CHAPTER II
The Baptists And The American Constitution
The Constitution?The Ratification?Two
Objections to the Constitution?Liberty not Sufficiently
Guarded?Massachusetts?James Manning?Virginia?Tames Madison
and John Leland?J. S. Barbour?Governor Briggs on
Leland?Patrick Henry Against the Constitution?John Adams?and
Religious Liberty?Thomas Jefferson?First Amendment to the
Constitution?The Baptists of Virginia Propose the
Amendment??The Forces Working for Liberty?Leonard
Bacon?Ruffini
At the close of the war a congress
of representatives from the States was called to draft a
Constitution for the United States. The new Constitution was
submitted for ratification by the various States September 17,
1787. There was much opposition to the proposed Constitution,
especially as it determined that there should be no religious
tests. For a long time it seemed doubtful if the Constitution
would be ratified. The issue hung upon the action of two States,
Massachusetts and Virginia. In each of these States the Baptists
held the balance of power.
There were two currents of thought
against the article on religion, the one finding it excessive
and dangerous, the other insufficient and maimed. It was feared
by some of the opponents of the articles that the power might
pass into the hands of the Roman Catholics, the Jews or
infidels; ?even the Pope of Rome,? one horrified delegate
exclaimed, ?might become President of the United States.? The
opposition was particularly strong in Massachusetts, where the
liberal ideas were combated by the legislature. Other States
were unable to find in the article a sufficiently wide and
certain guarantee of religious liberty, and therefore they
proposed amendments.
January 9, 1788, a convention of
delegates assembled in Boston, Massachusetts, from all parts of
the State. The debate was long; and the issue uncertain. Some of
the Baptists looked upon the Constitution with suspicion as not
giving full guarantee of freedom. James Manning, President of
Rhode Island College, was an earnest advocate of the adoption of
the Constitution and he had much influence in the body. He fully
believed that on the adoption of that measure the future
well‑being of the country was suspended. Being aware that
several Baptist min?isters were members of the convention, and
that they generally looked upon the proposed Constitution with a
jealous eye, he went to Boston with a view to exert whatever
influence he could to disarm his brethren of their prejudices,
and to bring them to act as he fully believed the interest of
the nation required. In this effort he was seconded by his
intimate friend, Dr. Samuel Stillman, who was himself a member
of the body, with two or three other very influential ministers.
The question of ratifica?tion was finally carried by a majority
of nineteen. Just before the final vote, Governor Hancock, the
President of the Conven?tion, called upon Dr. Manning to pray;
and, though the request took him by surprise, he fell upon his
knees, and offered a prayer in which patriotism and piety were
most delightfully blended, and which left an extraordinary
impression upon the whole as?sembly. On his return to
Providence, after the Convention had closed its sessions, he met
his friends with the warmest congratu?lations, and could
scarcely find language strong enough to ex?press his sense of
the importance of the result which had been reached (Sprague,
VI.).
The opposition to the Constitution
in Virginia was led by strong and popular men. The people were
about equally divided on the measure. The Convention met in
Richmond, in June, 1788. The Baptists in Williams meeting house,
Goochland county, March 7, had canvassed the Constitution and
reached the following conclusion:
Whether the new Federal
Constitution, which had now lately made its appearance in
public, made sufficient provision for the secure enjoy?ment
of religious liberty; on which, it was agreed unanimously
that, in the opinion of the General Committee, it did not
(Semple).
The leader in favor of the
Constitution was James Madison, and opposed to it was Patrick
Henry. Madison had been absent in Philadelphia, and the
candidate for Orange county was John Leland. It was a great
Baptist county and the probabilities were that Leland would be
elected. Madison called on Leland, spent half a day with him,
and Leland came down from the race and supported Madison. He
believed Madison would properly represent the cause.
The celebrated lawyer, J. S.
