sent over another excerpt from his forthcoming book on Deism that
relates to George Washington's belief in a Providential God. I am going
to publish it in two posts. The first is below.
On
the morning of March 5, 1776, George Washington was with the troops of
the American army in Boston, encouraging them to fight bravely if the
British attacked. So far in their war for independence, the Americans
had yet to win a significant victory. Things were looking bleak, and it
was a major defeat for the Americans that the British troops were in
control of Boston, the center of resistance to British rule and one of
the most important cities in America. However, the previous night the
Americans had managed to secretly drag cannons up Dorchester Heights, a
bluff of land that was within cannon range of the British troops. The
British either had to dislodge the Americans from Dorchester Heights or
evacuate Boston. Otherwise, the Americans would just rain cannonballs on
the British troops. Furthermore, the British attack had to happen
immediately since the longer the Americans were on the hill, the better
they could fortify their position and resist any assault. The British
general ordered the troops to immediately attack, but a wind and snow
storm arose, which was so violent, the British troops were unable to
move. By the time the storm was over, the Americans had so fortified
their position, the British called off their assault and chose to
evacuate Boston instead. George Washington claimed it was God who had
caused the storm and helped the Americans win their first major victory
of the war. He claimed that the storm that prevented the British attack
“must be ascribed to the interposition of that Providence, which has
manifestly appeared in our behalf through the whole of this important
struggle.” He then said, “May that Being, who is powerful to save, and
in whose hands is the fate of nations, look down with an eye of tender
pity and compassion upon the whole of the United Colonies; may he
continue to smile upon their counsels and arms, and crown them with
success, whilst employed in the cause of virtue and mankind.”1
Unlike
the religious beliefs of Ben Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, and John
Adams, Washington wrote extremely little about his religious beliefs.
Those who think he should be considered a Christian, often focus on two
major pieces of evidence. One, he believed God miraculously helped the
Americans during their war for independence. Two, he often prayed, and
particularly he often prayed for God’s help in worldly events. When it
is assumed deists had a distant and withdrawn God who never intervened
in the world, then these two points are good evidence that Washington
was not a deist, or not exclusively a deist. However, when one gets a
better historical understanding of deism, these two points tell us
nothing at all about whether Washington was a Christian or a deist.
Providence and the deists of the French Revolution
As
shown by Washington’s statement that the Boston storm was an act of
God, he believed God intervened to help the Americans win the
Revolutionary War. Because many scholars define a deist as a person who
believed in a distant, inactive deity, the scholars then assert that
Washington could not have been a deist. For example, Vincent Phillip
Munoz declared that “Washington’s belief in divine providence means, by
definition, that he could not be labeled a deist.”2 A number of scholars
go even further and claim that when Washington was mentioning the
interposition of Providence, he must have been referring to the
Christian God because
only the Christian God helps people in a providential way. So Kristo
Miettinen declared, "’Providence’ is not some squishy generic God-term. .
. . Deists, to the extent that they invoked God as Providence, were
making an explicitly Christian theological claim.”3
While
the English deists believed in an active God who cared about people,
they did not mention God helping countries fighting for their liberty.
This, however, was most likely due to historical circumstances: the
English deists were writing at a time when England was generally secure
from foreign invasion, and none of them were worried about their
freedom. Thus we should not make any claims about the deist God being
unconcerned with helping countries based on the English deists. We
should instead look at the large number of French deists who were
fighting both internal oppressors and foreign invaders during the French
Revolution. These French deists continually claimed God miraculously
helped their revolution survive, and unlike the American deists, almost
all of these French deists despised Christianity, equating it with pure
superstition. Thus anything the French deists claimed about God, they
were referring purely to the deist God.
I
have been arguing throughout this book that the deist God was more
completely good and fair than the Christian deity. It is not clear that
there is any necessary link between a good deity and one who helps
nations become free. Nevertheless, if a good deity is one that helps
downtrodden countries fight for their liberty, the deists believed in
that kind of deity also.
In
1789, the French Revolution began when the Bastille prison was stormed
and its prisoners were released. As the Revolution progressed, one of
the most important questions was whether the king, Louis XVI, should be
deposed, or whether the country should try to forge a constitutional
monarchy like England. This question was especially troubling as the
other European monarchs, led by the Holy Roman Emperor Leopold II,
threatened to invade France if they mistreated the king or the royal
family. The other monarchs saw the mistreatment of the French king as a
matter of concern to all the monarchs. The French soon imprisoned the
king and his queen, Marie Antoinette. This caused the monarchs of Europe
to unite, and the French were soon at war with Prussia, Spain, Naples,
Netherlands, Portugal, Britain, and the Holy Roman Empire. The situation
for the French Revolution was dire at first as many people inside
France, especially the Catholics, were against the Revolution, and the
French army was so disheartened that in one of the early battles, the
French soldiers all fled.
Many
of the prominent leaders of the French Revolution, including Jean-Paul
Marat, Camille Desmoulins, Maximilien Robespierre, and Louis Antoine de
Saint-Just, were deists. Considering the rest of Europe was attacking
France, and the French themselves were divided over the Revolution, the
French situation in the early 1790s was similar to the American
situation at the beginning of the Revolutionary War. Just as Washington
thought God helped the Americans in their fight for liberty, so too did
the French deists think God’s Providence helped the French in their
struggle for liberty.
