[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 161 (2015), Part 15]
[House]
[Pages 21538-21542]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                      OUR JUDEO-CHRISTIAN HERITAGE

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under the Speaker's announced policy of 
January 6, 2015, the gentleman from Texas (Mr. Gohmert) is recognized 
for the remainder of the hour as the designee of the majority leader.
  Mr. GOHMERT. Mr. Speaker, this will be the last session before we 
enter Christmas. And, Mr. Speaker, I have noted from a couple of 
articles that have been in the news this week, this one from December 
17, a story from Minnesota, the title: ``Parents Question Choice to 
Sing `Allahu Akbar' at Holiday Concert.''
  It is intriguing that, in an age when groups are attacking our Judeo-
Christian heritage, trying to rewrite our history, trying to prevent 
any mention of our Christian heritage--I am looking at the full face of 
Moses directly above me in front of me because we have, in this 
Chamber, profiles of people who were considered to be the greatest 
lawgivers of all time. And until recent years, Moses was considered the 
greatest lawgiver of all time. The Founders believed that.
  The Supreme Court now has relegated Moses to the ash heap of history. 
His revelation that he said came from God, that a man shall leave his 
father and mother, a woman leave their home, the two shall become one 
flesh. Jesus doubled down on that. He said not only is that what 
marriage is, what God joined together, let nobody pull apart.
  So we have relegated Moses to the ash heap. We have had the Supreme 
Court, for years now, saying, first, you

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can't have prayer in public, even though the Founders started each day 
of the Continental Congress with prayer; and although the 
Constitutional Convention didn't start each day with prayer, when they 
hit a brick wall and could go no further, Benjamin Franklin made his 
powerful speech about how they had begun each day with prayer, as he 
said, his exact words: ``In the beginning contest with Great Britain, 
when we were sensible of danger, we had daily prayer in this room. Our 
prayers, sir, were heard and they were graciously answered.''
  He went on to say: ``If a sparrow cannot fall to the ground without 
His notice, is it probable an empire could rise without His aid? We 
have been assured, sir, in the sacred writing, that `except the Lord 
build the house, they labor in vain that build it.'''
  He said: I also firmly believe that without His--God's--concurring 
aid, we will succeed in our political building no better, than the 
Builders of Babel: We will be confounded by our local partial interests 
and we, ourselves, shall be bye words through time.
  So I know our heritage. They didn't have money to pay for a chaplain 
that they could all agree on to do the prayer every day. He pointed out 
in the debate that we agreed on a chaplain. We didn't agree on any 
specific person here to do the prayer for all the different 
denominations. But we don't have a treasurer. We don't have money. We 
can't hire a chaplain.
  And that is when Randolph made his motion. Okay, basically, they had 
hit a brick wall. They were making no progress. As Franklin had said, 
we have more noes than ayes on virtually every vote.
  So he moved that they recess--here it was the end of June--they 
recess and reconvene to celebrate the country's birthday in early July, 
and worship together. So they did. That one passed. They reconvened to 
worship God at the Reformed Calvinistic Church there in Philadelphia.
  You can go online, Mr. Speaker, and find what is reported to be the 
prayer that he gave. It had a powerful influence. And when they 
reconvened, there was a new spirit. They were able to come together and 
end up arriving at the Great Compromise.
  Founder after Founder, including Washington himself, pointed out that 
clearly God's hand was upon them in the preparation of the 
Constitution, and then, ultimately, resulting in the Bill of Rights.

