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14 page printout, page 37 to 50 of 225
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SIX HISTORIC AMERICANS -- GEORGE WASHINGTON.
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GEORGE WASHINGTON.
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During the presidential campaign of 1880, the Christian Union
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made the startling admission that, of the nineteen men who, up to
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that time, had held the office of President of the United States,
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not one, with the Possible exception of Washington, had ever been
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a member of a Christian church.
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Was Washington a church member? Was he in any sense a
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Christian? In early life he held a formal adherence to the church
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of England, serving, for a time, as a vestryman in the parish in
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which he resided. But this being merely a temporal office did not
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necessitate his being a communicant, nor even a believer in
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Christianity. In his maturer age he was connected with no church.
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Washington, the young Virginia planter, might, perhaps, with some
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degree of truthfulness, have been called a Christian; Washington,
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the Soldier, statesman and sage, was not a Christian, but a Deist.
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This great man, like most men in public life, was reticent
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respecting his religious views. This rendered a general knowledge
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of his real belief impossible, and made it easy for zealous
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Christians to impose upon the public mind and claim him for their
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faith. Whatever evidence of his unbelief existed was, as far as
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possible, suppressed. Enough remains, however, to prompt me to
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attempt the task of proving the truth of the following
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propositions:
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1. That Washington was not a Christian communicant.
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2. That he was not a believer in the Christian religion.
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WAS WASHINGTON A COMMUNICANT?
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Washington was not a communicant. This fact can be easily
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demonstrated. A century ago it was the custom of all classes,
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irrespective of their religious beliefs, to attend church.
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Washington, adhering to the custom, attended. But when the
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administration of the sacrament took place, instead of remaining
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and partaking of the Lord's Supper as a communicant would have
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done, he invariably arose and retired from the church.
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The closing years of his life, save the last two, were passed
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in Philadelphia, he being then President of the United States. In
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addition to his eight years' incumbency of the presidency, he was,
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during the eight years of the Revolutionary war, and also during
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the six years that elapsed between the Revolution and the
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establishment of the Federal government, not only a frequent
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visitor in Philadelphia, but during a considerable portion of the
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time a resident of that city. While there he attended the Episcopal
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churches of which the Rev. William White and the Rev. James
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Abercromble were rectors. In regard to his being a communicant, no
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evidence can be so pertinent or so decisive as that of his pastors.
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Bishop White, the father of the Protestant Episcopal church of
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America, is one of the most eminent names in church history. During
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a large portion of the period covering nearly a quarter of a
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century, Washington, with his wife, attended the churches in which
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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37
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SIX HISTORIC AMERICANS -- GEORGE WASHINGTON.
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Bishop White officiated. In a letter dated Fredericksburg, Aug. 13,
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1835, Colonel Mercer sent Bishop White the following inquiry
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relative to this question:
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"I have a desire, my dear Sir, to know whether Gen.
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Washington was a communicant of the Protestant Episcopal
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church, or whether he occasionally went to the communion only,
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or if ever he did so at all. ... No authority can be so
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authentic and complete as yours on this point."
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To this inquiry Bishop White replied as follows:
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"Philadelphia, Aug. 15, 1835.
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"Dear Sir: In regard to the subject of your inquiry, truth
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requires me to say that Gen. Washington never received the
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communion in the churches of which I am the parochial minister.
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Mrs. Washington was an habitual communicant.
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... I have been written to by many on that point, and
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have been obliged to answer them as I now do you. I am
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respectfully.
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"Your humble servant,
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"WILLIAM WHITE."
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(Memoir of Bishop White, pp. 196, 197).
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In a standard Christian authority, Sprague's "Annals of the
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American Pulpit," written and compiled by Rev. Wm. B. Sprague,
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D.D., is a sketch of the life of Rev. James Abercromble, D.D. In
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this biographical sketch is to be found some very important
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evidence from the pen of Washington's other pastor, pertaining to
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the subject under consideration. I quote the following:
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"One incident in Dr. Abercrombie's experience as a
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clergyman, in connection with the Father of his Country, is
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especially worthy of record; and the following account of it
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was given by the Doctor himself, in a letter to a friend, in
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1831 shortly after there had been some public allusion to it:
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'With respect to the inquiry you make I can only state the
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following facts; that, as pastor of the Episcopal church,
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observing that, on sacramental Sundays, Gen. Washington,
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immediately after the desk and pulpit services, went out with
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the greater part of the congregation -- always leaving Mrs.
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Washington with the other communicants -- she invariably being
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one -- I considered it my duty in a sermon on Public Worship,
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to state the unhappy tendency of example, particularly of
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those in elevated stations who uniformly turned their backs
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upon the celebration of the Lord's Supper. I acknowledge the
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remark was intended for the President; and as such he received
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it. A few days after, in conversation with, I believe, a
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senator of the United States, he told me he had dined the day
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before with the President, who in the course of conversation
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at table said that on the preceding Sunday he had received a
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very just reproof from the pulpit for always leaving the
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church before the administration of the Sacrament; that he
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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38
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SIX HISTORIC AMERICANS -- GEORGE WASHINGTON.