Barbour, in an eulogy upon Madison, said that ?the credit of
adopting the Constitution of the United States properly belonged
to a Baptist clergyman, formerly of Virginia, by the name of
Leland; and he reached his conclusion in this way?he said that
if Madison had not been in the. Virginia Convention, the
Constitution would not have been ratified by that State; and, as
the approval of nine States was required to give effect to this
instrument, and as Virginia was the ninth State, if it had been
rejected by her, the Constitution would have failed; and that it
was by Elder Leland?s influence that Madison was elected to the
Convention.?
Governor Briggs, of Massachusetts,
who was a great friend of Leland, gives the following account of
the affair:
Soon after the Convention,
which framed the Constitution of the United States, had
finished their work, and submitted it to the people for
their action, two strong and active parties were formed in
the State of Virginia, on the subject of its adoption. The
State was nearly equally divided. One party was opposed to
its adoption, unless certain amendments, which they
maintained that the safety of the people required, should be
incorporated into it, before it was ratified by them. At the
head of this great party stood Patrick Henry, the Orator of
the Revolution, and one of Virginia?s favorite sons. The
other party agreed with their opponents said as to the
character and necessity of the amendments proposed, but they
contended that the people should have the power, and could
as well incorporate these amendments into the Constitution
after its adoption as before; that it was a great crisis in
the affairs of the country, and if the Constitution, then
presented to the people by the Convention, should be
rejected by them, such would be the state of the public
mind, that there was little or no reason to believe that
another would be agreed upon by a future Convention; and, in
such an event, ?so much to be dreaded, ?the hopes of
constitutional liberty and a confederated and free Republic
would be lost. At the head of this party stood James
Madison. The strength of the two parties was to be tested by
the election of County Delegates to the State Convention.
That Convention would have to adopt or reject the
Constitution. Mr. Madison was named as the candidate in
favor of its adoption for the County of Orange, in which he
resided. Elder Leland, also, at that time, lived in the
County of Orange, and his sympathies, he said, were with
Henry and his party. He was named as the candidate opposed
to adoption, and in opposition to Mr. Madison. Orange was a
strong Baptist county; and his friends had an undoubted
confidence in his election. Though reluctant to be a
candidate, he yielded to the solicitations of the opponents
of the Constitution, and accepted the nomination.
For three months after the
members of the Convention at Philadelphia had completed
their labors, and returned to their homes, Mr. Madison, with
John Jay and Alexander Hamilton, had remained in that city
for the purpose of preparing those political articles that
now constitute The Federalist. This gave the party opposed
to Madison, with Henry at their head, the start of him, in
canvassing the State in his absence. At length, when Mr.
Madison was about ready to return to Virginia, a public
meeting was appointed in the County of Orange, at which the
candidates for the Convention, ?Madison on the one side, and
Leland on the other, ?were to address the people from the
stump. Up to that time he had but a partial acquaintance
with Mr. Madison, but he had a high respect for his talents,
his candor, and the uprightness and purity of his private
character. On his way home from Philadelphia, Mr. Madison
went some distance out of his direct road to call upon him.
After the ordinary salutations, Mr. Madison began to
apologize for troubling him with a call at that time; but he
assured Mr. M. that no apology was necessary??I know your
errand here,? said he, ?it is to talk with me about the
Constitution. I am glad to see you, and to have an
opportunity of hearing your views on the subject.? Mr.
Madison spent half a day with him, and fully and
unreservedly communicated to him his opinions upon the great
matters which were then agitating the people of the State
and Confederacy.
Then they separated to meet
again very soon, as opposing candidates before the electors,
on the stump. The day came, and they met, and with them
nearly all the voters of the County of Orange, to hear their
candidates respectively discuss the important questions upon
which the people of Virginia were so soon to act. ?Mr.
Madison,? said the venerable man, ?first took the stump,
which was a hogshead of tobacco, standing on one end. For
two hours, he addressed his fellow citizens in a calm,
candid and statesman‑like manner, arguing his side of the
case, and fairly meeting and replying to the arguments which
had been put forth by his opponents, in the general canvass
of the State. Though Mr. Madison was not particularly a
pleasing or eloquent speaker, the people listened with
respectful attention. He left the hogshead, and my friends
called on me. I took it?and went in for Mr. Madison; and he
was elected without difficulty. ?This,? said he, ?is, I
suppose, what Mr. Barbour alluded to.? A noble Christian
patriot I That single act, with the motives which prompted
it, entitled him to the respect of mankind (Sprague, VI).
