God bless America?

Last quarter, in the American history course that I took, the class watched a documentary film from the 80s, called The Atomic Cafe (available on DVD from amazon). The film was made up entirely of videos produced during the post-WW2 era, many of them for propaganda use by the American government. No narration was given on top of the clips; the directors let the clips speak for themselves. If you’re interested in the Cold War and the bizarre mentality that the American government had about it, I highly recommend the film.

I want to touch on a specific scene from the film, which really struck me as odd. The scene in question is one showing President Truman, sitting at a desk, speaking to the American public. He says:

“Having found the atomic bomb, we have used it. It is an awful responsibility which has come to us. We thank God that it has come to us instead of to our enemies and we pray that He may guide us to use it in His way and for His purposes.

(emphasis mine)

I don’t believe in the Christian God, but let’s say he exists, for the sake of argument. As I understand it, the Christian God loves everyone. All humans are his creation, and he cares about all of us equally, regardless of what we do. Certainly, there are rules that one should listen to, but if you break the rules, you can generally get him to forgive you (depending on what branch of Christianity you’re dealing with).

So, God loves everyone. And, being an omnipotent being, viewing everything all at once, he probably doesn’t think of his creation in terms of nationalities, countries, races. Everything on the planet is his creation. God doesn’t see the globe with national boundaries pencilled in.

And yet, in the above quote, we have an American President thanking God for, essentially, letting America “find the atomic bomb” first, and then going on to say that he hopes God will help them to use the weapon to do good.

This makes no sense to me. If God existed, and we were all his creations, and he loved all of us equally, I’m fairly confident that one thing he wouldn’t want us to do would be to “find” the most devastating weapon ever created, and then use it to blow up hundreds of thousands of people. That just doesn’t come across as very loving to me.

Perhaps it’s because we’re talking about America here, an admittedly special case - at least in the minds of many people. All Americans (and probably just about everyone else who’s hooked into the world via the internet or some other news outlet) have heard the phrase “God bless America.” Our Presidents, particularly the most recent one, have regularly claimed that God is on our side. It doesn’t seem to matter what the government is doing, or how morally wrong it is - because it’s America doing it, a lot of people think it’s fine, because they have this strange idea that God is on “our side.” I think it’s interesting to note that when other countries or groups do this - like when Islamist fundamentalists claim that God wanted them to blow something up - Americans generally scoff and say that the Islamist fundamentalists are just “evil” (whatever that means).

Claiming that God is on “our” side is nothing new; nations have done it for centuries. But America seems particularly bad about it. I’ve read many times online that a lot of Europeans look at our politics with some amusement, because of how often our politicians throw God into the mix. I’ve talked to some Europeans who find it downright peculiar. I do too, but I suppose that’s pretty clear from this entry.

So - I don’t believe in God, but if you do, and you’re someone who thinks that he’s on “our side”, perhaps you should reconsider. Maybe he isn’t on our side. Maybe God is getting fed up with America tossing his name around like a football. If I were in his position, I probably would be. Nukes for God… indeed. I’m sure right below that one, on God’s to-do list, he has “Insure America secures oil supply in Iraq and Afghanistan.”

Tags: , , , ,

I think part of the problem here is that people mentally fuse the Christian idea of a universal god together with the things they desire in a tribal god. If you believe in local or ancestral deities, it isn’t so absurd to think of god being on your side (but that sort of deity is, necessarily, less powerful than a single God for everyone).

Frak @ Elizabeth’s comment. It’s like a megatonne cooler than what I was going to say.

Anyway, as far as the god/christ/religion thing goes: of course it makes no sense to you because it’s non-sense. I’ve lost the will and strength to try and ask the questions you do as they have absolutely no effect on those who persist in believing the stuff based on what they call faith. I will keep fighting those who insist on blending it into civil society and matters of state.

And that brings us to the US. I’ve always liked and admired the States and I still do. Seeing how the country is becoming more and more fundamentalist pains me. The War of Independence, as I see it, was a brilliant opportunity to spread the ideas of the Enlightenment. Hell, you fought it 13 years before the French themselves did. People like Thomas Paine and Max Robespierre are my absolute heroes. And now this.

I don’t know how it happened, by the way; perhaps you do. I’ve heard it say the US was fairly secular in the 19th C and that this dogmatism was a result of the Depression: charity and charitable organizations became ever more important and made their mark on all parts of society, both haves and have-nots. The war (Gott mit uns, the Nazis said) only made that worse. It’s a simple explanation and I don’t know if it’s true, so I’ll leave it at that. Moreover, I just found this page, so who knows?

Okay, long comment, lol. Let me finish by saying I judge people primarily on character and most Americans I’ve met (online and off) have been a pleasure to talk to. Some say your country is still in its childhood: bright, eager to learn and hopeful, but naive and prone to tantrums too. I hope you find your adulthood soon. Now you are like children playing with very dangerous toys and the nanny is none the better. Bless you ;-)

Elizabeth: I think that’s an intriguing idea, that of applying the traits a tribal god to a universal god. Indeed, if you believe in regional deities, or deities that look after a specific race or group of people, the idea of that god being on “your” side isn’t too bad at all.

But when you mix the idea of a universal god who loves everyone with traits of a tribal god, you end up with a lot of absurdity. Case in point, America.

Thanks for commenting!

Nils: Man, I knew you’d be all over this post. ;) I know where you’re coming from, about not having strength left to ask these questions over and over. You’re right - generally, trying to reason with someone about their faith is.. well, pointless.

I like America, too - a lot of it, anyway. I’m not unaware that if I wrote such things about my country if I lived somewhere else, I could get in a hell of a lot of trouble for it. For such rights, I’m quite happy, and I think America has done a lot of things “right” (a relative term, for sure). But I too am wary of the fundamentalist shift - and it seems to be getting worse.

I’m not sure if the Depression had a lot to do with the shift or not. In my most recent American history course, we learned that the re-emergence and rise of right wing fundamentalism was kicked off by Jerry Falwell in ‘79, when the Moral Majority was created. I know the MM has a lot to do with the fundamentalist bind the country is in now, but that doesn’t mean the Depression didn’t bring about shifts as well. History’s a tricky business, and not nearly as simple as “good and evil”, as some people would like to see it (eye roll).

And yes, America is a pretty young country. I often get the impression that the world’s older, more mature nations often look at America, shaking their heads, going, “Sigh, silly youthful nation. You’ll learn - or fall.”

Thanks for the blessing. ;)

My pleasure. I hope you don’t mind the lengthiness. It’s kind of a compliment. Your posts are worth contemplating and deserve a well-rounded comment I feel.

I’ve been hearing about the ‘it’s getting worse’ bit. One guy who comes to my local is from California. He’s involved in the music business here somehow, but currently he’s in our country illegally. He just doesn’t want to go back. He says he wants to submit an asylum application. Though that might be funny, I’ve advised against it.