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honored the preacher for his integrity and candor; that he had
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never sufficiently considered the influence of his example,
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and that he would not again give cause for the repetition of
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the reproof; and that, as he had never been a communicant,
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were he to become one then it would be imputed to an
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ostentatious display of religious zeal? arising altogether
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from his elevated station. Accordingly, he never afterwards
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came on the morning of sacramental Sunday, though at other
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times he was a constant attendant in the morning'" (Annals of
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the American Pulpit, Vol. v, p. 394).
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Here we have a confirmation of the statement previously made
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that Washington absented himself from church on sacramental
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Sundays; undeniable proof that during the later years of his life
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he was not a communicant; and, above all, the assurance of
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Washington himself that "he had never been a communicant."
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The Rev. E.D. Neill, in the Episcopal Recorder, the organ of
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the church of which it is claimed Washington was a communicant,
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says:
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"As I read, a few days ago, of the death of the Rev.
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Richard M. Abercrombie, rector of St. Matthew's Protestant
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Episcopal church in Jersey City, memories of my boyhood arose.
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He was born not far from my father's house in Philadelphia and
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was the son of the Rev. James Abercrombie, a fine scholar and
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preacher, who had in early life corresponded with the great
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lexicographer, Dr. Samuel Johnson, and in later years was the
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assistant minister of Christ's and St. Peter's churches, in
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Philadelphia, where my maternal ancestors had worshiped for
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more than one generation. One day, after the father had
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reached four score years, the lately deceased son took me into
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the study of the aged man, and showed me a letter which
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President George Washington had written to his father,
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thanking him for the loan of one of his manuscript sermons.
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Washington and his wife were regular attendants upon his
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ministry while residing in Philadelphia. The President was not
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a communicant, notwithstanding all the pretty stories to the
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contrary, and after the close of the sermon on sacramental
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Sundays, had fallen into the habit of retiring from the church
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while his wife remained and communed."
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Referring to Dr. Abercrombie's reproof of Washington, Mr.
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Neill says:
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"Upon one occasion Dr. Abercromble alluded to the unhappy
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tendency of the example of those dignified by age and position
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turning their backs upon the celebration of the Lord's Supper.
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The discourse arrested the attention of Washington, and after
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that he never came to church with his wife on Communion
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Sunday."
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The Rev. Dr. Wilson, in his famous sermon on the Religion of
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the Presidents, also alludes to this subject. He says:
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"When the Congress sat in Philadelphia, President
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Washington attended the Episcopal church. The rector, Dr.
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Abercrombie, told me that on the days when the sacrament of
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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39
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SIX HISTORIC AMERICANS -- GEORGE WASHINGTON.
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the Lord's Supper was to be administered, Washington's custom
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was to rise just before the ceremony commenced, and walk out
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of church. This became a subject of remark in the
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congregation, as setting a bad example. At length the Doctor
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undertook to speak of it, with a direct allusion to the
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President. Washington was heard afterwards to remark that this
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was the first time a clergyman had thus preached to him, and
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he should henceforth neither trouble the Doctor nor his
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congregation on such occasions; and ever after that, upon
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communion days, he 'absented himself altogether from the
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church.'
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The Rev. Bird Wilson, D.D., author of the "Memoir of Bishop
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White," says:
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"Though the General attended the churches in which Dr.
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White officiated, whenever he was in Philadelphia during the
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Revolutionary war, and afterwards while President of the
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United States, he never was a communicant in them" (Memoir of
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Bishop White, p. 188).
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The Rev. Beverly Tucker, D.D., of the Episcopal church, has
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attempted to prove that Washington was a churchman. But while
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professing to believe that he was a communicant before the
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Revolution he is compelled to admit that there is a doubt about his
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communing after the Revolution. He says:
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"The doubt has been raised partly on the strength of a
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letter written by Bishop White in 1832. He says that
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Washington attended St. Peter's church one winter, during the
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session of the Continental Congress, and that during his
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Presidency he had a pew in Christ church, 'which was
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habitually occupied by himself, by Mrs. Washington, who was
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regularly a communicant, and by his secretaries. This language
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is taken to mean, and probably correctly, that Washington did
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not commune."
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Dr. Tucker is evidently not acquainted with Bishop White's
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letter to Col. Mercer in 1835. There is no question as to the
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meaning of that letter. Continuing, Dr. Tucker says:
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"The doubt rests again on the recollection of Mrs.