When the Convention assembled,
Patrick Henry spoke against the Constitution with a vehemence
never surpassed by himself on any occasion in his whole life,
and with a power that sometimes was overwhelming. Once, while
this matchless orator was addressing the Convention, a wild
storm broke over Richmond; the heavens were ablaze with
lightning, the thunder roared, and the rain came down in
torrents; at this moment Henry seemed to see the anger of heaven
threatening the State, if it should consummate the guilty act of
adopting the Constitution, and he invoked celestial witnesses to
view and compassionate his distracted country in this grand
crisis of its history. And such was the effect of his speech on
the occasion; that the Convention immediately dispersed
(Howison, II).
But Madison and his party
prevailed. The Convention, when the final vote of ratification
was taken, only gave a majority of ten in favor of the
Constitution. Eighty‑nine cast their votes for it, and
seventy‑nine against it (Howe, Virginia Historical Collections,
124. Charleston, 1846).
In this manner the Constitution of
the United States was adopted. Already, it has been seen that
the Baptists did not think that the Constitution secured
religious liberty. Imperfect as it was considered, through Mr.
Madison and the Baptists, the Constitution had been ratified.
There was large opposition to any amendments. Many noble men
were in favor of the union of Church and State. Massachusetts
was wedded to an establishment. John Adams, her favorite son and
afterwards President of the United States, was indignant that
the Baptists addressed the Congress in Philadelphia praying for
religious liberty. He wrote as follows to Benjamin Kent:
I am for the most liberal
toleration of all denominations, but I hope Congress will
never meddle with religion further than to say their own
prayers...Let every Colony have its own religion without
molestation (Adams, Works by Charles Francis Adams, IX.).
As late as the beginning of the
nineteenth century there was a dream of a State Church. Thomas
Jefferson, writing to Benjamin Rush, says:
The successful experiment made
under the prevalence of that delusion (of a State Church) on
the clause of the Constitution, which, while it secures the
freedom of the press, covered also the freedom of religion,
had given to the clergy a very favorable hope of obtaining
an establishment of a particular form of Christianity
through the United States; and as every met believes its own
form the true one, every one perhaps hoped for his own, but
especially the Episcopalians and the Congregationalists. The
returning good sense of our country threatens abortion to
their hopes, and they believe that any portion of power
confided to me, will be exerted in opposition to their
schemes. And they believe rightly; for I have sworn upon the
altar of God, eternal hostility against every form of
tyranny over the minds of men (Jefferson, Writings, X, 174,
175. Washington, 1904).
Massachusetts did not ratify the
first amendment to the Constitution of the United States
(Backus, II). The suggested amendment came from the Baptists.
?Denominationally,? says Cathcart, ?no community asked for this
change in the Consti?tution but the Baptists. The Quakers
probably would have petitioned it, if they had thought of it,
but they did not. John Adams and the Congregationalists did not
desire it; the Episco?palians did not wish it; it went too far
for most Presbyterians in Revolutionary times, or in our days,
when we hear so much about putting the divine name in the
Constitution. The Baptists asked it through Washington; the
request commended itself to his judgment and to the generous
soul of Madison; and to the Bap?tists, beyond a doubt, belongs
the glory of engrafting its best articles on the noblest
Constitution ever framed for the govern?ment of mankind?
(Cathcart, Centennial Offering).
On account of his well‑known views
there was much opposi?tion to Madison in Virginia. Through the
influence of Patrick Henry he was defeated for the United States
Senate. The Con?gressional Districts were so gerrymandered that
it was thought he could not be elected to the House of
Representatives. Here again, the Baptists, believing in his
integrity, threw their in?fluence to him and he was elected to
Congress.
