Was America Founded as a Christian Nation? The Honest Answer
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As the country marks 250 years since the Declaration of Independence, one claim is everywhere: the United States was founded as a Christian nation.
In this episode of The Justice Briefing, Dr. Jemar Tisby refuses the flat yes or no and insists on the first move any honest answer requires, which is to define the terms.
If "Christian nation" means a country shaped by Christians and their ethics? Does it mean a government with an official, state-sanctioned church?
History has the receipts,
Dr. Tisby walks through the primary sources, from Article VI and the First Amendment to the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom and the Treaty of Tripoli, and he traces the longer backstory of Henry VIII and the colonists who fled state religion.
In This Episode- Why "define your terms" is the first move in answering the Christian nation question
- The sense in which the claim is true and the sense in which it is false
- History has the receipts: Article VI, the First Amendment, the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom, and the Treaty of Tripoli
- Henry VIII, the Act of Supremacy, and why colonists fled state religion
- The difference between the separation of church and state and the separation of faith and politics
- The Enlightenment roots of the Declaration
- What white Christian nationalists actually mean, and why the slogan works as a permission structure for power
- The Christian Past That Wasn't: Debunking the Christian Nationalist Myths That Hijack History by Warren Throckmorton
- The Spirit of Justice: True Stories of Faith, Race, and Resistance by Jemar Tisby
- The Color of Compromise (book and video study) by Jemar Tisby
- Rededicate 250, National Mall, May 17, 2026
- Primary sources: Article VI of the U.S. Constitution; the First Amendment; the Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom (1786); the Treaty of Tripoli (1797); the Act of Supremacy (1534); John Locke, Second Treatise on Civil Government
Support The Justice Briefing by subscribing at JemarTisby.Substack.com, where Dr. Tisby brings the receipts every week so you can answer questions like this one from an informed perspective.