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Fielding Lewis, Nelly Custis, Gen. Washington's step-
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granddaughter, written in 1833, who states that after the
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Mount Vernon family removed from Pohick church to Christ
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church, Alexandria, the General was accustomed, on Communion
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Sundays, to leave the church with her, sending the carriage
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back for Mrs. Washington."
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Washington's biographer, the Rev. Jared Sparks, who seems to
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have entertained the popular notion that Washington was in early
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life a communicant, admits that at a latter period he ceased to
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commune. He says:
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"The circumstance of his withdrawing himself from the
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communion service at a certain period of his life has been
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remarked as singular. This may be admitted and regretted, both
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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40
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SIX HISTORIC AMERICANS -- GEORGE WASHINGTON.
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on account of his example and the value of his opinions as to
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the importance and practical tendency of this rite" (Life of
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Washington, Vol. ii, p. 361).
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Origen Bacherer, in his debate with Robert Dale Owen in 1831,
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made an effort to prove that Washington was a Christian
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communicant. He appealed for help to the Rev. Wm. Jackson, rector
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of the Episcopal church of Alexandria, the church which Washington
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had attended. Mr. Jackson was only too willing to aid him. He
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instituted an exhaustive investigation for the purpose of
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discovering if possible some evidence of Washington having been a
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communicant. Letters of inquiry were addressed to his relatives and
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friends. But his efforts were unsuccessful. While he professed to
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believe that Washington was a Christian, he was compelled to say:
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"I find no one who ever communed with him" (Bacheler-Owen
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Debate, Vol. ii, p. 262).
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This, as might be supposed, did not satisfy Mr. Bacherer, and
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he entreated the rector to make another attempt. The second attempt
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was as fruitless as the first.' He writes:
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"I am sorry after so long a delay in replying to your
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last, that it is not in my power to communicate something
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decisive in reference to General Washington's church
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membership" (Ibid., ii, p. 370.)
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In the same letter Mr. Jackson says:
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"Nor can I find any old person who ever communed with
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him."
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The "People's Library of Information" contains the
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following:
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"The question has been raised as to whether any one of
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our Presidents was a communicant in a Christian church.
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There is a tradition that Washington asked permission of a
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Presbyterian mister in New Jersey to unite in communion. But
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it is only a tradition. Washington was a vestryman in the
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Episcopal church. But that office required no more piety
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than it would to be mate of a ship. There is no account of
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his communing in Boston, or in New York, or Philadelphia, or
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elsewhere, during the Revolutionary struggle."
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The tradition of Washington's wishing to unite with a
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Presbyterian minister in communion, like many other so-called
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traditions of the same character, has been industriously
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circulated. And yet it is scarcely possible to conceive of a more
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improbable story. Refusing to commune with the members of the
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church in which he was raised, and the church he was in the habit
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of attending, and going to the priest of another church -- a
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stranger -- and asking to commune with him! Had Washington been
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some intemperate vagabond, the story might have been believed.
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But Washington was not an inebriate, and was never so pressed for
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a drink as to beg a sup of sacramental wine from a Calvinistic
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clergyman.
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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41
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SIX HISTORIC AMERICANS -- GEORGE WASHINGTON.
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Gen. A.W. Greely, U.S.A., in an article on "Washington's
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Domestic and Religious Life" which was published in the Ladies'
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Home Journal for April, 1896, says:
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"But even if he was ever confirmed in its [the
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Episcopal] faith there is no reliable evidence that he ever
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took communion with it or with any other church."
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Some years ago, I met at Paris, Texas, an old gentlemen, Mr.
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F.W. Miner, who was born and who lived for a considerable time
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near Mt. Vernon. He told me that when a boy he was once in
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company with a party of old men, neighbors in early life of
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Washington, who were discussing the question of his religious
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belief. He says that it was admitted by all of them that he was
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not a church member, and by the most of them that he was not a
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Christian.
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Mr. George Wilson of Lexington, Mo., whose ancestors owned
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the Custis estate, and founded Alexandria, where Washington
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attended church, writes as follows: "My great-grandmother was
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Mary Alexander, daughter of 'John the younger,' who founded
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Alexandria. The Alexander pew in Christ church was next to
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Washington's, and an old lady, a kinswoman of mine, born near
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Alexandria and named Alexander, told me that the tradition in the
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Alexander family was that Washington NEVER took communion."
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In regard to Washington being a vestryman, Mr. Wilson says:
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"At that time the vestry was the county court, and in order to
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have a hand in managing the affairs of the county, in which his
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large property lay, regulating the levy of taxes, etc.,
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Washington had to be a vestryman."
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The St. Louis Globe contained the following in regard to the
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church membership of Washington:
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"It is a singular fact that much as has been written
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about Washington, particularly with regard to his superior
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personal virtue, there is nothing to show that he was ever a
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member of the church. He attended divine service, and lived
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an honorable and exemplary life, but as to his being a
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communicant, the record is surprisingly doubtful."