On the general subject of
amendments to the Constitution Madison, in a speech delivered
June 8, 1789, said:
I will state my reasons why I
think it proper to propose amendments, and state the
amendments themselves, so far as I think they ought to be
proposed. If I thought I could fulfill the duty I owe to
myself and my constituents, to let the subject pass over in
silence, I would most certainly not trespass on the
indulgence of the House. But I cannot do this, and am,
therefore, compelled to beg a patient hearing to what I have
to lay before you...It appears to me that this House is
bound by every motive of prudence not to let the first
session pass over without pro?posing to the State
Legislature some things to be incorporated into the
Constitution that will render it acceptable to the whole
people of the United States as it has been found acceptable
to a majority of them. I wish, among other reasons why
something should be done, that those who have been friendly
to the adoption of the Constitution may have the opportunity
of proving to those who were opposed to it that they were as
sincerely devoted to liberty and a republican government as
those who charged them with wishing the adoption of this
Constitution in order to lay the foundation of an
aristocracy or despotism. It will be a desirable thing to
extinguish from the bosom of every member of the community
any apprehensions that there are those among his countrymen
who wish to deprive them of the liberty for which they
valiantly fought and honorably bled. And if there are
amendments desired of such a nature as will not injure the
Constitution, and they can be engrafted so as to give
satisfaction to the doubting part of our fellow citizens,
the friends of the Federal Government will evince the spirit
of deference and concession for which they have been
hitherto distinguished...It cannot be a secret to the
gentlemen of this House that, notwithstanding the
ratification of this system of government by eleven of the
thirteen United States, in some cases unanimously, in others
by large majorities, yet still there is a great number of
our constituents who are dissatisfied with it, among whom
are many respectable for their talents and patriotism, and
respectable for the jealousy they have for their liberty,
which, though mistaken in its object, is laudable in its
motive. There is a great body of the people falling under
this description, who at present feel much inclined to, join
their support to the cause of Federalism, if they were
satisfied on this point...But perhaps there is a stronger
motive than this for one going into a consideration of the
subject. It is to provide those securities for liberty which
are required by a part of the community. I allude in a
particular manner to those two States (Rhode Island and
North Carolina) that have not thought fit to throw
themselves into the bosom of the confederacy. It is a
desirable thing, on our part as well as theirs, that a
reunion should take place as soon as possible...But I will
candidly acknowledge that, over and above all of these
considerations, I do conceive that the Constitution may be
amended; that is to say, if all powers of the general
Government may be guarded against in a more secure manner
than it is now done, while no one advantage arising from the
exercise of that power shall be damaged or endangered by it.
We have in this way something to gain; and, if we proceed
with caution, nothing to lose (Annals of Congress, I).
Upon the advice of Madison the
subject was presented to Washington. The petition was prepared
by John Leland and is as follows:
Address of the Committee of
the United Baptist Churches of Virginia, assembled in the
city of Richmond, August 8, 1789, to the President of the
United States of America
Sir, ?Among the many shouts of
congratulation that you receive from cities, societies,
States and the whole world, we wish to take an active part
in the universal chows, in expressing our great satisfaction
in your appointment to the first office in the nation. When
America, on a former occasion, was reduced to the necessity
of appealing to arms to defend her natural and civil rights,
a Washington was found fully adequate to the exigencies of
the dangerous attempt; who, by the philanthropy of his heart
and the prudence of his head, led forth her untutored troops
into the field of battle, and, by the skillfulness of his
hands, baffled the projects of the insulting foe and pointed
out the road to independence, even at a time when the energy
of the Cabinet was not sufficient to bring into action the
natural aid of the confederation, from its respective
sources.
The grand object being
obtained, the independence of the States acknowledged, free
from ambition, devoid of the thirst of blood, our hero
returned, with those he commanded, and laid down the sword
at the feet of those who gave it to him. ?Such an example to
the world is new.? Like other nations, we experienced that
it requires as great valor and wisdom to make an advantage
of a conquest as to gain one.
