Curious Mix in the Continental Congress April 1, 1996
Many supporters of the Revolution were deists. With leadership from Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson (and arguably John Adams and George Washington), they maintained a dominant presence in the Continental Congress, the body that governed American affairs from 1774 to 1789. At the same time, the Continental Congress was populated with traditional Christians like John Jay. Congress, however, sought to model the kind of cooperation between Christians and rationalists that it hoped would be observed across the colonies. For example, the Declaration of Independence, in its four references to God—“Nature’s God,” the “Creator,” the “Supreme Judge of the World,” and “Divine Providence”—were essentially deist terms that Christian congressmen consented to because they in no way denied Christian truth. Yet during the eight-year Revolutionary War, the annual thanksgiving and fast-day proclamations issued by Congress and observed throughout the colonies were written with the awareness that the overwhelming majority of religious Americans were Christian. The proclamations therefore regularly invoked the name of Jesus Christ and asked for his blessings upon the war effort. Hear Ye! Hear Ye! The Contintental Congress’s most famous compromise, the Declaration of Independence, being read to colonial troops.
Christianity and the American Revolution: Christian History, Issue 50, (Carol Stream, IL: Christianity Today, Inc.) 1997.
If you're a Christian History & Biography print subscriber...
...but have not yet registered for online access to CTLibrary.com, you can receive a full-year's access for just $29.95!
Register here
| | If you're NOT a Christian History & Biography print subscriber...
You're entitled to a special, introductory offer for new subscribers only! Subscribe now and receive a one-year Christian History & Biography print magazine subscription and one-year access to all Christian History archives for just $39.95!
Subscribe now!
|
|