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In an article conceding that Washington was not a
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communicant, the Western Christian Advocate says:
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"This is evident and convincing from the Life of Bishop
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White, bishop of the Episcopal church in America from 1787
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to 1836. Of this evidence it has been well said: 'There does
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not appear to be any such undoubtable evidence existing. The
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more scrutinously the church membership of Washington is
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examined, the more doubtful it appears. Bishop White seems
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to have had more intimate relations with Washington than any
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clergyman of his time. His testimony outweighs any amount of
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influential argumentation on the question.'
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|
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Bank of Wisdom
|
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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42
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SIX HISTORIC AMERICANS -- GEORGE WASHINGTON.
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The following is a recapitulation of the salient points in
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the preceding testimony, given in the words of the witnesses. It
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is in itself an overwhelming refutation of the claim that
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Washington was a communicant:
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"Gen. Washington never received the communion in the
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churches of which I am the parochial minister." -- Bishop
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White.
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"On sacramental Sundays, Gen. Washington, immediately
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after the desk and pulpit services, went out with the
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greater part of the Congregation." -- Rev. Dr. Abercromble.
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||
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"After that, [Dr. Abercrombie's reproof,] upon communion
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days, he absented himself altogether from the church." -- Rev.
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Dr. Wilson.
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"The General was accustomed, on communion Sundays, to
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leave the church with her [Nelly Custis], sending the
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carriage back for Mrs. Washington. " -- Rev. Dr. Beverly
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Tucker.
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"He never was a communicant in them [Dr. White's
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churches]." -- Rev. Dr. Bird Wilson.
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"I find no one who ever communed with him." -- Rev.
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William Jackson.
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"The President was not a communicant." -- Rev. E.D.
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Neill.
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"This [his ceasing to commune] may be admitted and
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regretted." -- Rev. Jared Sparks.
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||
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"There is no reliable evidence that he ever took
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communion." -- Gen. A.W. Greely.
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||
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"There is nothing to show that he was ever a member of
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the church." -- St. Louis Globe.
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"I have never been a communicant." -- Washington,
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quoted by Dr. Abercrombie.
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||
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||
The claim that Washington was a Christian communicant must
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||
be abandoned; the claim that he was a believer in Christianity, I
|
||
shall endeavor to showy is equally untenable.
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||
|
||
WAS WASHINGTON A CHRISTIAN?
|
||
|
||
In the political documents, correspondence, and other
|
||
writings of Washington, few references to the prevailing religion
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||
of his day are found. In no instance has he expressed a disbelief
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||
in the Christian religion, neither can there be found in all his
|
||
writings a single sentence that can with propriety be construed
|
||
into an acknowledgment of its claims. Once or twice he refers to
|
||
it in complimentary terms, but in these compliments there is
|
||
nothing inconsistent with the conduct of a conscientious Deist.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
43
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||
|
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SIX HISTORIC AMERICANS -- GEORGE WASHINGTON.
|
||
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Religions, like their adherents, possess both good and bad
|
||
qualities, and Christianity is no exception. While there is much
|
||
in it deserving the strongest condemnation, there is also much
|
||
that commands the respect and even challenges the admiration of
|
||
Infidels. Occupying the position that Washington did, enjoying as
|
||
he did the confidence and support of Christians, it was not
|
||
unnatural that he should indulge in a few friendly allusions to
|
||
their religious faith.
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||
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||
In his "Farewell Address," the last and best political paper
|
||
he gave to the Christian religion is not once named. In this work
|
||
he manifests the fondest solicitude for the future of his
|
||
country. His sentences are crowded with words of warning and
|
||
fatherly advice. But he does not seem to be impressed with the
|
||
idea that the safety of the government or the happiness of the
|
||
people depends upon Christianity. He recommends a cultivation of
|
||
the religious sentiment, but evinces no partiality for the
|
||
popular faith.
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||
|
||
In the absence of any recorded statements from Washington
|
||
himself concerning his religious belief, the most conclusive
|
||
evidence that can be presented is the admissions of his clerical
|
||
acquaintances. Among these there has been preserved the testimony
|
||
of his pastors, Bishop White and Dr. Abercromble.
|
||
|
||
In a letter to Rev. B.C.C. Parker of Massachusetts, dated
|
||
Nov. 28, 1832, in answer to some inquiries respecting
|
||
Washington's religion, Bishop White says:
|
||
|
||
"His behavior [in church] was always serious and attentive,
|
||
but as your letter seems to intend an inquiry on the point of
|
||
kneeling during the service, I owe it to the truth to declare
|
||
that I never saw him in the said attitude. ... Although I was
|
||
often in company with this great man, and had the honor of dining
|
||
often at his table, I never heard anything from him which could
|
||
manifest his opinions on the subject of religion. ... Within a
|
||
few days of his leaving the presidential chair, our vestry waited
|
||
on him with an address prepared and delivered by me. In his
|
||
answer he was pleased to express himself gratified by what he had
|
||
heard from our pulpit; but there was nothing that committed him
|
||
relatively to religious theory" ("Memoir of Bishop White," pp.