The want of efficiency in the
confederation, the redundancy of laws, and their partial
administration in the States, called aloud for a new
arrangement in our systems. The wisdom of the States for
that purpose was collected in a grand convention, over which
you, sir, had the honor to preside. A national government,
in all its parts, was recommended as the only preservation
of the Union, which plan of government is now in actual
operation.
When the constitution first
made its appearance in Virginia, we, as a society, had
unusual struggles of mind, fearing that the liberty of
conscience, dearer to us than property or life, was not
sufficiently secured. Perhaps our jealousies were heightened
by the usage we received in Virginia under the regal
government, when mobs, fines, bonds, and prisons were our
frequent repast.
Convinced, on the one hand,
that without an effective national government the States
would fall into disunion and all the consequent evils, and
on the other hand, fearing that we would be accessory to
some religious oppression, should any one society in the
union predominate over the rest; amidst all these
inquietudes of mind our consolation arose from this
consideration, via.: the plan must be good, for it has the
signature of a tried, trusty friend, and if religious
liberty is rather insecure in the Constitution, ?the
Administration will certainly prevent all oppressions, for a
Washington will preside.? According to our wishes, the
unanimous voice of the Union has called you, sir, from your
beloved retreat, to launch forth again into the faithless
seas of human affairs, to guide the helm of States. May the
divine munificence which covered your head in battle make
you yet a greater blessing to your admiring country in time
of peace! Should the horrid evils that have been so
pestiferous in Asia and Europe?faction, ambition, war,
perfidy, fraud and persecution for conscience sake, ever
approach the borders of our happy nation, may the name and
administration of our beloved President, like the radiant
source of day, scatter all those dark clouds from the
American hemisphere.
And, while we speak freely the
language of our hearts, we are satisfied that we express the
sentiments of our brethren whom we represent. The very name
of Washington is music in our ears, and, although the great
evil in the States, is the want of mutual confidence between
the rulers and the people, yet we have the utmost confidence
in the President of the States; and it is our fervent prayer
to Almighty God that the Federal Government, and the
governments of the respective States, without rivalship, may
cooperate together as to make the numerous people over which
you preside the happiest nation on earth, and you, sir, the
happiest man, in seeing the people whom, by the smiles of
Providence, you saved from vassalage by your valor and made
wise by your maxims, sitting securely under their vines and
fig trees, enjoying the perfection of human felicity. May
God long preserve your life and health for a blessing to the
world in general, and the United States in particular; and
when, like the sun, you have finished your course of great
and unparalleled services, and go the way of all the earth,
may the Divine Being, who will reward every man according to
his works, grant unto you a glorious admission into the
everlasting kingdom, through Jesus Christ. This, sir, is the
prayer of your happy admirers.
By order of the Committee.
Samuel Harris, Chairman.
Reuben Ford, Clerk (Leland,
Works).
Washington made the following
reply:
To the General Committee,
Representing the United Baptist Churches in Virginia:
Gentlemen?I request that you
will accept my best acknowledgments for your congratulations
on my appointment to the first office of the nation. The
kind manner in which you mention my past conduct equally
claims the expression of my gratitude.
After we had, by the smiles of
Divine Providence on our exertions, obtained the object for
which we contended, I retired at the conclusion of the war,
with the idea that my country could have no further occasion
for my services, and with the intention of never again
entering public life. But when the exigencies of my country
seemed to require me once more to engage in public affairs,
my honest conviction of duty superceded my former
resolution, and became my apology for deviating from the
happy plan which I had adopted.
If I could have entertained
the slightest apprehension that the Constitution framed by
the Convention, where I had the honor to preside, might
possibly endanger the religious rights of any ecclesiastical
society, certainly I would never have placed my signature to
it; and if I could now conceive that the general government
might be so administered as to render the liberty of
conscience insecure, I beg you that none will be persuaded,
that none will be more zealous than myself to establish
effective barriers against the horrors of spiritual tyranny
and every species of religious persecution; for you
doubtless remember I have often expressed my sentiments,
that any man, conducting himself as a good citizen, and
being accountable to God alone for his religious opinions,
ought to be protected in worshipping the Deity according to
the dictates of his oven conscience.
