In 1801, the Baptists of Danbury, Connecticut, penned a letter to the newly elected president, Thomas Jefferson, to declare their belief âthat Americaâs God has raised you up to fill the chair of State out of that good will which he bears to the Millions which you preside over.â1 In their view, Jefferson was a divine instrument for the purpose of securing and safeguarding religious liberty. The Danbury Baptists were speaking on behalf of thousands of Baptists in the early United States who still endured the weight of religious intolerance by their respective state churches. But the Danbury Association did not speak for all Baptists.
Jeffersonâs famous reply, in which he referred to the First Amendment as erecting âa wall of separation between Church & State,â has led many historians to frame virtually all Baptists as Democratic-Republicans who shared a similar view.2 However, most Baptists did not define religious liberty in such strict separationist terms. In fact, many believed that Jeffersonâs ideas about God and government were harmful to society.
In an era of American history in which certain states still boasted a tax-supported church, many Baptists partnered politically with actual Christian nationalists to realize their own vision of an America where religion was not established but still encouraged.3 They locked arms with Congregationalists and Episcopalians, denominations that traditionally opposed disestablishment, to promote various moral and social causes, and to regulate matters like immigration and the influx of foreign (i.e., French) ideas. Like many Baptists today, they emphasized freedom of conscience and the importance of the Bible to shape the minds and morals of citizens.
These Baptists help to expose two myths about religion in America: (1) The earliest Baptist supporters of the First Amendment intended a âwallâ between church and state. (2) Baptists in the early United States agreed upon a universal definition of religious liberty.
Four Kinds of Baptists
The ultra-Jeffersonian Baptist John Leland (1754â1841) once called religious liberty the âpolar starâ of Baptist politics.4 However, to borrow a biblical analogy, in their pursuit of the âpolar starâ of religious freedom, Baptists did not always arrive in the same Bethlehem.
âMany Baptists believed that Jeffersonâs ideas about God and government were harmful to society.â
Although Leland has become somewhat famous for wheeling his 1,235-pound cheese to the White House as a gift to his âheroâ Jefferson, not every Baptist was a self-professed âdyed-in-the-skinâ Democratic-Republican.5 On one hand, due to their common cause in disestablishing religion, there is a sense in which every Baptist in the early United States was âJeffersonian.â On the other hand, most Baptists were not willing to remove religion from government in the same way that Jefferson wished to extricate government from religion.
In fact, there were at least four kinds of Baptists who qualified their Jeffersonianism: (1) those Democratic-Republicans who supported Jefferson but did not share his view of religious liberty, (2) Federalists who applauded Jeffersonâs push for religious liberty but who partnered with establishmentarians due to a common belief in the importance of Christianity as the basis for good government, (3) anti-Jeffersonians who believed Jeffersonâs ideas were dangerous and undermined public morality, and (4) those who were so disillusioned with party politics that they chose not to support any candidate, including Jefferson. Like their spiritual descendants today, Baptists in the early republic were a diverse bunch.
Democratic-Republican but Not Separationist
Isaac Backus, pastor of Middleborough Baptist Church in Massachusetts, had every reason to be a Jefferson man. At the Continental Congress in 1774, John Adams dismissed the former Congregationalist when the latter contended for âthe liberty of worshipping God according to our consciences, not being obliged to support a ministry we cannot attend.â6 Like most Separate Baptists, Backus had experienced the hostility of the so-called âStanding Orderâ clergymen in the Federalist Party. As the chairman of the Grievance Committee in the Warren Association, he documented complaints of religious persecution by Baptists.
But Backus was not interested in building a wall between church and state. He believed in the âsweet harmonyâ between religion and civil government, and he also did not object to compulsory attendance at public worship, teaching of the Westminster Confession in New England schools, and strict observance of the Sabbath.7 Backus once referred to Roger Williamsâs Rhode Island as an âirreligious colony,â bristling at the thought of a more secular America where Christianity was removed from the public square.