|
||
189-191; Sparks' "Life of Washington," Vol. ii., p. 359).
|
||
|
||
The Rev. Parker, to whom Bishop White's letter is addressed,
|
||
was, it seems, anxious to obtain some evidence that Washington
|
||
was a believer in Christianity, and, not satisfied with the
|
||
bishop's answer, begged him, it would appear, to tax his mind for
|
||
some fact that would tend to show that Washington was a believer.
|
||
In a letter dated Dec. 21, 1832, the bishop writes as follows:
|
||
|
||
"I do not believe that any degree of recollection will
|
||
bring to my mind any fact which would prove General
|
||
Washington to have been a believer in the Christian
|
||
revelation further than as may be hoped from his constant
|
||
attendance upon Christian worship, in connection with the
|
||
general reserve of his character" ("Memoir of Bishop White,"
|
||
p. 193).
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
44
|
||
|
||
SIX HISTORIC AMERICANS -- GEORGE WASHINGTON.
|
||
|
||
Bishop White's testimony does not afford positive proof of
|
||
Washington's unbelief, but it certainly furnishes strong
|
||
presumptive evidence of its truth. It is hardly possible to
|
||
suppose that he could have been a believer and have let his most
|
||
intimate Christian associates remain in total ignorance of the
|
||
fact. Bishop White indulges a faint hope that he may have been,
|
||
but this hope is simply based on his "constant attendance" at
|
||
church, and when we consider how large a proportion of those who
|
||
attend church are unbelievers, that many of our most radical
|
||
Freethinkers are regular church-goers, there are very small
|
||
grounds, I think, upon which to indulge even a hope. But even
|
||
this "constant attendance" on the part of Washington cannot be
|
||
accepted without some qualification; for, while it is true that
|
||
he often attended church, he was by no means a constant
|
||
attendant. Not only did he uniformly absent himself on communion
|
||
days, but the entries in his diary show that he remained away for
|
||
several Sundays in succession, spending his time at home reading
|
||
and writing, riding out into the country, or in visiting his
|
||
friends.
|
||
|
||
But if Bishop White cherished a faint hope that Washington
|
||
had some faith in the religion of Christ, Dr. Abercrombie did
|
||
not. Long after Washington's death, in reply to Dr. Wilson, who
|
||
had interrogated him as to his illustrious auditor's religious
|
||
views, Dr. Abercrombie's brief but emphatic answer was:
|
||
|
||
"Sir, Washington was a Deist."
|
||
|
||
Washington rarely attended, as we have seen, any church but
|
||
the Episcopal, hence, if any denomination of Christians could
|
||
claim him as an adherent, it was this one. Yet here we have two
|
||
of its most distinguished representatives, pastors of the
|
||
churches which he attended, the one not knowing what his belief
|
||
was, the other disclaiming him and asserting that he was a Deist.
|
||
|
||
The Rev. Dr. Wilson, who was almost a contemporary of our
|
||
earlier statesmen and presidents, and who thoroughly investigated
|
||
the subject of their religious beliefs, in his sermon already
|
||
mentioned affirmed that the founders of our nation were nearly
|
||
all Infidels, and that of the presidents who had thus far been
|
||
elected -- George Washington, John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, James
|
||
Madison, James Monroe, John Quincy Adams, and Andrew Jackson --
|
||
not one had professed a belief in Christianity. From this sermon
|
||
I quote the following:
|
||
|
||
"When the war was over and the victory over our enemies
|
||
won, and the blessings and happiness of liberty and peace
|
||
were secured, the Constitution was framed and God was
|
||
neglected. He was not merely forgotten. He was absolutely
|
||
voted out of the Constitution. The proceedings, as published
|
||
by Thompson, the secretary, and the history of the day, show
|
||
that the question was gravely debated whether God should be
|
||
in the Constitution or not, and, after a solemn debate he
|
||
was deliberately voted out of it. ... There is not only in
|
||
the theory of our government no recognition of God's laws
|
||
and sovereignty, but its practical operation, its
|
||
administration, has been conformable to its theory. Those
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
45
|
||
|
||
SIX HISTORIC AMERICANS -- GEORGE WASHINGTON.
|
||
|
||
who have been called to administer the government have not
|
||
been men making any public profession of Christianity. ...
|
||
Washington was a man of valor and wisdom. He was esteemed by
|
||
the whole world as a great and good man; but he was not a
|
||
professing Christian."
