Faith at the Foundation: Christianity, the Founders, and the Birth of America
America did not emerge from a religious vacuum.
Nor was it founded as a secular experiment divorced from Christian ethics.
The United States was forged by men deeply shaped by biblical morality, Christian worldview assumptions, and centuries of Protestant political thoughtโeven when they disagreed theologically or personally failed to live up to those ideals.
To understand Americaโs founding honestly, we must reject both extremes:
- The claim that Christianity had no influence
- The claim that the founders were uniformly orthodox Christians
History supports neither.
George Washington: Public Faith and Moral Conviction
George Washington was not a theologian.
He was a statesman shaped by Christian ethics.
Washingtonโs letters and public addresses consistently affirm:
- The necessity of religion for morality
- The belief that virtue is essential for liberty
- The conviction that national success depends on moral character
In his Farewell Address, Washington famously warned:
โOf all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable supports.โ
This was not rhetorical fluff.
It reflected a widely held belief among the founders: self-governance requires self-restraint, and self-restraint depends on moral formationโhistorically supplied by Christianity.
Washington regularly referenced โProvidence,โ attended church, and viewed national independence as the result of divine favor, not merely military success.
Thomas Jefferson: Christian Ethics Without Orthodoxy
Thomas Jefferson is often used as proof that America was founded as a secular nation.
That is falseโbut so is the claim that Jefferson was an evangelical believer.
Jefferson rejected key Christian doctrines such as:
- The Trinity
- The deity of Christ
- Miracles
And yet, he deeply admired Jesusโ moral teachings, calling them the most sublime ethical system ever taught.
Jeffersonโs famous separation-of-church-and-state letter (to the Danbury Baptists) was not an attack on Christianityโbut a defense of it, aimed at preventing state control over the church.
Importantly, Jefferson:
- Quoted Scripture regularly
- Grounded natural rights in a Creator
- Viewed moral law as objective, not subjective
His disagreement was theologicalโnot moral.
John Adams: Liberty Requires Virtue
John Adams was explicit about the connection between Christianity and republican government.
He wrote:
โOur Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.โ
Adams believed:
- Law cannot replace virtue
- Government cannot function without moral citizens
- Christianity historically produced the moral framework necessary for liberty
Adams feared what would happen when religious conviction collapsed.
Modern America is proving his concern was justified.
James Madison: Ordered Liberty, Not Moral Chaos
James Madison, often called the โFather of the Constitution,โ believed deeply in:
- Religious liberty
- Limited government
- Human fallibility
Madison understood that unchecked power corrupts, which is why the Constitution assumes sinful human natureโa profoundly biblical assumption.
The separation of powers, checks and balances, and limited authority all reflect a Christian anthropology: man is not naturally good and must be restrained.
This was not Enlightenment optimism.
It was theological realism.
The Declaration of Independence: A Theological Document
The Declaration of Independence is not neutral.
It appeals explicitly to:
- โThe Laws of Nature and of Natureโs Godโ
- A Creator who endows rights
- A moral judge of nations
- Divine providence
Rights do not come from government.
They come from God.
That idea is not secular.
It is biblical in originโeven if articulated through philosophical language.
George Whitefield and the Great Awakening
Before America was a nation, it was a revived people.
George Whitefield, along with Jonathan Edwards and other revivalists, helped shape the moral and spiritual climate of the colonies during the First Great Awakening.
Whitefield:
- Preached to massive crowds across colonies
- Emphasized repentance, personal faith, and moral reform
- Undermined rigid class structures by preaching to all people equally
The Great Awakening:
- Fostered shared moral language
- Encouraged resistance to tyranny
- Reinforced the idea that authority is accountable to God
Many historians note that the revolution would have been unthinkable without this spiritual groundwork.
Christianity Did Not Create a TheocracyโIt Created a Framework
The founders did not establish a state church.
They established a moral architecture.
They assumed:
- Moral law exists
- Truth is objective
- Rights are God-given
- Power must be restrained
- Virtue is necessary for freedom
Those assumptions are not neutral.
They are Christian-influenced.
Remove themโand the system collapses.
Final Word
America was not founded as a Christian nation in the sense of enforced doctrine.
But it was unquestionably founded on Christian moral assumptions, biblical views of human nature, and a belief in divine accountability.
The founders understood something modern America has forgotten:
Liberty cannot survive without virtueโand virtue cannot survive without transcendent truth.
Ignore that foundation, and the structure will not stand.



