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Huckabee defends praise of revisionist historian

Former and possible future presidential candidate Mike Huckabee went on Comedy Central's Daily Show to defend his praise for David Barton, a leading advocate for the view that America was founded as a Christian nation—a view using what critics call revisionist history.

Speaking after Barton at the recent Rediscover God in America conference in Iowa, Huckabee said he doesn't know of a more effective communicator than the founder and president of Wall­Builders, a pro-family organization that promotes "America's forgotten history and heroes," with particular attention to "the moral, religious and constitutional foundation on which America was built."

"I just wish that every single young person in America would be able to be under his tutelage and understand something about who we really are as a nation," said Huckabee, a Fox News personality who is among leaders in polls listing possible GOP presidential contenders in 2012.

"I almost wish there would be . . . a simultaneous telecast, and all Americans would be forced—forced at gunpoint no less—to listen to every David Barton message," Huckabee joked. "And I think our country would be better for it."

Pressed April 6 on his admiration for Barton by Daily Show host Jon Stewart, Huckabee said he thinks Barton "is very much a historian" whose objective is "to bring some balance to the idea that the founders had no spiritual direction at all."

During the interview the former Arkansas governor and ordained Baptist minister gave his own views on the phrase "separation of church and state."

"Separation of church and state was a phrase that didn't appear until a letter Thomas Jefferson wrote in 1804," he said, claiming that "it was the polar opposite of how many people have interpreted it. They have interpreted it to say that it was essentially a doctrine that the church wasn't to involve itself in the affairs of state. Actually it was the opposite. It was that the government would not pick out a particular church and establish it as a state church."

Brent Walker of the Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty said Huckabee was partly right about the letter, which actually was written in 1802, in that Jefferson applied his "wall of separation" to the federal government and not individuals, but wrong in saying that was the first time the metaphor appeared.

Walker said Roger Williams, founder of the first Baptist church established on American soil and a religious-liberty advocate in colonial America, used it 150 years earlier when he referred to "a hedge or wall of separation between the garden of the church and the wilderness of the world." Walker added: "Williams and Jefferson understood the benefits to both the church and state of keeping those two entities separate and distinct."

Walker also disputed Huckabee's assertion that Jefferson's letter was the "polar opposite" of what church-state separationists believe today. The letter was the president's response to an earlier letter from the Danbury Baptists complaining that their religious privileges under Connecticut's established church were enjoyed "as favors granted, and not as inalienable rights." —ABP 

Bob Allen

Bob Allen writes for Baptist News Global.

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