“So, can you point to something in the constitution that is specifically anti-Catholic?”
I never claimed there was. Thanks anyway for the straw man though.
“But I think you actually put your finger on the “render unto Caesar” verse.”
Nope. That has nothing to do with any critique of either Enlightenment philosophy, the Founders thinking, or the deification of the Founders and the Constitution by many Americans.
You need to look into what the Enlightenment was and how it was incredibly anti-Catholic and anti-Scholastic. This sort of philosophy influenced the Founders almost exclusively.
The American system of government may not be actively anti-Religion like the Communists, but it’s certainly passively anti-Catholic insofar as it is inherently secular and has fostered the compete breakdown of society. We see this in the legal basis for abhorrent human behavior like homosexuality, transgenderism, assisted suicide, abortion. In it’s attempt to safeguard religious freedom, it has denied the existence of any religious truth or mortality. It vaguely acknowledges human rights as endowed by a deity, yet fails to elaborate on those rights (save for another vague statement about life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness).
Whatever good the Constitution has been, and I believe it has been fairly effective in some respects, it’s clearly the result of a philosophy which has abandoned Scholastic teleology for sentamentalism deprived of moral truths.
-Owen Riley