Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Religious References in Presidential Oaths

By Mathew Goldstein (Explicit Atheist)

Claims that every president has appended "so help me God" to his presidential oath office can be found in various publications and on the Internet.  One of the earliest such claims appears in The Pittsburgh Press, Jan. 20, 1937 where the one exception is said to be George Washington during his first inauguration.  The Joint Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies web site, which is administered by the Senate Rules Committee, features a "so help me God" video which says that all presidents have appended this phrase.  The National Conference on Citizenship, chartered by Congress since 1953 (it is one of 94 organizations so chartered), publishes a  History of the Oath of Office web page that says "Although the U.S. Constitution does not include the words, “So help me God,” George Washington, upon taking the Oath of Office, added it and every President since has said it".  Many more publications, while not saying that all presidents appended this phrase, claim that George Washington did during his first inauguration and that other presidents, following that precedent, have done the same.  But is this true?

A film clip from Paramount Sound News that records Herbert Hoover's 1929 inaugural oath recitation demonstrates he did not append this monotheistic phrase and was not prompted to do so by the Chief Justice.  So claims that every president did so are not only unsupported, as I will show below, but they are positively disproved.

Prior to 1854 there appears to be no record of any assertions that any president appended the phrase "so help me God" to their inaugural oath of office.  None, zip, nil, zero.  You heard me right, the evidence that this occurred is an empty void, it doesn't exist.

The earliest published claim that any president added that phrase to his presidential oath which I am currently aware of appears in "The republican court; or, American society in the days of Washington" by Rufus Wilmot Griswold.  The Reverend Griswold wrote that George Washington said "with fervor, his eyes closed, that his whole soul might be absorbed in the supplication, "so help me God!".  Although Griswold claims to have obtained his information about the inauguration from Washington Irving, who Griswold claims witnessed the inauguration, this "eyes closed" description of George Washington appears to be an entirely fictional embellishment.  Washington Irving was 6 years old at the time of the inauguration and Griswold places Irving too far away from the balcony to reliably see such details or even reliably hear what was said. Friends of Griswold knew him as a consummate liar and coined the phrase "Is that a Griswold or a fact?". Washington Irving is not known to have ever claimed that he heard the oath recitation when he was six years old.

This was followed by Life of George Washington, by Washington Irving,  Life and Times of Washington, by John Frederick Schroeder (completed by R.W. Griswold), and Memoirs of Washington, by Caroline Matilda Kirkland, all published in 1857.  Irving was a lawyer and author, Schroeder was an Episcopalian minister, and Kirkland was a writer, and all four had social ties to each other.  None were historians, and none of these authors are known to have done serious research for their books.  The editor of the  Memoir of the life of Eliza S. M. Quincy, ed. E S Quincy, Boston [Printed by J. Wilson] 1861, complains in a footnote at the bottom of page 52 that "The previous pages, which describe the entrance and inauguration of Washington, were sent to Mr. Irving, in 1856, at his request, by the Editor, and are inserted in his "Life of Washington," vol iv. pp. 510, 513, 514, but without reference to their source."  Also, according to The Religious Beliefs of Our Presidents, by Franklin Steiner, 1936, most of Washington Irving's biography of George Washington is copied from the biography written by historian Sparks, and Irving did little if any original research for his popular biography of George Washington. Similarly, in his article on Washington in the Dictionary of American Biography (1936), J C Fitzpatrick wrote, "Washington Irving, Life of GW (5 vols., 1855-1859) is satisfactory from most viewpoints, though its reliance on [Jared] Sparks lessens the confidence it would otherwise command."

There is one contemporaneous, first hand, eyewitness account of George Washington's first inauguration that quotes the entire oath recitation and describes what happened immediately thereafter. It is the letter of the French consul, Comte de Moustier, April 30, 1789, written in french to the Minister of Foreign Affairs of France. No shmG. So the overall weight of the overall available evidence favors the conclusion that George Washington did not say shmG. Washington Irving's more than six decades after the fact, and non-sourced, assertion otherwise in his book is counter-evidenced by this letter.

Other books and articles subsequent to 1854 continue to not depict George Washington appending so help me God. Examples include  Abridgment of the Debates of Congress from 1789 to 1856, Volume I, by Thomas Hart Benton, and Joseph Gales and William Winston Seaton and John C Rives.   Memoir of the life of Eliza S. M. Quincy, ed. E S Quincy 1861. Reminiscences of an Old New Yorker, by William A. Duer, 1867. 

