Peter A. Lillback's book <i>George Washington's Sacred Fire</i>
Peter A. Lillback's book George Washington's Sacred Fire
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Finding Washington's Faith

George Washington often is depicted as a Deist, viewing God as a remote creator who abandoned his creation.
George Washington often is depicted as a Deist, viewing God as a remote creator who abandoned his creation. But most people know little about the Christian faith that guided and sustained the Father of Our Country, says Peter A. Lillback, author of George Washington’s Sacred Fire, a new biography based on 15 years of research into Washington and his writings.

Lillback, a Presbyterian pastor in Bryn Mawr, Pa. (pop. 4,382), as well as the president of Westminster Theological Seminary and the nonprofit Providence Forum, an organization committed to preserving American’s spiritual roots, spoke to American Profile about Washington, born 275 years ago on Feb. 22.

AP: Why is Washington so often regarded as a leader without Christian faith?

PL: It’s been so often said that Washington didn’t partake of communion. Yet I discovered the evidence is that he communed in Virginia, New Jersey and New York. After he took the oath of office, he went down a few blocks to a two-hour worship service, and Mrs. Alexander Hamilton recorded that she knelt in communion with him after the service was over. (There also has been) the argument that he did not use the Bible and was not Bible-serious. But we know on Inauguration Day he used a Bible to take the oath of office. It came from the local Masonic order, and they still have that Bible to this day. There are 200 different examples where Washington alludes to or cites the Bible. He calls Scripture “Holy Writ.”

AP: What was his basic personality?

PL: Shy, non-self-disclosing and remarkably gracious and polite. He had a reserved dignity. And he was not a public speaker. One of the writers of the inaugural address said, “He stood trembling before his people with his notes in his hand.” There are some incidents where he was overcome by stage fright. Someone made the observation, “There was never a battle in which he stood in terror, but there are speeches where he could not stand up without trembling.”

AP: Were his teeth really wooden, as we sometimes hear?

PL: They were not wooden. The story is that his (false) teeth were made out of animal bone or tusks. But how did the (wooden teeth) myth get started? According to one version, Washington loved to drink port (wine), and port can stain your teeth. He said, “My teeth are becoming so stained you could think they were wood.”

AP: Washington’s image today is quaint at best. We mostly see him as a talking dollar bill in a TV commercial for a President’s Day sale. How did he become such a largely forgotten hero?

PL: I suppose because of the spirit of political correctness. In seeking to correct the oversight of people that belong in our story as Americans, we’ve thrown out some of our white male founders. We don’t know them anymore. In a 2005 poll of college seniors, President Bill Clinton’s job performance had a much higher score of approval than George Washington’s. How many public school rooms have a picture of George Washington anymore? Fifty years ago, every school had a picture of him hanging up. He’s as faceless as the monument that’s been given to him, and that’s tragic.

AP: What would he likely think of our modern-day presidents?

PL: Washington advocated peace through strength. He would have loved Ronald Reagan’s idea of a really powerful navy and strong army. On the other hand, part of his farewell address gave the warning, “Avoid entangling alliances.” So he would have had a lot of problems going back to the (President Woodrow) Wilson era, when America got involved in European conflicts and worldwide issues. He wouldn’t have wanted us to be involved on the international stage. But he would have been enthralled with George Bush’s commitment to liberty. He would have looked at the debacle we’re in right now of fighting terror, and he might have said something like, “You have to have people who are loyal to the government. Have you been letting immigrants into your country that are not loyal?” And he probably would have criticized every administration that allowed us to be dependent on international oil.

AP: What do you think his ultimate legacy is?

PL: His legacy is this country. His personality, his commitment and his resolve kept the army together. It was understood even in his own lifetime that if they could get him to give up, the war would be over. Imagine being defeated outside of Philadelphia. An enemy army has taken the capital city, and you’ve retreated, having lost two battles. You have to take care of your soldiers, and there’s no place to go but the wilderness. And you have a letter sent to you by people in Philadelphia who had been loyal to you, saying, “Let’s end this, before there’s any more bloodshed.” But Washington had the courage to stand strong and not give up, even though he said in one of his letters, “You can tell where the soldiers have walked, not just by their footprints in the snow, but by the bloodstains that are there.” Men were dying of exposure and starvation. Weeks would go by when they wouldn’t eat anything but flour and water. So there would be no America if there weren’t the character of Washington that was utterly resolved to accomplishing the job he’d been given.