                              {time}  1030

  The first right within the Bill of Rights was basically to make clear 
that government would never interfere with religion.
  Basically, we have come to a place after all these years where the 
United States Supreme Court has said not only can you not have the 
Judeo-Christian God as part of any government--the same God that the 
Founders were giving credit to and praying to--but now this year the 
Supreme Court took the ultimate step of saying: Forget Moses. Forget 
Jesus. We are the new God and here is what we pronounce in place of 
Moses and Jesus and our founding principles. So this is a big year.
  I know the President says we are not a Christian nation, and I won't 
argue that point with him. I won't debate him. I think he is right. I 
know where we started, and I know every time, according to my staff, I 
mention God here where--in this Capitol, God's name has been invoked 
from the very beginning of this Capitol and before this Capitol and 
when it was in Philadelphia and when the first Congress was sworn in 
and President George Washington was sworn in at Federal Hall in New 
York City. It was his idea to bring his Bible and put his hand on the 
Bible, his idea to add the words ``so help me God.''
  It was all their idea that the first thing they would do as a 
Congress together, after being sworn in, was to walk down, basically, 
Wall Street to St. Paul's Chapel there in New York and dedicate this 
country there in 1789 to God Almighty.
  I won't debate the President saying we are not a Christian nation, 
but the Bible has been quoted over our history in this Chamber more 
than any other book as a reason for or against legislation passing. It 
is a part of our heritage, to a much lesser extent in more recent 
years, as the Supreme Court--at least the five majority in the Supreme 
Court becoming our God instead of the God that was acknowledged by Ben 
Franklin, George Washington, basically every President.
  Mr. Speaker, we have a job to represent our constituents. We have an 
oath to the Constitution. I know we take that seriously. Part of our 
job in representing our constituents is to educate people on the issues 
and what has been important and what has been our strength, what has 
been our weaknesses. If you don't know our history, then, as the saying 
goes, those who refuse to learn from history are destined to repeat it. 
It is important to know history.
  It is important to note the official words of the United States' 
highest magistrate, our President. Jefferson was asked once as he rode 
his horse down Pennsylvania Avenue on a Sunday morning--he had a big 
Bible in his hand, it was reported. I have had this verified by the 
Congressional Research Service.
  When Jefferson was President for those 8 years, when he was in 
Washington, not only did he condone the church service, the largest 
Christian church service in Washington that occurred just down the 
hall, but he participated. He would even have the Marine Band come and 
play the hymns on many occasions for the Christian church service.
  As he rode down this one occasion, he was asked, ``Mr. President, 
where are you going?''
  He said, ``I am going to church up in the Capitol.''
  The statement was made, ``Mr. President, you don't believe everything 
they do.''
  Because he had questions about some of the miracles reported in the 
Bible.
  But it was reported that his response was, ``Sir, I am the highest 
elected magistrate in this country. It is imperative that I set the 
proper example.''
  Now, I asked the Congressional Research Service is it true what has 
been attributed to the person people claim to be the father of the 
Constitution, James Madison, that when he was President for his 8 
years, that he also condoned and participated in church services just 
down the hall here every Sunday he was in Washington?
  The Congressional Research Service, a bipartisan, nonpartisan 
service, reported, yes, but he was different from Jefferson. Jefferson 
normally rode a horse down Pennsylvania Avenue whereas Madison would 
normally come to church up here in the Capitol in a coach drawn by 
horses rather than on horseback.
  So, Mr. Speaker, as we take the traditional Christmas recess, no 
matter what your religious preference is or no preference at all, it is 
a fact this is a Christmas recess.
  Although this was not a statement at Christmastime, the commander of 
our military in 1778, George Washington, made this order as commander 
of our military. Some say this is really the reason God blessed their 
efforts, is because of their commitment and dedication. This is an 
order of George Washington to the troops at Valley Forge. This is 
George Washington's order, Mr. Speaker. I will read it verbatim:

       The Commander in Chief directs that divine service be 
     performed every Sunday at eleven o'clock in each brigade 
     which has chaplains. Those brigades which have none will 
     attend the places of worship nearest to them. It is expected 
     that officers of all ranks will, by their attendance, set an 
     example for their men. While we are zealously performing the 
     duties of good citizens and soldiers, we certainly ought not 
     to be inattentive to the higher duties of religion. To the 
     distinguished character of patriot, it should be our highest 
     glory to laud the more distinguished character of Christian.

