdrbnd0... said...

You do not find, ever. It was in a letter, a letter he wrote Jefferson.

magpieix A.L.M.N. said...

Jefferson's letter was not "particularly." It was reviewed a letter from U.S. President and the Attorney General approves and is a statement of policy.

James Madison also confirmed that the First Amendment was intended separation of church and state.

It is impossible for the free exercise of religion, without requiring a separation between church and state, and that is what Jefferson was recognized, and the Supreme Court upheld that time very much.

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