However, the assertion that George Washington added this monotheistic codicil to his oath of office is widely repeated.  Examples include "Mount Vernon and its associations: by Benson John Lossing, 1859.  "The reconstruction of the government of the United States of America: a Democratic empire advocated" by William B. Wedgwood, 1861.  "Washington and the American republic ..."  by Benson John Lossing, c1870.  "Our first century: being a popular descriptive portraiture of the one hundred great and memorable events of perpetual interest in the history of our country" by Richard Miller Devens, 1876.  "Our country. A household history for all readers" by Benson John Lossing, With illustrations by Felix O. C. Darley, 1877. "Harper's popular cyclopaedia of United States history from the aboriginal period to 1876" by Benson John Lossing, 1881.  Chapter VIII of the Centennial Anniversary of Washington's Inauguration. Proceedings in the First Parish Meeting House at Groton, Massachusetts, titled "Inaugural Ceremonies of President Washington" by the Rev. Frank C Whitney.  The Century Magazine, volume 37, issue 6, April 1889, "The Inauguration of Washington", by Clarence Winthrop Bowen.  "The story of the city of New York,..."  by Charles Burr Todd, 1890.  "The History of the Centennial Celebration of the Inauguration of George Washington, by Clarence W. Bowen 1892.  The Washington Post, March 4, 1893 says that George Washington "murmured" shmG during his first inauguration.  "The American metropolis, from Knickerbocker days to the present time: New York City life in all its various phases" by Frank Moss, 1897.

The Macon Daily Telegraph, February 22, 1861, and various other sources, reveal that the phrase "so help me God" was appended to the Oath of Office by the President of the Confederate States (Jefferson Davis).  The eyewitness accounts of Abraham Lincoln's March 1861 inauguration suggest that he did not append this phrase to his oath of office. 

"So help me God" was appended in 1862 to a revised federal oath of office.  This is a different oath from the presidential oath office that is specified in the constitution. The Civil War-era members of Congress were intent on using this new "Ironclad oath" to keep Confederate loyalists out of the government. This Ironclad oath was replaced in 1884 by Congress.

Noah Brooks, a political confident of Lincoln, author, and a journalist for the Sacramento Daily Union, claimed that Lincoln added shmG at his 2nd Inauguration in an March 4, 1865 article published by the Sacramento Daily Union.  However, the Introduction of the book "Lincoln Observed: Civil War Dispatches of Noah Brooks" edited by Michael Burlingame, 1998, has the following commentary: 'When he wrote about Lincoln's religion, Brooks dubiously ascribed his own Christian piety to the sixteenth president. Shortly after the assassination, Brooks told a clergyman: "I am glad now that I never hesitated, when proper occasion offered, to talk with him upon religious matters, for I think that the best evidences of his belief in Christ are those which I derived in free and easy conversations with him. You know I had an intimate acquaintance with him, which was not hampered or embarrassed by any official or business relations, nor did he have the same undefined reluctance which a man in his position would have had in talking upon religious matters, if I had been a clergyman." Brooks's able biographer, however, thinks it "extremely doubtful" that Lincoln "talked openly to anybody about Christ's atonement for man's sins."'  In "Christ the King" by Reverend James Mitchell Foster, 1894 we find the following observation about Lincoln's inaugurations:
Every President, after George Washington and before RB Hayes, took the presidential oath without an appeal to God, omitting the very essence of the oath. Rev. A. M. Milligan, D.D., wrote Abraham Lincoln before his inaugural in 1861, and also before his second inaugural in 1865, asking him, in deference to the consciences of the Christian people of the land, to take the presidential oath in the name of God. He replied both times that God's name was not in the Constitution, and he could not depart from the letter of that instrument. 
  The response from Lincoln to the first letter from Rev. A. M. Milligan is quoted in  Reformation Principles Stated and Applied,  by James Mitchell Foster, 1890, F.H. Revell, Chicago and New York, page 234-5  as follows: 'Rev. A. M. Milligan, D. D., of Pittsburgh, wrote President Lincoln, in 1861, asking if he would not take the Presidential oath in the name of God. He replied: "The relations between the Northern and Southern States are so strained I would not dare violate the letter of the Constitution. The name of God is not in that instrument."'  Other newspapers that quoted the oath recitation indicated that Lincoln did not append "so help me God" to his oath during his second inauguration.

The next mention of any president adding these four words to the oath is Chester Arthur in 1881.  Chester Arthur would have appended shmG to his oath of office as Vice President that same year (President Garfield was shot and died the year he was elected) as a result of the Civil War modification to the federal oath for executive office holders 19 years earlier.

In 1885, one newspaper, Boston Investigator, March 25, 1885, published commentary accusing Grover Cleveland of "violating the constitution" by adding the words "So help me God" (note: Contrary to this commentary, the real constitutional issue is arguably what the Chief Justice says when leading the oath recitation, not what the president says after the official oath recitation is completed).  But other newspapers did not report that he had, in fact, appended those four words.  Nor is Cleveland quoted appending those four words eight years later in 1893 during his second inauguration. 

