How the Bible Shaped America's Founding Generation
Regarding the Bible’s influence on America, Andrew Jackson,
America’s 7th president, declared, “That book, sir, is the rock on
which our Republic rests.” Born in 1767, Jackson’s life overlapped that of the
founding generation, and his statement reflects the general sentiment of the
founding generation toward the Bible.
George Washington
Honors and Esteems the Bible
While
president, Washington’s nephew, Robert Lewis, served as his secretary and lived
with him. Lewis said that he had accidentally witnessed Washington’s private
devotions in his library both morning and evening and that on those occasions
he had seen him in a kneeling posture with a Bible open before him, and that he
believed such to have been his daily practice.
James Madison’s
Biblical Worldview
James Madison, the chief architect of the U.S. Constitution, had a
thorough Christian upbringing and training. At the College of New Jersey, he
was mentored by the school’s president, John Witherspoon, a Presbyterian
Reformer and signer of the Declaration of Independence, who once declared, “Cursed
is all education
that is contrary
to Christ.”
After completing his studies, Madison remained at
the college where worked on a project translating the Bible from Hebrew and
Greek into English. His estimation of the Bible was demonstrated when as
president, in 1812, he signed a federal bill that provided economic aid for a Bible
society in its goal of the mass distribution of the Bible.
Dr. D. James Kennedy and Jerry Newcombe were right
when they said, “Madison’s worldview was one shaped by the Bible more than any
other source” (Hyatt, 5 Pillars of theAmerican Republic, 14).
The Founders Primary Authority
From the beginning, the Bible had been incorporated
into all the learning of the schools in Colonial America. For example, The New England Primer coupled Bible
verses and church doctrine with the learning of the ABCs. The letter “A,” for
example, was associated with “Adam” and the statement, “In Adam’s fall, we
sinned all.” Children in early America learned to read with their primer in one
hand and their Bible in the other.
Knowing how the Founders esteemed and
reverenced the Bible, it comes as no surprise that The First
Continental Congress was opened with Bible reading and prayer. It is also no
surprise that when Benjamin Franklin called the Constitutional Convention to
Prayer, he quoted from both the Psalms and the Gospels (Hyatt, 5 Pillars ofthe American Republic, 14).
Indeed, a ten-year project instituted to
discover where the Founders got their ideas for America’s founding documents
found that by far the single most cited authority in their writings was the
Bible. They were people of the Book and consciously and unconsciously used it
as the standard for measuring all other writings both ancient and modern.
Congress Recommends
the First English Bible Printed in America
The Founders’ respect for the Bible was highlighted when the first
English Bible printed in America in 1782 included a recommendation from
Congress. The producer of the Bible, Robert Aitken, had written a letter to
Congress in which he asked for that government body’s sanction on his work. In
the letter, Aitken called this Bible, “a neat
Edition of the Scriptures for the use in schools.”
Congress enthusiastically responded to his request
and offered the following recommendation to be included in this first English
Bible printed in America.
Resolved: That the United States in Congress
assembled, highly approve the pious and laudable undertaking of Mr. Aitken, as
subservient to the interest of religion as well as an instance of the progress
of the arts in this country, and being satisfied from the above report, of his
care and accuracy in the execution of the work they recommend this edition of
the Bible to the inhabitants of the United States and hereby authorize him to
publish this recommendation in the manner he shall think proper.
The
Founders Not Impacted by Deism
The Founders lived at a time when the European
Enlightenment and its exaltation of reason was drawing many on the European
continent away from the Bible. However, the Enlightenment and its religious
counterpart, Deism, never gained popularity in America. The late Harvard
professor, Perry Miller, called Deism an “exotic plant” that never took root in
American soil. America’s Founders saw no dichotomy between Biblical revelation
and reason. The well-known Catholic scholar, William Novak, says,
Everywhere that reason led, Americans found the
Bible. If they read Francis Bacon, they found the Bible. If they read Isaac
Newton or John Milton, they found the Bible. In Shakespeare, they found the
Bible. In the world of the founders, the Bible was an unavoidable and useful
rod of measurement, a stimulus to intellectual innovation (Hyatt, 5 Pillars of the American Republic, 16).
The Bible Impacted
All of American Life
When the French sociologist, Alexis de Tocqueville, visited America
in 1831 to study her institutions, he said, "The religious atmosphere of
the country was the first thing that struck me.” In describing the opening of
America’s western frontier, he was impressed with the character of those
adventurers whom he said, “Penetrated the wilds of the New Word with the Bible,
an axe, and some newspapers.”
Yes, Jackson was right. The Bible was the rock on which the early
American republic rested. This profound influence of the Bible on the founding
of America was confirmed by her 26th president, Theodore Roosevelt,
who said, “No other book of any kind ever written in English has ever so
affected the whole life of a people.”
What
Christians Can Do
How far we have fallen! The Book that made America
great has become an object of disdain and ridicule by an arrogant, narcissistic
cultural elite. America’s Founders would be astounded to know that the book
they so revered is now banned from public schools and that government officials
are threatened with lawsuits for holding Bible studies with their colleagues.
Yes, this un-American hostility to the Bible is a
marker showing the extent to which the nation has been severed from its roots. It also serves as
a wake-up call for Christians in America to repent of their burning desire for
acceptance by modern culture and become salt and light to this generation and begin
praying for another great, national spiritual awakening.
This article was
derived from Dr. Eddie Hyatt’s latest book, 5 Pillars of the American Republic, available from Amazon and his website at
www.eddiehyatt.com.
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