|
||
|
||
Dr. Wilson's sermon was published in the Albany Daily
|
||
Advertiser in 1831, and attracted the attention of Robert Dale
|
||
Owen, then a young man, who called to see its author in regard to
|
||
his statement concerning Washington's belief. The result of his
|
||
visit is given in a letter to Amos Gilbert. The letter is dated
|
||
Albany, November 13, 1831., and was published in New York a
|
||
fortnight later. He says:
|
||
|
||
"I called last evening on Dr. Wilson, as I told you I
|
||
should, and I have seldom derived more pleasure from a short
|
||
interview with anyone. Unless my discernment of character
|
||
has been rievously at fault, I met an honest man and sincere
|
||
Christian. But you shall have the particulars. A gentleman
|
||
of this city accompanied me to the Doctor's residence. We
|
||
were very courteously received. I found him a tall,
|
||
commanding figure, with a countenance of much benevolence,
|
||
and a brow indicative of deep thought, apparently
|
||
approaching fifty years of age. I opened the interview by
|
||
stating that though personally a stranger to him, I had
|
||
taken the liberty of calling in consequence of having
|
||
perused an interesting sermon of his, which had been
|
||
reported in the Daily Advertiser of this city, and regarding
|
||
which, as he probably knew, a variety of opinions prevailed.
|
||
In a discussion, in which I had taken a part, some of the
|
||
facts as there reported had been questioned; and I wished to
|
||
know from him whether the reporter had fairly given his
|
||
words or not. ... I then read to him from a copy of the
|
||
Daily Advertiser the paragraph which regards Washington,
|
||
beginning, 'Washington was a man,' etc., and ending,
|
||
'absented himself altogether from the church.' 'I indorse,'
|
||
said Dr. Wilson, with emphasis, 'every word of that. Nay, I
|
||
do not wish to conceal from you any part of the truth, even
|
||
what I have not given to the public. Dr. Abercrombie said
|
||
more than I have repeated. At the close of our conversation
|
||
on the subject his emphatic expression was -- for I well
|
||
remember the very words -- 'Sir, Washington was a Deist.'"
|
||
|
||
In concluding the interview, Dr. Wilson said: "I have
|
||
diligently perused every line that Washington ever gave to the
|
||
public, and I do not find one expression in which he pledges
|
||
himself as a believer in Christianity. I think anyone who will
|
||
candidly do as I have done, will come to the conclusion that he
|
||
was a Deist and nothing more.),
|
||
|
||
In February, 1800, a few weeks after. Washington's death,
|
||
Jefferson made the following entry in his journal:
|
||
|
||
"Dr. Rush told me (he had it from Asa Green) that when
|
||
the clergy addressed General Washington, on his departure
|
||
from the government, it was observed in their consultation
|
||
that he had never, on any occasion, said a word to the
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
46
|
||
|
||
SIX HISTORIC AMERICANS -- GEORGE WASHINGTON.
|
||
|
||
public which showed a belief in the Christian religion, and
|
||
they thought they should so pen their address as to force
|
||
him at length to disclose publicly whether he was a
|
||
Christian or not. However, he observed, the old fox was too
|
||
cunning for them. He answered every article of their address
|
||
particularly, except that, which he passed over without
|
||
notice" (Jefferson's Works, Vol. iv., p. 572).
|
||
|
||
Jefferson further says: "I know that Gouverneur Morris, who
|
||
claimed to be in his secrets, and believed himself to be so, has
|
||
often told me that General Washington believed no more in that
|
||
system [Christianity] than he did" (Ibid).
|
||
|
||
Gouverneur Morris was the principal drafter of the
|
||
Constitution of the United States; he was a member of the
|
||
Continental Congress, a United States senator from New York, and
|
||
minister to France. He accepted, to a considerable extent, the
|
||
skeptical views of French Freethinkers.
|
||
|
||
The "Asa" Green mentioned by Jefferson was undoubtedly the
|
||
Rev. Ashbel Green, chaplain to Congress during Washington's
|
||
administration. In an article on Washington's religion,
|
||
contributed to the Chicago Tribune, B.F. Underwood says:
|
||
|
||
"If there were an Asa Green in Washington's time he was
|
||
a man of no prominence, and it is probable the person
|
||
referred to by Jefferson was the Rev. Dr. Ashbel Green, who
|
||
served as chaplain to the Congress during the eight years
|
||
that body sat in Philadelphia, was afterwards president of
|
||
Princeton College, and the only clerical member of Congress
|
||
that signed the Declaration of Independence. His name shines
|
||
illustriously in the annals of the Presbyterian church in
|
||
the United States."
|
||
|
||
Some years ago I received a letter from Hon. A.B. Bradford
|
||
of Pennsylvania, relative to Washington's belief. Mr. Bradford
|
||
was for a long time a prominent clergyman in the Presbyterian
|
||
church, and was appointed a consul to China by President Lincoln.
