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The lemon is squeezed dry

There’s something attractive in the party names in the Supreme Court’s decision on the relationship between government and religion: American Legion v. American Humanist Association. Both organizations, the veterans group formed after World War I and the secular humanist group founded the year this nation entered World War II, want to tell you how American they are.

And they are locked in the longstanding debate over the meaning of the first clause of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion,” it reads, “or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”

Note that this is not, as many Americans think, a command that there be a solid wall between church and state. That metaphor was advanced by Thomas Jefferson, who neither attended the Constitutional Convention nor voted for the First Amendment.

Rather, the amendment barred Congress from creating an established church supported by taxation, like the Church of England, and from messing with the established church in any state (those in Connecticut and Massachusetts continued to exist until 1818 and 1833, respectively).

This made sense in a new nation uniting what had long been culturally and religiously diverse colonies. As Justice Clarence Thomas noted in his concurring opinion in the American Legion case, it also means that this portion of the First Amendment cannot logically be applied to limit the states. States can’t be barred from banning “exactly what the text of the Clause seeks to protect: state establishments of religion.”

The Bladensburg Cross was erected by citizens in 1925 to memorialize 49 men of Prince George’s County, Maryland, who were killed in World War I and has been maintained since in a traffic circle by a state-government agency. The issue before the court was whether the cross was an unconstitutional establishment of religion.

No, said the court, by a 7-2 margin. Justice Samuel Alito’s plurality opinion stressed that the cross was old (the American Humanist Association sued in 2012, 87 years after it was dedicated in a multi-faith ceremony), that its message was not solely religious (Americans were much taken with the rows of crosses in World War I military cemeteries) and became even less so over time. Its removal would be seen by many “not as a neutral act but as the manifestation of a ‘hostility toward religion.'”

What Justice Alito did not do was decide the case under the three-part test set forth in what was long taken as the leading Establishment Clause case, Lemon v. Kurtzman of 1971. In that case, the court overturned by an 8-1 margin Pennsylvania and Rhode Island laws providing state funding of nonreligious programs provided by religious — almost all Catholic — schools.

Lemon, he argued, has not proved to be a “framework” for deciding First Amendment cases, has frequently been sidestepped by the court and has not provided consistent guidance for trial judges. Its supposedly rigorous tests, especially its ban on “an excessive government entanglement with religion,” are in practice impressionistic. The same facts strike one judge as forbidden entanglement and another as peaceful co-existence. Such multipart tests, common in midcentury jurisprudence, were a tool for legal elites to foist their values on the public.

Concurring justices were even harsher. Justice Kavanaugh notes, “this Court no longer applies to old test articulated in Lemon v. Kurtzman.” For Justice Gorsuch, Lemon was “a misadventure” that “sought a ‘grand unifying theory’ of the Establishment Clause but left us only a mess.” Justice Thomas wrote, “I would take the logical next step and overrule the Lemon test in all contexts.”

It seems that all the juice has been squeezed from this citrus, with just the rind left rotting in the garbage can.

Lemon and American Legion were decided in culturally different Americas. Lemon’s postwar America was a time of increasing religious allegiance and attendance, of significant cultural conformity. It was a time when judges and legal scholars were quick to detect and eager to prevent what they considered undue pressure on nonconformists and unbelievers.

Today’s America is one of declining religious allegiance and attendance, one in which media, university, corporate elites and government elites stigmatize religious belief and expression. It’s an America where justices seek to prevent undue pressure on believers.

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Michael Barone is a senior political analyst

for the Washington Examiner, resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and longtime co-author of The Almanac of American Politics.

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