When thinking about the Constitution of the United States, names like James Madison usually come to mind. But a friend of the great "architect of the Constitution," John Leland, a Baptist minister, had much to do with Madison's giant accomplishments. In fact, without Mr. Leland's influence the establishment clause in the First Amendment may not exist as we know it. In this series of articles we will explore the critical but little-known role played by the Baptists in helping to secure America’s cherished religious freedoms. Our story begins by focusing on the persecution suffered by Baptists in 17thcentury America – and a hot New England summer.

Victor Gamma explains.

An engraving of the 1651 whipping of Obadiah Holmes.

An engraving of the 1651 whipping of Obadiah Holmes.

In July 1651 the Newport Baptist Church received a request from a house-bound member in Lynn, Massachusetts named William Witter. Witter was desirous of hearing the Word of God preached. Being blind and quite elderly, he requested a pastoral visit from Baptist minister and physician John Clarke along with co-religionists Obadiah Holmes and John Crandall. The three men made the eighty-mile journey to Lynn, where Witter lived. While in Massachusetts they baptized Witter in accordance with 'believer's baptism'. Clarke and Holmes were known to the Massachusetts authorities. The Bay Colony required that any who denied infant baptism or taught this to others, or who denied the right of the state to make war should be arrested and banished from the colony. Witter was no stranger to the authorities as well, being bold to the point of insolence. Salem court records have preserved some of his statements made during his earlier trial;

          “The baptism of infants is sinful.”

         “Infant baptism is the badge of the whore.”

         “They who stay whiles a child is baptized do worship the devil.” 

 

News of Clarke and his associates’ presence at Witter’s home spread quickly. By that very evening a warrant had been issued for their arrest, which action was carried out the following day.  The three were forced to attend a congregational service, in which they refused to remove their hats and attempted to preach. They were imprisoned and then taken to Boston for trial. Their prosecutor was John Cotton, who argued that the defendants, whom he called Anabaptists, were worthy of the death penalty for heresy. After a ‘trial’ which consisted merely of charges and sentencing, the three Baptists were given the penalties of paying fines or to be ‘well-whipt.’

Of the three Baptists, Clarke and Holmes refused to pay a fine. Clarke avoided the whipping post when a friend paid his fine while he was being led to his punishment. The steadfast Holmes, however, would brook no aid from friends or sympathizers, saying, “Agreeing to the payment of my fine would constitute admission of wrongdoing.”  By refusing to pay a fine and not allowing anyone else to, Holmes was making a statement that the law was completely invalid and unjust by its very nature.  The sentence was carried out publically with thirty stripes, which was ten less than the forty considered to be a death sentence, but equal to that given to rapists. The “whipper’s” instrument of torment featured three leather strips, so in reality Holmes received ninety lashes. Holmes chose the opportunity to preach to the crowd while being whipped. An eyewitness, John Spur, described the whipping of Obadiah Holmes. As the 'whipper' removed the clothes from his upper body in order to administer the beatings, Spur records that Holmes declared, "Lord lay not this sin upon their charge." During the whipping Holmes stated, "O Lord I beseech thee to manifest thy power in the weakness of thy creature." According to Spur, Holmes submitted to the whipping, ". . . neither moving nor stirring at all for the strokes, (and) broke out into these expressions,  'Blessed and praised be the Lord,' and this he carried it to the end and went away rejoicingly." Many onlookers were moved to loudly request the beating to stop, and were themselves arrested. As a result of his beating, Holmes was unable to sleep on his back for a month. After recovering, Holmes went on to continue his evangelistic work. His bold stand had also become a symbol in the struggle for religious liberty.

 

Freedom of conscience

Bold stands such as this led the historian George Bancroft to declare, “Freedom of conscience, unlimited freedom of mind, was from the first a trophy of the Baptists.” In the seventeenth century, freedom of conscience had become such a become such a defining feature of Baptists that the great John Locke was moved to write, “The Baptists were the first and only propounders of absolute liberty, just and true liberty, equal and impartial liberty.” Ultimately, the measures taken against Baptists would include whipping, imprisonment, fines and banishment. Because America offered such a vast abundance of space, a favorite device of those defending the Standing Order was to exile Baptists and other dissenting groups into the wilderness. As one offended contemporary put it, “All Familists, Antinomians, Anabaptists, and other enthusiasts, shall have free Liberty to keep away from us, and such as will come to be gone as fast as they can the sooner the better.”