AP: He had to have had faith just to survive Valley Forge.

PL: That’s right. There was nothing there. They had to build houses for 10,000 soldiers by chopping down trees, finding mud and putting them together. And he promised his men, “I will not leave my tent until you all are under roof.” His headquarters were there, but he didn’t live in them until he finished shivering with the very last soldier. You’ve got to love a leader like that.

Visit www.providenceforum.org for more information.

Alanna Nash is a writer based in Louisville, Ky.

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Discuss this Article

Here are the first 10 of 16 comments about this article. To read more or post your own comments, visit our message boards.
mpanter wrote:
Editors

Thank you for your article on George Washington's faith. It has been a long time since I have read such an article, and we greatly appreciate it. Your interview with the book's article was so refreshing.

Keep it up!

ML Panter
George Washington was one of many Christians among our founding fathers. Most of the men who wrote the Declaration of Independence, our Constitution and the Bill of Rights were devout Christians. The majority of Americans are completely unaware that this nation was founded upon Christianity, thanks to the purging of the faith from our history books during the 1920s, 30s and 40s. Thanks to writers like Alana Nash and Jonathan Last, the truth of American's Christian beginnings is gradually emerging from the secular revision of our past. For more information about how this country began, visit wallbuilders.com and similar sites. Thanks, AP, for publishing this article. Keep up the good work.
Jessica wrote:
George Washington was definately a Christian. In fact, most of our Founding Fathers were Christians. Some historians have called them "deists", but that is incorrect. I'm glad someone is finally getting the truth out in the open. Political correctness is poisening our history books today, so thank you for telling it the way it really was.
caharrison wrote:
Thank you for covering a great book on Washington. Many in academia today would like for us to forget that a strong Christian faith guided most of the influential Founding Fathers of our country, and they intended for that to continue. In George Washington's farewell address, he said
"... Of all the habits and dispositions which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensible supports. In vain would that man claim the tribute of patriotism who would labor to subvert those great pillars..."
Thank you for the article Finding Washington's Faith. I thoroughtly enjoyed reading it. A christian belief is the foundation of our country. I'm a history buff also. Thank You, again. Janice English
I love America and I love God, but I am appalled at what many Americans do in the name of liberty and in the name of God -- and I'm sure George Washington's moral sense would be shocked, also. Peter Lillback's statement that Washington would be "enthralled with George Bush's commitment to liberty" is highly offensive in light of the fact that over 3,000 of our soldiers have died because of the administration's lies -- NOT liberty. And every discussion of America's religious roots needs to include the wording of Article VI of the Constitution: "no religious test shall ever be required" for federal office. The US President can be any religion in the world, or no religion at all. Given that the BTK serial killer was a church president, and thousands of other examples, it's clear that religion does not guarantee goodness. And lack of religion -- such as Thomas Paine -- does not imply any lack of morality or excellent character. I think the Lillback interview presents a deeply unbalanced viewpoint.
tedthbear wrote:
Washington was an inspiring military leader, a great statesman and a committed Christian. That is a very revealing article.
eatkinson wrote:
How refreshing to actually read about the faith of a great American. Today we are in a state of denial regarding the presence of and importance of faith in our daily lives. You actually used several words which are almost foreign to our vocabularies in the press. 'God' 'pray' 'Bible' to mention a few.
Thank you for your boldness, we need to hear the truth about our great Christian leaders. Could you follow up with more explicit articles about great americans, maybe General Swartzkof - etc. Thank you again.
I really liked the article but disagreed with the labeling of the photo of Washington kneeling on page 18. The caption was a "Pull Quote" out of the article that said "Washington sought "strength through peace."" The actual quote from Peter Lillback was, on page 7, "Washington advocated peace through strength," a totally different meaning than "strength through peace." "Strength through peace" sounds like peace at any price will make us strong. I like Teddy Rooseveldt's "Walk softly, but carry a big stick."
dmoore wrote:
A typical Parson Weemish article with little basis in fact and much in fiction except to underscore that while the Founding Fathers or Founding Brothers were good men who adhered to Biblical code of ethics they were Deists. The mythical cover picture is based on a contrived story out of the Valley Forge expierience and never happened. They were admirable men but they were men. Consult "The Faiths of the Founding Fathers" by David L. Holmes and others cited therein. The allusions to the present by Lillbaack are obviously silly. Please try to do betert next year.

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