Thomas Baldwin defended Jefferson publicly after his election in 1800. However, as pastor of Second Baptist Church of Boston and as chaplain of the General Court of Massachusetts, Baldwin was on friendly terms with Federalists. In the so-called âbenevolent empireâ that arose in the early republic, Baldwin worked with Congregationalists in various moral and missionary endeavors.8 Of Baldwin it was said that âno important association seemed complete unless it had enrolled him as its President.â9
However, Baldwinâs vision of America included more than voluntary societies. He also campaigned for publicly funded biblical education. In a sermon delivered before the Federalist governor of Massachusetts in 1802, Baldwin insisted that there was cause âno more deserving of legislative attention, than the education of youth and children.â Without the âreligion of the Bible,â he argued, America would certainly lose its most basic liberties. Sensitive to the âirreligionâ sometimes associated with the âRepublican name,â Baldwinâs response to the First Amendment wasnât to keep Bibles out of schools, but to teach children âthe essential articles of the âFaith once delivered to the Saints.ââ10
Federalists Who Appreciated Jefferson
The second group of Baptists who did not adopt Jeffersonâs âwallâ metaphor were not Democratic-Republicans at all. These Baptists affiliated with the Federalist party not because they believed that religion should be wedded to the state, but because they feared the tyranny of a state completely divorced from religion.11
Charleston Baptist Richard Furman honored Jefferson as a founder of the nation, but he aligned with Federalists because they shared his ideal of a Christian citizenry. Furman was vice president of the Charleston Bible Society, which met in the home of his friend and vice-presidential candidate Charles Cotesworth Pinckney. Furmanâs Southern network included Episcopal and Presbyterian pastors, and his favorite American theologian was Yale President Timothy Dwight, the leading clergymen of the âStanding Orderâ and the grandson of Jonathan Edwards.12 He also partnered with the most notable Federalists in the South when he led in the formation of a âSocietyâ in Charleston âfor encouraging Emigration of virtuous citizens from other countries.â According to his own combination of religious liberty and religious nationalism, Furman, a slaveowner, sought to regulate the influx of âthose about to leave Europeâ whom he deemed injurious to American society.13
There were, in fact, a host of Baptist Federalists in the early republic, men who did not excoriate Jefferson publicly but who were suspicious of his beliefs. These men included Hezekiah Smith, Oliver Hart, Morgan Edwards, James Manning, and Henry Holcombe. John Mason Peck named his youngest son after John Adams.14 Not surprisingly, they were proponents of education and moral improvement, causes they believed to be impossible with a âwallâ separating church and state. To reach the poor and spread the gospel, these men worked with all sorts of Protestant denominations â and sometimes with Roman Catholics. In New Orleans in 1817, the young Federalist William B. Johnson was even asked to preach at St. Louis Cathedral for a benefit for the Poydras Orphan Asylum. Father Anthony of the local diocese approved of the homily, but he requested to âsee his sermon before he preaches it.â15
Anti-Jeffersonians
The third group of Baptists who opposed Jeffersonâs âwallâ were in fact Jeffersonâs most bitter opponents. These Baptists defy the stereotypical Lelandian caricature of Baptists who praised âAmericaâs Godâ for raising up Jefferson. In fact, they were anti-Jeffersonian.
Jonathan Maxcy was a brilliant college President who served at three different institutions. He spent most of his career in New England and South Carolina, two hotbeds of Baptist Federalism. Maxcy was judged by some to be a âviolent politicianâ whose âsarcasms against the Anti-Federalistsâ were viewed as incompatible for a man of his office. The year before âthe revolution of 1800,â Maxcy warned his audience of âforeign foes and domestic traitorsâ in America who were âcontinually advancing opinions and doctrines which tend to its subversion.â The nativistic Maxcy believed that Jefferson posed a threat to religious liberty with his âforeign influence and foreign intrigueâ and his âutmost efforts to ruin our government.â16 His case against a Jeffersonian wall was simple: âThe most salutary laws can have no effect against general corruption of sentiments and morals. The American people, therefore, have no way to secure their liberty, but by securing their religion.â
Samuel Stillman, the pastor of First Baptist Church of Boston, launched the same kind of verbal assaults in Jeffersonâs direction. In 1795, he warned his hearers of âmen of boundless ambition, who become heads of parties, and spare no pains to get into place.â17 These kinds of thinly veiled shots at Jefferson were not uncommon in New England, even among Baptists.
Neither Democratic-Republican nor Federalist
Stillman was a personal friend of John Adams. However, the last group of Baptists who opposed Jefferson were friends of neither Adams nor Jefferson. Some, like Georgia Baptist Jesse Mercer, simply did not vote, âfor he said all parties had aberrated so far from the constitution, that he could not conscientiously vote for the candidates.â18 In 1798, Mercer wrote the article of the Georgia constitution guaranteeing religious liberty. However, at least by the end of Jeffersonâs presidency, Mercer no longer identified with the principles that Jefferson had bequeathed to the Democratic-Republican party.
âReligious liberty has always united â and to some extent divided â Baptists in America.â
A closer look at the political leanings of Baptists in the early United States reveals a people who were remarkably similar to Baptists and other evangelicals today. They wrestled with the influence of ideas on society, the importance of shaping childrenâs minds, the responsibility of Christians to practice their faith, the relationship between religious liberty and nationalism, and the inherent tension of supporting political parties led by men who denied some of their most basic convictions. There is truly nothing new under the Baptist sun (Ecclesiastes 1:9).
By examining our Baptist ancestors, we are reminded that religious liberty has long united â and to some extent divided â Baptists in America. However, within this spectrum of views, it is doubtful that the majority of Baptists, including the Danbury Association, ever intended to build a âwallâ between church and state.19