You have given me mixed, unrelated, and disjointed statements from a website for teachers, and a truncated version of the debates that lasted months. You do know that Everson won, right?
They are mutually exclusive. There was no wall of separation, and Black used in the ruling Madison’s writings in the Memorial and Remonstrances of 1785, and Jeffeson’s letter to the Danbury Baptists in 1802, and neither on have a bearing on the intent of the establishment clause, and what Madison and Jefferson wrote prior and post Bill of Rights have no relevance on a court’s ruling on the Constitution.
Your quote by Madison also demonstrates his intent was only limited to establishing a national religion, which is my argument, and the “compel men to worship God in any manner contrary to their conscience” is from his experience as a young man and Baptists being jailed for violating Virginia’s established religion of Anglican.
Regarding the necessary and proper clause, the states feared that the Congress would try to establish a national religion through the necessary and proper clause. One of the state’s reasons for the establishment clause was to prevent the Congress from using the necessary and proper clause to force the states to not be able to have state sponsored religions.
If you want to use the wall of separation, then you will have to prove what Jefferson’s intent was in his Danbury letter, and you will not be able to prove it to match your views. But the letter and Jefferson have no bearing on the intent of the establishment clause.
The statements are not "mixed, unrelated, and disjointed." WTF are you talking about?
The source is a faithful reproduction of the congressional records on the Bill of Rights. That site is aimed at teachers, so??? You can find the exact same thing here at the Library of Congress' Annals of Congress... http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=llac&fileName=001/llac001.db&recNum=380
The source I used was simply easier to read and search.
Everson did not win. The court, WRONGLY, ruled that the reimbursements for transportation costs were "separate and so indisputably marked off from the religious function" that they did not violate the constitution. I am sorry, I thought you might offer a little better argument than the pathetic idiots, usf and td, but it seems you may just be a bag of wind.
Madison's intent was clear, to bar any support of religion, in general, by the government or prohibitions against worship. The quote I offered shows that. You first denied Madison ever said it, then claim it is disjointed or unrelated and now that it does not mean what it clearly states. You are pretty clearly grasping at straws.