There are some reports that Theodore Roosevelt appended this phrase in 1905, but other reports indicate that he did not.  There are similarly contradictory reports about Taft in 1909 and Harding in 1921. Calvin Coolidge appended shmG in 1923. Chief Justice Taft prompted for this four word phrase during Calvin Coolidge's 1925 inauguration, but there are contradictory reports about whether Coolidge responded by repeating that phrase or just responded "I do".

Starting in 1933, all presidents have included this monotheistic codicil to their oath of office, almost always, if not always, at the prompting of the Chief Justice, even though these four words do not appear in the legal oath as it was inscribed in the U.S. constitution.  This raises a question:  Is it legal for government officials who are leading oath recitations to simply add, on their own initiative, a religious codicil of their own choice to governmental oath recitations? Generally speaking, the answer to this question clearly must be no, but apparently there has been a double-standard exception here for the Chief Justice.  A federal Court of Appeals denied Michael Newdow standing to challenge the legality of the Chief Justice doing this when leading presidential inauguration oath recitations and the Supreme Court refused to consider the complaint against this extra-legal modification of the presidential oath of office in May of this year.

Could some judges be influenced by this distorted "history" that claims all presidents have appended 'so help me God' to their oath office?  Chief Justice Rehnquist, writing for the majority in  ELK GROVE UNIFIED SCHOOL DIST. V. NEWDOW, and Justice Scalia's dissent in  McCREARY COUNTY, KENTUCKY, et al., PETITIONERS v. AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION OF KENTUCKY et al., both mistakenly endorsed as a historical fact this counter-evidenced legend that George Washington appended "so help me God' during the first presidential oath of office.

If you are interested in challenging purveyors of this inaccurate history regarding George Washington and every subsequent president then you can write to the National Council of Citizenship (NCoC) and ask them to drop these non-evidenced, so called "historical" and "factual", assertions.  You can write to David B. Smith, Executive Director, and Kristen Cambell, Director, Programs and Media on Citizenship with a carbon copy to the Office Manager, Ian H Dubin.  The corresponding email addresses are dsmith@ncoc.net, kcambell@ncoc.net, and idubin@ncoc.net.  For physical address and telephone number visit their NCoC web site. Tell them to either cite contemporaneous eyewitness accounts for George Washington and all the other presidents or stop asserting this happened given that there is no such evidence.

Follow up: The NCoC Office Manager sent me an email citing the Joint Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies (JCCIC) as claiming that George Washington added these four words and "this added phrase has been repeated since". However, the JCCIC also has no evidence that every president, or George Washington, said those four words, so NCoC citing JCCIC is irrelevant, circular finger pointing, that fails to deliver any evidence to support these assertions. In your emails, letters, and/or telephone calls to NCoC, please insist that the NCoC ask the JCCIC for the evidence. Also, provide NCoC with this link to the Jan. 9, 2009 USA Today article by C.L. Grossman that quotes the historical editor for the U.S. Senate Historical Office acknowledging that there is insufficient evidence that any 18th century or early 19th century president included this monotheistic codicil: No proof Washington said 'so help me God' -- will Obama? If you receive a noteworthy response from the NCoC then please share it with us.

For more details see: So help me God in presidential oaths.

8 comments:

  1. With all the current hoopla about every president (or almost every president) having added "So help me God" to their oath of office, one would think that Benjamin Harrison (23rd President, 1889–1893) would have mentioned it when he wrote his book, This country of ours (1897), but he didn't. On page 93 is President Harrison's description of how the presidential oath was administered in his day:
    The oath is usually administered by the Chief Justice of the United States, in the presence of the people, upon a platform erected on the east front of the Capitol. When Washington was first inaugurated the Supreme Court of the United States had not been organized, and the Chancellor of the State of New York was selected to administer the oath. When the oath had been taken the Chancellor proclaimed "Long live George Washington, President of the United States." A Bible is used in the administration of the oath, and the President kisses the open page of the Book. After the administration of the oath the President delivers an address. [...] Congress, in the usual course of things, is not in session when the President takes the oath of office, as it was when Washington was first inaugurated, and so the form of inaugural address is "My Fellow-Citizens."

    ReplyDelete
  2. Matthew says: "Prior to 1854 there appears to be no record of any assertions that any president appended the phrase "so help me God" to their inaugural oath of office. None, zip, nil, zero. You heard me right, the evidence that this occurred is an empty void, it doesn't exist."