  Those are George Washington's words as commander of our military.
  Well, John Adams, without whom it is unlikely we would have arrived 
at the place we did with the Declaration--he is the one that directed 
Thomas Jefferson to do the first draft of the Declaration of 
Independence. He was critical in holding things together. Even

[[Page 21540]]

though he only won one term as President, he was Vice President for two 
terms. He was very important in arriving at our Constitution.
  John Adams on October 11, 1798, said this to the First Brigade, Third 
Division, of Militia of Massachusetts:

       We have no government armed with power capable of 
     contending with human passions, unbridled by morality and 
     religion. Avarice, ambition, revenge, or gallantry would 
     break the strongest cords of our Constitution as a whale goes 
     through a net. Our Constitution was made only for a moral and 
     religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government 
     of any other.

  This is from a Founder that knew how the Constitution was forged, 
made a difference in our country's beginning. He says our Constitution 
is not fit as a governing document for any but a moral and religious 
people. So over the years we have been taken down the road away from 
being a moral and religious people.
  Franklin Roosevelt started many social programs. He made a lot of 
decisions, I think, that were dramatic mistakes. The man deserves 
credit for leading this Nation through a time of war, mistakes being 
made.
  He got us through a war and helped with Winston Churchill and other 
leaders to keep freedom alive so that it would be present in our 
lifetime, even as we see our freedoms being taken by government the 
further we go along.
  Exactly 2 weeks after the surprise attack at Pearl Harbor on December 
7, 1941, a day he said in this very Chamber from right up here at this 
level--he had a marble podium and not this wooden one--but he said that 
was a day that would live in infamy.
  Exactly 2 weeks later, December 21, 1941, this was Franklin 
Roosevelt's message to our Nation:

       Sincere and faithful men and women are asking themselves 
     this Christmas: How can we light our trees? How can we give 
     our gifts? How can we meet and worship with love and with 
     uplifted spirit and heart in a world at war, a world of 
     fighting and suffering, and death? How can we pause even for 
     a day, even for Christmas day, in our urgent labor of arming 
     a decent humanity against the enemies which beset it?

  Parenthetically, Mr. Speaker, he didn't mean holiday. He meant what 
he said, Christmas day.
  Roosevelt goes on:

       How can we, as men and women, put the world aside in 
     peaceful years to rejoice in the birth of Christ? Looking 
     into the days to come, I have set aside a day of prayer and 
     in that proclamation I have said: The year 1941 has brought 
     upon our Nation a war of aggression by powers dominated by 
     arrogant rulers whose selfish purpose is to destroy free 
     institutions. They would thereby take from the freedom-loving 
     peoples of the Earth the hard-won liberties gained over many 
     centuries. The new year of 1942 calls for the courage. Our 
     strength, as the strength of all men everywhere, is of 
     greater avail as God upholds us. Therefore, I do hereby 
     appoint the first day of the year 1942 as a day of prayer, of 
     asking forgiveness for our shortcomings of the past, of 
     consecrations to the task of the present and of asking God's 
     help in days to come. We need His guidance that this people 
     may be humble in spirit, but strong in the conviction of the 
     right, steadfast to endure sacrifice, and brave to achieve a 
     victory of liberty and peace.

  Franklin Roosevelt says our strongest weapon in this war is that 
conviction of the dignity and brotherhood of man which Christmas day 
signifies against enemies who preach the principles of hate and 
practice them. We set our fate in human love and in God's care for us 
in all men everywhere.
  A year later, on Christmas Eve, Franklin Roosevelt said:

       To you who serve in uniform, I also send a message of cheer 
     that you are in the thoughts of your families and friends at 
     home and that Christmas prayers follow you wherever you may 
     be. To all Americans, I say that loving our neighbor as we 
     love ourselves is not enough, that we, as a Nation and as 
     individuals, will please God best by showing regard for the 
     laws of God. There is no better way of fostering goodwill 
     toward men than by first fostering goodwill toward God.