You will not find names like Isaac Backus or John Leland in a book about the writing of the Constitution, nonetheless, these Baptists, along with their predecessors like Holmes, played a critical role in providing the underpinning attitudes that resulted in the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment. In fighting for their own freedom, they struck a blow for all Americans, articulating a philosophy concerning the relationship between the religious and civil sphere, protecting the rights of the former. Baptists were often well ahead of their colonial brethren in the matter of freedom of conscience.

Baptists felt the heavy hand of persecution from the moment of their arrival in the English colonies. There were many reasons for this. Both the Puritans of New England and the Anglicans of Virginia believed in the union of church and state to some degree and the necessity of the civil authority to enforce religious conformity. The Protestant churches that broke away from Rome in the fifteenth century maintained the system of state support of churches. In England the government sponsorship of religion was called the ‘nursing father.’ In the English colonies, this system of the civil rulers as nursing fathers continued. Furthermore, the Puritans held that society could not function without establishment of religion, referred to as the “Standing Order.” Without it, they contended, society would crumble into anarchy and moral perversion. The 1689 Act of Toleration, although a milestone in British history, did not establish religious liberty. It extended toleration to a greater number of religious expressions, but maintained England as a protestant state with England under the prelacy of the Church of England and Scotland under the Presbyterian establishment. During the colonial era, most colonists also held the view that residents of a particular colony should properly all belong to the same church, and took it as natural that this church should be financially and legally supported by the state, including non-voluntary taxes and even laws requiring participation in religious services. Even havens of religious toleration like Pennsylvania and Maryland sometimes heard the lament of oppressed minorities.

 

Baptists in the New World

The Baptists, having already experienced persecution in England, arrived in the New World generally hostile to the idea of civil authorities determining their religious beliefs and practices. The Baptists eventually compiled a large amount of scriptural and historical support for their position. Isaac Backus, later to be the champion of liberty for Baptists during the Revolutionary era, relied on eighteenth-century Lutheran historian Johann Lorenz Von Mosheim to express the common Baptist view of the state of Christendom in his History of New England. Backus' history asserted that the early church's purity was perverted by  “. . . an alteration. . . that Christian ministers succeeded to the rights and privileges of the Jewish priesthood. Heathen philosophy was also called in to interpret the scriptures . . . to which they added, in the fourth century, under Constantine, the use of temporal penalties, and corporal tortures, for the same end (to promote of the interests of the church).” 

No other issue so horrified the religious establishment, though, as the issue of baptism. The Puritans and Separatists held firmly to the practice of infant baptism as one sign of the covenantal nature of the church. They saw in the ceremony a badge of the covenant a sign as circumcision was for the Jews.  As Cotton Matter put it, “They did all agree with their brethren in Plymouth in this point, ‘That the children of the faithful, were church members, with their parents, and that their baptism was a seal of their being so.’ ” In Massachusetts Puritans held to the validity of an established church, and as Anglicans in Virginia they were determined to support the canons of the Church of England including the Thirty Nine Articles. Article 27 stated, “The baptism of young children is in any wise to be retained in the Church, as most agreeable with the institutions of Christ.” Those that refused to comply with this article were spoken of as those who “dare not submit their children to be baptized by their undertaking of god-fathers, and receive the Cross as a dedicating badge of Christianity . . .” This belief conflicted sharply with Baptist convictions. Isaac Backus in hisHistory of New England offers a quote from John Robinson which, citing scripture for each point, summarized the Baptist position on baptism “. . . the sacrament of baptism is to be administered   . . . only to such as are . . . taught and made disciples [Matt. xxviii. 19]. . . Baptism administered to any others is so far from investing them with any saintship in that estate, that [as] it makes guilty, both the giver and the receiver, of sacrilege, and is the taking of God’s name in vain.” 