    Perhaps you need to do a bit more historical research. The following article will give some very good documented reasons why what you say is wrong. http://www.wallbuilders.com/LIBissuesArticles.asp?id=102750&utm_source=WallBuilders+Mailings&utm_campaign=b3dacdda6b-So_Help_Me_God12_15_2011&utm_medium=email

    In the above linked article, David Barton shows that the original induction ceremony for George Washington was VERY religious in nature, with at least 7 different religious components. He also shows that the legal status of oaths according to the laws of that time, previous to that time, and after that time almost all required the use of the phrase "so help me God." It was written in the actual laws of many states.

    Here is one excerpt from the article: "Other states had similar requirements, but consider those in place in NEW YORK when President Washington was sworn in by the state’s top judicial official. At that time, New York law required that “the usual mode of administering oaths” be followed (i.e., “So help me God”) and that the person taking the oath place his hand upon the Gospels and then kiss the Gospels at the conclusion of the oath. 33 (Like the other states, these provisions remained the legal standard long after the inauguration. 34 )"

    Also, examining quotes from the founding fathers, it is seen that the taking of an oath was clearly seen to be a religious activity.

    "Significantly, every existing law or legal commentary from before, during, and after the writing of the Constitution unanimously affirmed that the taking of any oath by any public official was always an inherently religious activity; and numerous Framers and early legal scholars agreed (emphasis added in each quote):"

    Repeating the phrase "so help me God" makes the most sense. I think the burden is on the atheist to prove that it wasn't said in light of the practice and laws of that time.

    I suppose though that since the kissing of the Bible has been a practice from of old, you would have no problem with the new President doing that.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Jim, The essay was specifically about there being no documentation of "so help me God" at the end of the Presidential oath, including the case of George Washington. Despite all of the assertions from Barton there is no documentation that this phrase was actually used at that time.

    Kissing a bible would be rather gross and disgusting. Further there would not be the slightest reason for us to think that people would more faithfully keep the oath if they included any of this religious nonsense.

    ReplyDelete
  4. The Viginia Constitution did not require an oath at all until the outbreak of the civil war.
     
    The Virginia State Constitution: a reference guide, Part 56 by John J. Dinan

    Section 7. Oath Or Affirmation

    All officers elected or appointed under or pursuant to this Constitution shall, before they enter on the performance of their public duties, severally take and subscribe the following oath or affirmation:
       "I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support the Constitution of the United States, and the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Virginia, and I will faithfully and impartially discharge all the duties incumbent upon me as ______________ according to the best of my ability (so help me God)."
    Although the current oath has been uncontroversial, previous oaths have generated significant controversey. The 1864 Constitution was the first to require officeholders to take an oath and the purpose was to ensure that officeholders were not supporters of the Confederacy. Then, the 1867-68 Convention approved a "test-oath" that would have prevented a significant number of past supporters of the Confederacy from holding state office. Both of these oaths approved by the 1867-68 Convention provoked significant controversey, whether at the time or in coming years. [end excerpt]

    Even if, as Jim May argues, SHMG can be found in state government oaths, it doesn't follow that any of the presidents appended that phrase to their oath of office. I think that for religious people this can be difficult to accept because for them everything of importance is religious, all meaning is religious, everything good and meriting respect is religious, therefore all presidents must have been religious, and all legal principles, and all commitments, must be religious, etc. but I would like to suggest, Jim, that that isn't real history. The presidents really did not append SHMG. If they had appended SHMG then there would llikely be eyewitness accounts of them saying SHMG.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Explicit Atheist said... Also, regarding "the usual mode" for oaths in NY
    at that time: SHMG was not in the NY oaths for
    public office. Placing one hand on the bible, and
    kissing the bible, was the official practice, but
    SHMG was not. The first inaugural appears to
    have followed NY's official practice because NY law, not federal law, was considered to be
    sovereign in the context of the first inauguration
    by the NY state official who administered the
    oath. SHMG appeared in the NY oath for
    witnesses in court, but not in the NY oath for
    public office. Furthermore, we do have an eyewitness account
    that appears to be accurate and complete. It
    mentions the bible, it quotes the oath recitation,
    it quotes what was said immediately after the
    oath recitation. No SHMG.

    ReplyDelete
  6. Correction: no SHMG in NY courtroom oaths either. Regardless of what was in NY state oaths at the timr, the oath being recited was the federal oath, and neither the federal oath for the president, nor the federal oath for Congress, included SHMG.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Jim, you claim that the burden to show no SHMG is ours. We have met that burden because there is a single eyewitness account that quotes the oath. You can read a translation here: http://members.purespeed.com/~mg/commentary/PDF/ComtedeMoustier17890430.pdf

    It was written in french immediately after the event by the Ambassador from France who stood on the balcony of Federal Hall while the oath was being recited there. GW did not say SHMG.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Jim, regarding what we object to: We object to the Chief Justice appending SHMG to the oath while leading the recitation. Government officials who lead oaths should not be unilaterally adding or removing words to legal oaths.

    ReplyDelete