                              {time}  1045

  Then Franklin Roosevelt basically takes a quote from John 14:15 in 
saying:
  ``If we love Him, we will keep His Commandments.
  ``In sending Christmas greetings to the Armed Forces and merchant 
sailors of the United Nations, we include therein our pride in their 
bravery on the fighting fronts and on all the seas.
  ``It is significant that tomorrow--Christmas Day--our plants and 
factories will be stilled. This is not true of the other holidays we 
have long been accustomed to celebrate. On all other holidays work goes 
on--gladly--for the winning of the war. So Christmas becomes the only 
holiday in all the year.
  ``I like to think that this is so because Christmas is a holy day. 
May all it stands for live and grow throughout the years.''
  Well, Mr. Speaker, 5 years later exactly, Harry Truman nationally 
broadcast this address at the lighting of the National--not holiday 
tree but Christmas Tree--on the White House lawn. Again, Mr. Speaker, 
just as those who failed to learn from the mistakes of history are 
destined to repeat them, we can avoid the mistakes by looking at what 
strengthened America and what caused God to bless America.
  We won a war against evil fascism that is raising its head yet again. 
Just as Hitler colluded with radical Islam, agreed with some of his 
fascist ideas against Jews, against Christians, there is so much 
ignorance. Some people try to say Hitler was a Christian. It is the 
farthest thing from it.
  These are Harry Truman's words, December 1947 on Christmas Eve:
  ``My fellow countrymen: We are met on the South Lawn of the White 
House. Above the barren treetops rises the towering shaft of the 
Washington Monument. The scene is peaceful and tranquil. The shadows 
deepen, and the holy night falls gently over the National Capital, as 
we gather around our Christmas tree.
  ``Down the ages, from the first Christmas through all the years of 19 
centuries, mankind, in its weary pilgrimage through a changing world, 
has been cheered and strengthened by the message of Christmas.
  ``The angels sang for joy at the first Christmas in a faraway 
Bethlehem. Their song has echoed through the corridors of time and will 
continue to sustain the heart of man through eternity.
  ``Let us not forget that the first Christmas was a homeless one. A 
humble man and woman had gone up from Galilee, out of the city of 
Nazareth, to Bethlehem. There is a sense of desolation in St. Luke's 
brief chronicle that Mary `brought forth her firstborn son, wrapped Him 
in swaddling clothes, and laid Him in a manger because there was no 
room for them in the inn.'
  ``For many of our brethren in Europe and Asia, this too will be a 
homeless Christmas. There can be little happiness for those who will 
keep another Christmas in poverty and exile and in separation from 
their loved ones.
  ``As we prepare to celebrate our Christmas this year in a land of 
plenty, we would be heartless, indeed, if we were indifferent to the 
plight of less fortunate peoples overseas.
  ``We must not forget that our Revolutionary fathers also knew a 
Christmas of suffering and desolation. Washington wrote from Valley 
Forge 2 days before Christmas in 1777: `We have this day no less than 
2,873 men in camp unfit for duty because they are barefooted and 
otherwise naked.'
  ``We can be thankful that our people have risen today, as did our 
forefathers in Washington's time, to our obligation and our 
opportunity.
  ``At this point in the world's history, the words of St. Paul have 
greater significance than ever before. He said, `And now abideth faith, 
hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of these is charity.'
  ``Let us then put our trust in the unerring star which guided the 
Wise Men to the manger of Bethlehem. Let us hearken again to the angel 
choir singing, `Glory to God in the highest, and on Earth peace, 
goodwill toward men.'
  ``With hope for the future and with faith in God, I wish all my 
countrymen a very Merry Christmas.''
  A year later, Harry Truman, as President of the United States, 
officially said:
  ``For of all the days of the year, Christmas is the family day. 
Christmas began that way.
  ``The moving event of the first Christmas was the bringing forth of 
the first born in the stable in Bethlehem. There began, in humble 
surroundings,

[[Page 21541]]