 

The view of Baptists

False perceptions also fanned the flames of suspicion. When the Puritan or Anglican establishment looked at Baptists they often saw not simple dissenters but dangerous incendiaries. The memory of Anabaptist excesses, such as the Munster Rebellion of 1535-6 were still recalled and projected on to the Baptists. In fact, ‘Anabaptist’ was a name that continued to be applied to the Baptists.  Regardless of their efforts to distance themselves from the taint of Anabaptist excesses, the Baptists were popularly held to be dangerous subversives or degenerate antinomians.  The 1644 law banishing Baptists from Massachusetts Bay Colony stated, “Forasmuch as experience hath plentifully and often proved that since the first arising of the Anabaptists about a hundred years since, they have been the incendiaries of the commonwealths and the infectors of persons in main matters of religion and the troublers of churches . . .” Baptists promptly answered such charges when given the opportunity. In 1680 John Russel, second pastor of the Baptist church in Boston, sought to dispel the irrational opinions of Baptists in a tract entitled Some Considerable Passages Concerning the First Gathering and Further Progress of a Church of Christ in Gospel Order in Boston in New England Commonly (though Falsely) Called By the Name of Anabaptists. Russell’s tract was a point-by-point refutation of the common charges laid at the feet of Baptists using simple logic. For example Russell argues against the contention that Baptists were a threat to the church, “We are charged to be underminers of the Churches. This is also a great mistake: we never designed . . . any such thing, but heartily desire and daily pray for the well-being, flourishing, and Prosperity of all the Churches of Christ.” 

Up until now we’ve explored the reasons why Baptists faced persecution in America.  In part two (here), Roger Williams and Religious Freedom, we look at the story of Roger Williams and the founding of the first Baptist church in America.

What do you think of the article? Let us know below.

Christianity has had a major influence in America since the early European settlers moved there. Here, Daniel Smith considers how different Christian ideologies predominated in different parts of America – ultimately leading to differences between the North and South that lingered for a long time.

You can read Daniel’s past articles on California in the US Civil War (here), Medieval Jesters (here), How American Colonial Law Justified the Settlement of Native American Territories (here), and Spanish Colonial Influence on Native Americans in Northern California (here).

Benjamin Franklin Drawing Electricity from the Sky: Painting by Benjamin West, circa 1816. Founding Fathers such as Benjamin Franklin often cited Scripture.

Benjamin Franklin Drawing Electricity from the Sky: Painting by Benjamin West, circa 1816. Founding Fathers such as Benjamin Franklin often cited Scripture.

To understand the differing ideology behind the split regions of America, from North to South, you need to understand first that the United States of America was founded as a Christian nation. In the early 1600s, when the first Europeans landed, they established settlements. Within every settlement was a Charter. This document solidified the legal framework for the colony to be run by. Within each colony’s Charter, you would have found reference to the Bible in one mention or another. Now let us fast forward a little bit in time to bring you into the know on – why,the colonies civil governments were run in the manner that they were… it’s called religion.

In the 1600s there were three American regions that had settlements in place. These three regions consisted of the Northern, Middle, and Southern colonies. Each colony had a separate form of Christian doctrine it followed, all depending on the region that you lived. Three distinct Christian movements came out of these regions, in major geographical areas. This was important because their views of church government determined their colonial form of civil government. This gets complex, but it is important to understand that with all sects of religion come subtle and major differences in how laws and morals are navigated. 

The Southern colonies were the stronghold of Episcopalians’, who emphasize strong apostolic leadership. Southern government was well known for their aristocratic monarchial form of government. The effects of this form of church government would be apparent when the first representative assembly in America began in 1607 at the church in Jamestown, Virginia with Reverend Bucke leading the Burgess in prayer. The Burgess were considered the “plantation elite” at that time. The Reverend would be known to ask God to guide and sanctify their proceedings to his own glory and the good of the plantation. Jamestown would go on to issue laws requiring church attendance. In doing so, the thought process behind the decree was believing that men’s affairs cannot prosper where God’s service is neglected.