The
best-known example of a French deist claiming God providentially helped
the French Revolution came from Maximilien Robespierre, the most
prominent of the radical revolutionary leaders. Robespierre claimed God
had purposively killed the leader of the countries that were attacking
France, the Holy Roman Emperor Leopold II. Despite being a healthy man
in his forties, Leopold suddenly and mysteriously died at the beginning
of March in 1792. His death was a great blow to the anti-French forces,
and Robespierre claimed God killed Leopold in order to help the French
defeat the foreign powers who were attacking France. A short while after
Leopold’s death, Robespierre spoke to the Jacobin club, the most
radical faction of revolutionary leaders. Robespierre declared that
France had been menaced by foreign armies organized by Leopold II, as
well as civil war, and traitors in the army. At this time of deep
trouble, he claimed that “Providence, which always watches over us much
better than our own wisdom, by striking Leopold dead, disrupted for some
time our enemy’s projects.” Then another revolutionary leader,
Marguerite-Élie Guadet, interrupted Robespierre. Gaudet said that “I do
not see any sense in this idea” of providence. He claimed that the
French did not fight “for three years to rid ourselves of the slavery of
despotism, to afterwards put ourselves under the slavery of
superstition.” After Gaudet spoke, a commotion broke out in the hall,
with some people murmuring and some applauding. Robespierre could have
replied that he was just speaking rhetorically, and he did not really
believe in Providence. Instead, he repeated his claim saying that “the
eternal Being influences essentially the destiny of all nations, and he
appears to me to watch in a particularly singular manner over the French
Revolution.” Finally, he declared that the belief in God’s providential
care “is a heartfelt belief, it is a feeling with which I cannot
dispense.”4
Robespierre
was far from the only French deist who thought Providence had a part in
the death of Leopold II of Austria. Another prominent leader of the
radical revolutionary faction, Georges Auguste Couthon, agreed. Couthon
said of Leopold’s death that “Providence, who always has greatly served
the revolution, has killed Leopold, one of our most cruel enemies.”
Couthon often talked about Providence helping the French Revolution, but
the event that Couthon thought most showed God’s miraculous Providence
was the attempted assassination in May of 1794 of the revolutionary
leaders Robespierre and Jean-Marie Collot d’Herbois. Couthon wrote that
the assassination failed even though the assassin had planned it well,
because “in truth there was a miracle.” Couthon then went on to describe
the event in detail. First, the assassin presented himself at
Robespierre’s home, “but Heaven wished that he not be admitted.” Then
the assassin went to the door Robespierre always entered and left his
home. Couthon claimed, in a passage he did not explain, that
“Robespierre’s custodian spirit (génie conservateur) made him take a
different route that day.” When he could not kill Robespierre, the
assassin went to Collot’s home.
This time the assassin was able to find Collot and get very close to
him. The assassin tried to shoot Collot once, but the pistol did not go
off. The assassin fired a second time and, even though he was standing
right next to Collot, the assassin missed him. Couthon finished by
writing, “I wish to say again that it is by a miracle that Robespierre
and Collot escaped. When one is guarded by Providence and the virtue of
the people, one is well-guarded . . . it is the supreme Being who guards
us.”5 It was not just Couthon who thought God was personally protecting
Robespierre. Another French revolutionary leader, Louis Legendre,
asserted that the assassin tried to kill Robespierre, “but the God of
nature did not suffer that the crime was successful.”6
Robespierre,
Couthon, and Legendre were major political leaders during the
Revolution, and one can always wonder about the sincerity of political
leaders talking of God helping their cause. But a large number of French
deists who were not political leaders made the same claim about God
helping the Revolution. For example, Jean-Baptiste Febvé was an obscure
official in the criminal bureau of the department of Meurthe. In 1794,
in the city of Nancy, Febve gave a long speech honoring God for all the
help God had recently given the French. He declared, that the only way
to explain all the miracles of the French Revolution was “the power of
divine Providence. . . . The projects of the enemies of liberty were
always confounded, their criminal maneuvers discovered, their plots
always destroyed. . . . The most formidable powers of Europe were allied
against France, and France was victorious… doesn’t this show well
enough the existence of a Supreme Being who protects the French nation?”
Another example is a speech in 1797 given by Louis Dubroca, a former
Catholic priest who had become a prominent deist leader. In this speech,
which was read to many deists gathered throughout France to worship
God, Dubroca proclaimed that it was all due to God’s help that France
had won the war. He declared,
Oh
God . . .we love to proclaim that it was you who guided in combat the
invincible battalions of our troops, who roused the heroic fighters, and
who aided their generous devotion by victory. They fought for their
fatherland, for their liberty, how could you, God powerful and good, not
sustain a cause so beautiful? … when you have crowned a peace which
fulfills our wishes, who is able to doubt your Providence did not itself
preside over the new destiny of France, that the republic is not your
work?7
Dubroca
proclaimed that no one could doubt that God guided the French troops in
battle and presided over the establishment of the French Republic.
Deists
are commonly seen as so emphasizing natural laws, that they believed
that God never broke these natural laws. I have argued throughout this
book that the English and American deists did not fit this stereotype,
and they believed in miracles and other forms of divine intervention.
The French Revolutionary deists were so far from fitting this stereotype
that they saw God and nature as their allies helping them defeat their
enemies. For example, when bad weather shipwrecked some English warships
on the French coast, Georges Auguste Couthon wrote, “it is evidently
Providence which produces these miracles.” In her book on the way nature
was pictured in the French Revolution, Mary Ashburn Miller claims it
was common for the French revolutionaries to see nature itself as a
“revolutionary and providential force. Nature became a space of
particular providence, not just a regulating system.”8
Deists
living during the French Revolution in the 1790s, who were very
anti-Christian, continually claimed God was providentially helping them
by defeating the plans of their enemies. Thus there is no connection
between believing in God’s providential help and being a Christian. So
Washington’s belief that God miraculously intervened during the American
Revolution gives no support to him being a Christian.