the home life of the Holy Family, glorified in song and story and in 
the hearts of men down through the centuries. The great joys and 
mysteries of that event have forever sanctified and enriched all home 
life.
  ``The hallowed associations of Christmas draw all hearts toward home. 
With one accord, we receive with joy and reverence the message of the 
first Christmas: `Glory to God in the highest, and on Earth peace, 
goodwill to men.'
  ``What could be more appropriate than for all of us to dedicate 
ourselves to the cause of peace on this holy night. As a Nation, we 
have a history of little more than a century and a half. But the 
religion which came to the world, heralded by the song of the angels, 
has endured for 19 centuries. It will continue to endure. It remains 
today the world's best hope for peace if the world will accept its 
fundamental teaching: that all men are brothers.''
  Then he quotes from Scripture:
  ``God that made the world and all things therein hath made of one 
blood all nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the Earth.''
  Then Truman says: ``In the spirit of that message from the Acts of 
the Apostles, I wish all of you a Merry Christmas.''
  I know, Mr. Speaker, there are people that go nuts when we talk about 
these official pronouncements by government officials as part of their 
government duty, but it is part of our history.
  For those who go ballistic when this part of our history, that led us 
to being the greatest nation in the history of the world--more assets 
for individuals; a country where the number one health problem for the 
Nation's poor is obesity; a country where we have sacrificed our 
greatest treasure, American lives, for other people's freedom without a 
demand for imperialism, without a demand that they convert to our 
government's leadership--that is why they speak French in France, 
Japanese in Japan, and German in Germany.
  Dwight Eisenhower, who knew something about fighting, said this 7 
years after the last statement I read from Harry Truman. This was his 
official pronouncement. President Eisenhower said:
  ``This evening's ceremony here at the White House is one of many 
thousands in America's traditional celebration of the birth, almost 
2,000 years ago, of the Prince of Peace.
  ``For us, this Christmas is truly a sense of goodwill--and our first 
peaceful one since 1949. Our hopes are bright, even though the world 
still stands divided in two antagonistic parts.
  ``More precisely than in any other way, prayer places freedom and 
communism in opposition, one to the other. The Communist can find no 
reserve of strength in prayer because his doctrine of materialism and 
statism denies the dignity of man and, consequently, the existence of 
God.
  ``But in America, George Washington long ago rejected exclusive 
dependence upon mere materialistic values. In the bitter and critical 
winter at Valley Forge, when the cause of liberty was so near defeat, 
his recourse was sincere and earnest prayer. From it, he received new 
hope and new strength of purpose out of which grew the freedom in which 
we celebrate this Christmas season.
  ``As religious faith is the foundation of free government, so is 
prayer an indispensable part of that faith.
  ``Would it not be fitting for each of us to speak in prayer to the 
Father of all men and women on this Earth, of whatever nation, and of 
every race and creed--to ask that He--God--help us and teach us and 
strengthen us and receive our thanks?
  ``Should we not pray that He help us?''
  He always capitalized ``He'' when he spoke of God.
  ``Should we not pray that He receive our thanks? For certainly, we 
are grateful for the opportunity given us to use our strength and our 
faith to meet the problems of this hour. And on this Christmas Eve, all 
hearts in America are filled with special thanks to God that the blood 
of those we love no longer spills on battlefields abroad. May He--God--
receive the thanks of each of us for this, His greatest bounty--and our 
supplication that peace on Earth may live with us, always.''
  So the leader of our fight against fascism, world domination of hate 
in World War II, Dwight Eisenhower, made those rather profound words.
  But, Mr. Speaker, we see through our history when our Nation was 
deeply troubled--whether it was Washington, whether it was Lincoln, 
whether it was Franklin Roosevelt in World War II, Eisenhower in the 
Korean war, Kennedy during Vietnam--all of our Presidents have known up 
to this point that our greatest hope comes through prayer to God.
  I am not speaking these words and reading our historic statements by 
Presidents--by our leaders--to try to convert anybody, but just so our 
history is understood, as our way continues to grow darker, critical 
violence is escalating again, racial divides are growing deeper when I 
thought we had--we have--we have come so far. We need to turn, 
according to our former leaders, historically--what they said is: Turn 
to God.
  This is not to convert anybody. It is simply so that this record of 
where Presidents, leaders, and Americans used to turn be part of the 
Record today.
  So John Kennedy's words, as President, December 17, 1962--at this 
time, there were only advisers in Vietnam--at the official lighting of 
the National Christmas Tree. It was still a Christmas tree for John 
Kennedy:
  ``With the lighting of this tree, which is an old ceremony in 
Washington and one which has been among the most important 
responsibilities of a good many Presidents of the United States, we 
initiate, in a formal way, the Christmas season.
  ``We mark the festival of Christmas, which is the most sacred and 
hopeful day in our civilization. For nearly 2,000 years, the message of 
Christmas, the message of peace and goodwill towards all men, has been 
the guiding star of our endeavors.
  ``I had a meeting which included some of our representatives from 
far-off countries in Africa and Asia. They were returning to their 
posts for the Christmas holidays.