The Northern colonies were dominated by Congregationalists. A decade or two later, the Middle colonies dominated by the Presbyterian, and Reformed Catholic faiths merged with the Northern colonies. New England had the first American settlement settled in 1620. After decades of trying to expose the corruption in the Church of England, and showing little effect, they left for the New World. Puritans at Boston (1630) were known for their fundamental, or strict legalistic ways of Christianity that was dominated by the hierarchal Catholic denomination; whereas the Separatists (or Protestants) at Plymouth Bay colony emphasized the personal relationship and accountability to God without the strict adherence to the legalistic and ritualistic aspects of Catholicism. 

It is important to note the major Puritan drawback was that they were still holding onto the idea of a State church. They saw nothing wrong with that, and compelled religion (as in Europe). The disapproval of issue in England was that Church and State were corrupt and unbiblical in many aspects. Eventually Protestant and Puritan ministers would work together with their theology to allow for more freedom of conscience and individual liberty.

 

FAST FORWARD

A Christian Nation is molded by its formof government, not whoformed it. If the form of a nation’s government is molded by Biblical ideas, then the nation isa Christian nation. Now let us fast forward a little bit in time. In 1867 The North American Reviewstated that “The American government and Constitution is the … political expression of Christian ideas.”[1]Our founders were all collectively convinced of this truth. Even unconventional believers such as Benjamin Franklin often cited Scripture. 

At the Constitutional Convention of 1787, Franklin said: 

We have been assured, Sir, in the Sacred Writings that ‘except the Lord build the house, they labor in vain that build it’ [psalm 1237:1]. I firmly believe this, and I also believe that without His concurring aid we shall succeed in this political building no better than the builder of Babel [Genesis 11].”[2]

 

The ideas embodied in the U.S. Constitution stem primarily from the Bible. The Founders reasoned from the Bible far more than any other source. This was once taken for granted by Americans until modern revisionist historians began to promote the view that nationalistic enlightenment thinkers were the major influence behind the Constitution. 

How can we know for sure? Dr. Donald Lutz, a professor of political science from the University of Houston, conducted an exhaustive ten-year research of about 15,000 political documents of the Founders’ era (1760-1805), and recorded every quote or reference to another written source. This list of the 3,154 citations of the Founders was analyzed and published in Volume #78 of the American Political Science Review in 1983. The results would give quite an accurate measure of the influence of various sources of thought on the Constitution. The results were surprisingly contradictory to modern scholarship. By far, the most often quoted source of their political ideas was the Bible.

This would account for over one-third (34%) of all their citations. Another 50% of all references can be attributed to authors who themselves derived their ideas from the Bible. Therefore, it can be said that 84% of the ideas in our Constitution are based directly or indirectly on the Bible.[3]The Bible and civil liberty are inseparable. Even Newsweek, on December 26, 1982, acknowledged after a major analysis of the Bible’s influence in America, that, Now historians are discovering that the Bible, perhaps even more than the Constitution is our Founding document.”[4]

Some historians recognize that Franklin’s reference to “the Sacred Writings” (Scripture) and to “the builders of Babel” (Israel) in the Convention’s search for “political truth” (Christ’s teachings) was not a strange coincidental fluke. There was absolute meaning. So now that you understand a little more on how important religion and the colonial governments were so closely knitted together, it’s also important to note that even though not all Colonial Americans were Christians (although most were), all of them understood the importance and adherence of living by Christian principles. Simply put, they all ultimately believed that Scriptures “guidelines” were the right way of doing life.

 

CHRISTIANS DIVIDED

There is a paradox to Christianity, and from a non-denominational standpoint, that paradox is the fundamental ideology of Old Testament Scripture. This should be considered a true error of Christian tradition. Well, how is that so? With every sect of Christianity, there is a molded tradition made out of how the Holy Bible is transliterated to Christian leaders and individuals alike. With the division of Christianity as a religion comes an inevitable vacuum, and that is the molding of Scripture to fit mankind’s agenda. This is of course part of the doctrinal fallacy that Scripture warns Christians about falling into belief over.[5]

There always seemed to be a struggle between morality, temperance, education, and slavery. When these struggles become so heavy that they bleed out from the individual and into the churches – these internal struggles then bleed into politics and society. This is where the formation of civil government becomes very complex. Especially when it comes down to moral and spiritual beliefs. It becomes even more complex when you attempt to figure out how to codify laws for society to live by. This is where Christian principles come into play. The Colonists had already been living by a codified system, laid out through history based upon Christian values and laws.

