• WEREN'T WE FOUNDED BY DEISTS UNRULY ADVENTURERS AND RELIGIOUS CASTAWAYS?

    From Scott Allen to ALL on Wednesday, January 14, 2026 08:14:06

    QUESTION #5

    WEREN'T WE FOUNDED BY DEISTS
    UNRULY ADVENTURERS AND RELIGIOUS CASTAWAYS?

    This stereotype presented in TV docu-dramas and history classrooms
    throughout the nation is one of the greatest defamations of
    national character ever perpetrated upon a people.

    The influence of Deism in America was minimal until the nineteenth
    century when it made inroads through the Unitarian Church and the
    atheistic philosophy of the French Revolution. During our Founding
    period, however, it had little influence. According to history Perry
    Miller, Deism was strictly "an exotic plant" imported from europe which
    did not flourish here. This distinguished historian also makes the point
    that the colonial clergy presented to the people a religious rationale
    for the American Revolution which united them behind its goals. Deism
    was incapable of producing such a phenomenon. it professed a belief in
    one God but denied the divine origin of Scriptures. Its weak philosophy
    of a non-active, spectator God who left all the affairs of the world to
    human whim was no match for the powerful Biblical faith of the majority
    of our people in the Founding Father generation. Even Jefferson and
    Franklin, the two men most often quoted as being Deists, give little
    credence to the view in there writings. Undoubtedly, both of these men
    did imbibe a mixture of European religious heresy, but the predominant influence upon their world continued to be Christian.

    Franklin's Plea for Public Prayer

    In the summer of 1787 a feeling of desperation and deadlock had
    descended upon the Consitutional Convention. Men from various states
    were planning to leave and it would be years before they could gather
    again for another try at bringing the loosely-knit confederation colonies together to form a republic.

    On June 28, 1787, as the Convention was ready to adjourn in dissension,
    a wise old man addressed its President, George Washington, with quiet simplicity:

    "How has it happened, Sir, that we have not hitherto once thought of
    humbly appealing to the Father of lights to illuminate our
    understandings? in the beginning of the contest with Great Britain,
    when we were sensible to danger, we had daily prayers in this room
    for Divine protection. Our prayers, Sir, were heard and they were
    graciously answered...I have lived, Sir, a long time and the longer
    I live, the more convincing proofs I see of this truth--that God
    governs in the affairs of men.-And if a sparrow cannot fall to the
    ground without His notice, is it probable that an empire can rise
    without His aid? We have been assured, Sir, in the sacred writings
    that'except the Lord build the house, they labor in vain that build
    it.'....I firmly believe this..."

    Benjamin Franklin's words were heeded and the Convention went on to
    complete its task. Although Franklin is often classified as a Deist, it
    is clear from the above statements that he had been deeply influenced by
    the Christian world-view and such great Christian ministers as George Whitefield.

    It could be well argued that many Christians today have acted more like
    Deists than the few accused of this heresy in our founding, because
    today we often give lip service to the Lord Jesus Christ over all
    things, but then act as though He were an absentee, distant monarch just
    biding His time to claim His throne!


    Don't Believe What You See?

    Regarding the charge that wild adventurers and womanizers roamed the
    land in early America, there is little need for refutation. On the
    frontier, starting in the times of the Puritans, some scouts and
    settlers did precede the church and families, and there were some
    atrocities perpetrated upon the Indians and some rowdy settlements. But
    as soon as settlements were established and churches were formed, the
    immoral and rowdy were made subject to the rule of the law. The
    Christian women of the community, especially, demanded it. Our TV
    generation has absorbed too much western cowboy-fever, most of it
    fictitious distortions of true life in early America. The US News and
    World Report (May 21, 1979)reports that the American people receive most
    of their knowledge of history from watching TV docu-dramas. And most of
    these docu-dramas bear little resemblance to the true story of our
    history. Only by going back and reading the original documents, as you
    are going to be challenged to do in this study of America's Christian
    History, can you determine the real story.

    The truth is that those that saved their money and possesed the fortitude
    to settle this country were for the most part character-filled
    Christians. Rev R.J. Rushdoony points out that it took two years living expenses just to cross and settle America and that the well-established families with the Puritan work ethic and Christian faith were the true
    hardy breed that settled our country. These godly men and women, due due
    to their family orientation, free-enterprise spirit, and Christian
    discipline, maintained cultural dominion over the sin-loving reprobates
    that we read so much about. Our history is evidence of the fact that, in
    the long-run, nothing can thwart an individual who has an understanding
    of his Commission from God to subdue the earth and who believes God for
    the victory.