There are various opinions about the idea that America is a Christian country. But after reading the church books, I think that our country is clearly not built on Christianity. Even in many religious right groups, we insist that our law should carry out the teachings of Protestant Christianity. There is another statement in the document written by our founder. The US Constitution does not refer to Christianity or Jesus Christ, and we prove that our country is not a Christian country.
So, if it is not based on any of the above criteria as a Christian country, what would make the United States a Christian country? According to Judge Brewer, the United States is "one of the countries of the world, most well-known as a Christian state" 2. Moral - Whatever they are - to derive their form and spirit from their religion. For example, the Egyptians allowed brothers and sisters to get married. Because this is a precedent established by their God, Isis and Osiris. Therefore, the classic country also celebrated Bacchus' sickness. Therefore, as the Qur'an teaches, the Turks became lazy and inactive. When a recent philosopher in a country discovered that neither God nor religion existed, the state fell into a miserable case without law and morality. . . . In the United States, Christianity is primitive, spontaneous, ethnic religion.
Many young Christians who claim their belief today are completely refusing labels of "evangelical" or "Christian." That is because our faith does not want to match this strange Christian nationalism. Rather than concentrate on cultivating our children we want people to understand our beliefs through our actions and good words. However, the Christian nationalist movement made it a political identity and influenced the American policy. But if Christians need to recognize something, that we must live in the United States after becoming a Christian and pretend to be a Christian or even related things
Is the United States a "country of Christians"? Several Americans think so. Religious right activists and right-wing television missionaries often insist that the United States is a Christian country. Even some politicians agree. They may be meaningful if a person issuing this statement simply says that most Americans are Christians. But those who think that the United States is a Christian country usually mean more things and claim that this country should become an official Christian. As a result of this discussion, the nature of our country is in danger.