Through a typically organic process called “gradualism”, Colonial America began to grow and adjust their laws (and morals) accordingly to their ways of doing life. With this societal gradualism occurring subtly since the early 1600s, it’s easy to see how certain aspectsof life’s principles can get twisted to fit people’s personal agendas. One man in particular, was a Northerner by the name of John Brown. He was a devout Calvinist. Mr. Brown was very much a “fire and brimstone” style of believer. 

Calvinists’ doctrine of salvation by election; the belief that worldly success was a sign of God’s favor; the concept of the “calling,” according to which all people are called by God to vocations that, no matter how great or humble, are equal in his sight and whose diligent performance is a sacred duty; and the injunction against a waste, according to which wealth must be used for the glory of God through stewardship to mankind rather than squandered off in consumption and easy living. 

With that, he also thought that because he was in a place of political positioning, that it was God’s will that he must have undertook a mission to help ignite the firestorm that ultimately freed the slaves. God does not grant permission to do Hiswill, however he did providentially use Mr. Brown as one of the dozen catalysts to actually advance the opening salvos of the Civil War. We will get to Mr. Brown’s story later. Christianity was the base foundation of how society was written for the North American colonies. It is always unfortunate when a few misled leaders push these personal twists that ultimately expand into their local communities, thus the Northern and Southern regions of the United States. Regardless of doctrinal belief of Christianity, national sins are what collapses a nations successes and longevity. Two national sin examples would be slavery and greed.

 

COMPROMISING MORALS & ETHICS         

Congress passed the Northwest Ordinance Act in 1787 and 1789, which prohibited slavery in the new states. Congress also banned the exportation or transfer of slaves from anystate in 1794. It is evidence enough that all intentions of that generation were united in an effort to abolish slavery. England banned slavery in 1834 by the stroke of a pen. As new generations of Americans rose up to take the reins, they had seemingly less convictions on the matters of greed and slavery than their fathers before them. 

They began to compromise their morals and ethics. This was due to greed. The trend towards emancipation came to a halt in the South, and even churches began to justify slavery for the first time around 1810. By that date, all slave trading had been made illegal; however slave owning itself became more firmly entrenched in the South. Between 1810 and 1820, America experienced not only growth but also its share of social problems associated with its polarization of “cultures.” 

It was truly the first time America began to see morality wane and ethics bending to make ends meet. Specifically, the morals and ethics that were a big social issue for Yankee and Antebellum societies were drunkenness, prostitution, ignorance, and above all, slavery.[6]Of course with every issue in America there is always an argument to the story. Protestantism experienced a modernization of ethics during the industrial-era of America. In fact, the temperance movement coincided at the exact same time as the industrial revolution.

It was the temperance movement in America that gave way to the reforming movements throughout the entire country, regardless of blue or grey ideology. These movements grew out of the Second Great Awakening. A Christian revival nationwide, with a refocus on man’s accountability to Jesus Christ, instead of only being held accountable to themselves. It was through the temperance movement that soberness, education, woman’s rights, and anti-slaveryfinally became front-and-center social issues for both the American North andSouth. 

 

 

What do you think of the author’s arguments? Let us know below.

Finally, Daniel Smith writes at complexamerica.org.


[1]Hall, Verna M. 1980. The Christian History of the Constitution of the United States of America (CHOC).San Francisco. p. 198.

[2]Madison, James. 1987. Notes of Debates in the Federal Convention of 1787.NY: W.W. Norton & Co.

[3]Lutz, Donald. 1984. "The Relative Influence of European Writers on Late 18th Century American Political Thought." American Political Science Review189-197.

[4]Newsweek. Dec. 26, 1982. "Historians Acknowledge American Biblical Link." Newsweek

[5]Read: Book of Matthew. TheHoly Bible.

[6]J. C. Furnas, The Americans: A Social History(New York, 1969) p. 505