                              {time}  1100

  ``Talking with them afterwards, I was struck by the fact that in the 
far off continents Moslems, Hindus, Buddhists, as well as Christians, 
paused from their labors on the 25th day of December to celebrate the 
birthday of the Prince of Peace. There could be no more striking proof 
that Christmas is truly the universal holiday of all men. It is the day 
when all of us dedicate our thoughts to others; when all are reminded 
that mercy and compassion are the enduring virtues; when all show, by 
small deeds and large and by acts, that it is more blessed to give than 
to receive.
  ``It is the day when we remind ourselves that man can and must live 
in peace with his neighbors and that it is the peacemakers who are 
truly blessed. In this year of 1962 we greet each other at Christmas 
with some special sense of the blessings of peace. This has been a year 
of peril when the peace has been sorely threatened. But it has been a 
year when peril was faced and when reason ruled. As a result, we may 
talk, at this Christmas, just a little bit more confidently of peace on 
Earth, good will to men. As a result, the hopes of the American people 
are perhaps a little higher. We have much yet to do. We still need to 
ask that God bless everyone.''
  Of course, each President has made pronouncements of a similar nature 
various times.
  This was Jimmy Carter, President Carter, December 15, 1977, at what 
he described as the Christmas Pageant of Peace Ceremony on the White 
House Ellipse:
  ``Christmas has a special meaning for those of us who are Christians, 
those of us who believe in Christ, those of us who know that almost 
2,000 years ago, the Son of Peace was born to give us a vision of 
perfection, a vision of humility, a vision of unselfishness, a vision 
of compassion, a vision of love.''
  President Carter in 1978 said:

[[Page 21542]]

  ``Rosalyn and I send our warmest wishes to our fellow citizens who 
celebrate the birth of Christ and who rejoice with us in the coming of 
the peace He symbolizes.
  ``We welcome this opportunity to offer our thanks to those who have 
given us their encouragement and prayers.
  ``We also join in this season's traditional expression of 
appreciation to God for His blessings in the past year, and we ask for 
His continuing guidance and protection as we face the challenges of 
1979.''
  President George W. Bush, President Clinton, President George W. 
Bush, and President Obama have delivered Christmas messages, and 
President Obama his holiday messages.
  I would like to conclude at this time with President Reagan's 
message, as he says on the observance of Christmas, December 19, 1988, 
his last Christmas message as President:
  ``The themes of Christmas and of coming home for the holidays have 
long been intertwined in song and story. There is a profound irony and 
lesson in this, because Christmas celebrates the coming of a savior who 
was born without a home.
  ``There was no room at the inn for the Holy Family. Weary of travel, 
a young Mary close to childbirth and her carpenter husband Joseph found 
but the rude shelter of a stable. There was born the King of Kings, the 
Prince of Peace--an event on which all history would turn. Jesus would 
again be without a home, and more than once; on the flight to Egypt and 
during His public ministry, when he said, `The foxes have holes, and 
the birds of the air have nests; but the son of man hath nowhere to lay 
his head.'
  ``From His very infancy, on, our Redeemer was reminding us that from 
then on we would never lack a home in Him. Like the shepherds whom the 
angel of the Lord appeared on the first Christmas Day, we could always 
say: `Let us now go even unto Bethlehem, and see this thing which is 
come to pass, which the Lord hath made known to us.'
  ``As we come home with gladness to family and friends this Christmas, 
let us also remember our neighbors who cannot go home themselves. Our 
compassion and concern this Christmas and all year long will mean much 
to the hospitalized, the homeless, the convalescent, the orphaned--and 
will surely lead us on our way to the joy and peace of Bethlehem and 
the Christ child who bids us come. For it is only in finding and living 
the internal meaning of the nativity that we can be truly happy, truly 
at peace, truly home.''
  He concludes, as I will--President Reagan:
  ``Merry Christmas, and God bless you.''
  I yield back the balance of my time.

                          ____________________