|
||
His statements help to corroborate the statements of Dr. Wilson,
|
||
Thomas Jefferson, and Mr. Underwood. He says:
|
||
|
||
"I knew Dr. Wilson personally, and have entertained him
|
||
at my house, on which occasion he said in my hearing what my
|
||
relative, the Rev. Dr. Ashbel Green of Philadelphia,
|
||
frequently told me in his study, viz., that during the time
|
||
that Congress sat in that city the clergy, suspecting from
|
||
good evidence that Washington was not a believer in the
|
||
Bible as a revelation from heaven, laid a plan to extort
|
||
from him a confession, either pro or con, but that the plan
|
||
failed. Dr. Green was chaplain to Congress during all the
|
||
time of its sitting in Philadelphia; dined with the
|
||
President on special invitation nearly every week; was well
|
||
acquainted with him, and after he had been dead and gone
|
||
many years, often said in my hearing, though very
|
||
sorrowfully, of course, that while Washington was very
|
||
deferential to religion and its ceremonies, like nearly all
|
||
the founders of the Republic, he was not a Christian, but a
|
||
Deist."
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
47
|
||
|
||
SIX HISTORIC AMERICANS -- GEORGE WASHINGTON.
|
||
|
||
Mr. Underwood's article contained the following from the pen
|
||
of Mr. Bradford:
|
||
|
||
"It was during his [Dr. Green's] long residence in
|
||
Philadelphia that I became intimately acquainted with him as
|
||
a relative, student of theology at Princeton, and a member
|
||
of the same Presbytery to which he belonged. Many an hour
|
||
during my student and clergyman days did I spend with him in
|
||
his study at No. 150 Pine street, Philadelphia, listening to
|
||
his interesting and instructive conversation on
|
||
Revolutionary times and incidents. I recollect well that
|
||
during one of these interviews in his study I inquired of
|
||
him what were the real opinions Washington entertained on
|
||
the subject of religion. He promptly answered pretty nearly
|
||
in the language which Jefferson says Dr. Rush used. He
|
||
explained more at length the plan laid by the clergy of
|
||
Philadelphia at the close of Washington's administration as
|
||
President to get his views of religion for the sake of the
|
||
good influence they supposed they would have in
|
||
counteracting the Infidelity of Paine and the rest of the
|
||
Revolutionary patriots, military and civil. But I well
|
||
remember the smile on his face and the twinkle of his black
|
||
eye when he said: 'The old fox was too cunning for Us.' He
|
||
affirmed, in concluding his narrative, that from his long
|
||
and intimate acquaintance with Washington he knew it to be
|
||
the case that while he respectfully conformed to the
|
||
religious customs of society by generally going to church on
|
||
Sundays, he had no belief at all in the divine origin of the
|
||
Bible, or the Jewish-Christian religion."
|
||
|
||
The testimony of General Greely, whose thorough
|
||
investigation of Washington's religious belief makes him an
|
||
authority on the subject, is among the most important yet
|
||
adduced. From his article on "Washington's Domestic and Religions
|
||
Life" I quote the following paragraphs:
|
||
|
||
"The effort to depict Washington as very devout from
|
||
his childhood, as a strict Sabbatarian, and as in intimate
|
||
spiritual communication with the church is practically
|
||
contradicted by his own letters."
|
||
|
||
"In his letters, even those of consolation, there
|
||
appears almost nothing to indicate his spiritual frame of
|
||
mind. A particularly careful study of the man's letters
|
||
convinces me that while the spirit of Christianity, as
|
||
exemplified in love of God and love of man [Theophilauthropy
|
||
or Deism], was the controlling factor of his nature, yet he
|
||
never formulated his religious faith."
|
||
|
||
"It is, however, somewhat striking that in several
|
||
thousand letters the name of Jesus Christ never appears, and
|
||
it is notably absent from his last will."
|
||
|
||
"His services as a vestryman had no special
|
||
significance from a religious standpoint. The political
|
||
affairs of a Virginia county were then directed by the
|
||
vestry, which, having the power to elect its own members,
|
||
was an important instrument of the oligarchy of Virginia."
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
48
|
||
|
||
SIX HISTORIC AMERICANS -- GEORGE WASHINGTON.
|
||
|
||
"He was not regular in attendance at church save
|
||
possibly at home. While present at the First Provencal
|
||
Congress in Philadelphia he went once to the Roman Catholic
|
||
and once to the Episcopal church. He spent four mouths in
|
||
the Constitutional Convention, going six times to church,
|
||
once each to the Romish high mass, to the Friends', to the
|
||
Presbyterian, and thrice to the Episcopal service."
|
||
|
||
"From his childhood he traveled on Sunday whenever
|
||
occasion required. He considered it proper for his negroes
|
||
to fish, and on that day made at least one contract. During
|
||
his official busy life Sunday was largely given to his home
|
||
correspondence, being, as he says, the most convenient day
|
||
in which to spare time from his public burdens to look after
|
||
his impaired fortune and estates."
|
||
|
||
Dr. Moncure D. Conway, who made a study of Washington's life
|
||
and character, who had access to his private papers, and who was
|
||
employed to edit a volume of his letters, has written a monograph
|
||
on "The Religion of Washington," from which I take the following:
|
||
|
||
"In editing a volume of Washington's private letters
|
||
for the Long Island Historical Society, I have been much
|
||
impressed by indications that this great historic
|
||
personality represented the Liberal religious tendency of
|
||
his tune. That tendency was to respect religious
|
||
organizations as part of the social order, which required
|
||
some minister to visit the sick, bury the dead, and perform
|
||
marriages. It was considered in nowise inconsistent with
|
||
disbelief of the clergyman's doctrines to contribute to his
|
||
support, or even to be a vestryman in his church."
|
||
|
||
"In his many letters to his adopted nephew and young
|
||
relatives, he admonishes them about their manners and
|
||
morals, but in no case have I been able to discover any
|
||
suggestion that they should read the Bible, keep the
|
||
Sabbath, go to church, or any warning against Infidelity."
|
||
|
||
"Washington had in his library the writings of Paine,
|
||
Priestley, Voltaire, Frederick the Great, and other
|
||
heretical works."
|
||
|
||
Conway says that "Washington was glad to have Volney as his
|
||
guest at Mount Vernon," and cited a letter of introduction which
|
||
Washington gave him to the citizens of the United States during
|
||
his travels in this country.
|
||
|
||
In a contribution to the New York Times Dr. Conway says:
|
||
|
||
"Augustine Washington, like most scholarly Virginians
|
||
of his time, was a Deist. ... Contemporary evidence shows
|
||
that in mature life Washington was a Deist, and did not
|
||
commune, which is quite consistent with his being a
|
||
vestryman. In England, where vestries have secular
|
||
functions, it is not unusual for Unitarians to be vestrymen,
|
||
there being no doctrinal subscription required for that
|
||
office. Washington's letters during the Revolution
|
||
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
49
|
||
|
||
SIX HISTORIC AMERICANS -- GEORGE WASHINGTON.
|
||
|
||
occasionally indicate his recognition of the hand of
|
||
Providence in notable public events, but in the thousands of
|
||
his letters I have never been able to find the name of
|
||
Christ or any reference to him."
|
||
|
||
There is no evidence to show that Washington, even in early
|
||
life, was a believer in Christianity. The contrary is rather to
|
||
be presumed. His father, as Dr. Conway states, was a Deist; while
|
||
his mother was not excessively religious, His brother, Lawrence
|
||
Washington, was, it is claimed, the first advocate of religious
|
||
liberty in Virginia, and evidently an unbeliever, so that instead
|
||
of being surrounded at home by the stifling atmosphere of
|
||
superstition, he was permitted to breathe the pure air of
|
||
religious freedom.
|
||
|
||
It is certain that at no time during his life did he take
|
||
any special interest in church affairs. Gen. Greely says that "He
|
||
was not regular in church attendance save possibly at home." At
|
||
home he was the least regular in his attendance. His diary shows
|
||
that he attended about twelve times a year. During the week he
|
||
Superintended the affairs of his farm; on Sunday he usually
|
||
attended to his correspondence. Sunday visitors at his house were
|
||
numerous. If he ever objected to them it was not because they
|
||
kept him from his devotions, but because they kept him from his
|
||
work. In his diary he writes:
|
||
|
||
"It hath so happened, that on the last Sundays -- call
|
||
them the first or seventh [days] as you please, I have been
|
||
unable to perform the latter duty on account of visits from
|
||
strangers, with whom I could not use the freedom to leave
|
||
alone, or recommend to the care of each other, for their
|
||
amusement."
|
||
|
||
When he visited his distant tenants to collect his rent,
|
||
their piety, and not his, prevented him from doing the business
|
||
on Sunday, as the following entry in his diary shows:
|
||
|
||
"Being Sunday, and the people living on my land very
|
||
religious, it was thought best to postpone going among them
|
||
till to-morrow."
|
||
|
||
His diary also shows that he "closed land purchases, sold
|
||
wheat, and, while a Virginia planter, went fox hunting on
|
||
Sunday."
|
||
|
||
He did not, like most pious churchmen, believe that
|
||
Christian servants are better than others. When on one occasion
|
||
he needed servants, he wrote:
|
||
|
||
"If they are good workmen, they may be from Asia,
|
||
Africa, or Europe; they may be Mahomedans, Jews, or
|
||
Christians of any sect, or they may be Atheists."
|
||
|
||
These extracts contain no explicit declarations of disbelief
|
||
in Christianity, but between the lines we can easily read, "I am
|
||
not a Christian."
|
||
**** ****
|
||
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
||
|
||
Bank of Wisdom
|
||
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
||
50
|
||
|