While I recollect with
satisfaction that the religious society of which you are
members, throughout America, uniformly and almost
unanimously were the firm friends of civil liberty, and the
persevering promoters of our glorious revolution, I cannot
hesitate to believe that they will be the faithful
supporters of a free, yet efficient, general government.
Under this pleasing expectation, I rejoice to assure them
that they may rely upon my beat wishes and endeavors to
promote their prosperity.
In the meantime, be assured,
gentlemen, that I entertain a proper sense of your fervent
supplications to God for my temporal and eternal happiness.
I am, Gentlemen, your most
obedient servant,
George Washington.
(Sparks, Writings of
Washington, XII).
One of the first things Madison
proposed on entering Congress, June 8, 1789, was the following
amendment to the Constitution of the United States:
Congress shall make no law
respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech,
or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to
assemble and petition the government for a redress of
grievances.
The Baptists felt secure under
this new provision of the Constitution. Long afterwards, March
2, 1819, Madison wrote to Robert Walsh, from Montpelier, as
follows:
It was the universal opinion
of the century preceding the last that civil government
could not stand without the prop of a religious
establishment, and that the Christian religion itself would
perish, if not supported by a legal provision for its
clergy. The experience of Virginia conspicuously
corroborates the disproof of both opinions. The civil
government, though bereft of everything like an associated
hierarchy, possesses the requisite stability and performs
its functions with complete success; whilst the number, the
industry, and the morality of the priesthood, and the
devotion of the people, have been manifestly increased by
the total separation of the Church from the State.
The forces which worked for
liberty have thus been summed up by Bacon: ?In the establishment
of the American principle of the non‑interference of the State
with religion, and the equality of all religious communions
before the law, much was due, no doubt, to the mutual jealousies
of the sects, no one or two of which were strong enough to
maintain exceptional pretensions over the rest combined. Much
also is to be imputed to the indifferentism and sometimes the
anti‑religious sentiment of an important and numerous class of
doctrinaire politicians of which Jefferson may be taken as a
type. So far as this work was a work of intelligent conviction
and religious faith, the chief honor of it must be given to the
Baptists. Other sects, notably the Presbyterians, had been
energetic and efficient in demanding their own liberties; the
Friends and Baptists agreed in demanding liberty of conscience
and worship, and equality before the law, for all alike. But the
active labor in this cause was mainly done by the Baptists. It
is to their consistency and constancy in the warfare against the
privileges of the powerful ?Standing Order? of New England, and
of the moribund establishments in the South, that we are chiefly
indebted for the final triumph, in this country, of that
principle of the separation of church and state, which is one of
the largest contributions of the New World to civilization and
the church universal? (Bacon, A History of American
Christianity).
Ruffini has summed up the
provisions of this amendment in the following discriminating
manner: ?By this the United States solemnly promised that they
would never elevate any one form of belief to the rank of the
official religion of the Confederation, but that, on the
contrary, equal liberty would be conceded to all the churches.
It was, therefore, the most absolute separation of the two
powers which the United States, at the moment of constituting
themselves into a Republic, placed at the basis of their
relations with Churches, and to that separation they entrusted
the guarantee of the fullest religious liberty.
?There is, however, one thing that
must be especially noted. The Constitution of the United States
did not abolish the union between the State and the Church
within those particular States in which the separation had not
already taken place. Now, no separation had been effected, nor
was it realized for a whole century, in the New England States.
Again, the Constitution did not guarantee full religious liberty
except in federal relationships, and it did not remove those
restrictions in the internal relations of single States...Some
of them (the States), however, still remained intolerant in
spite of and after the Federal Constitution? (Ruffini).
Books for
further reference:
The Writings of Thomas Jefferson
containing his Autobiography, Notes on Virginia, Parliamentary
Manual, Official Papers, Messages and Addresses, and other
Writings Official and Private. Andrew A. Lipscomb, Editor in
Chief, Albert Ellery Bergh, Managing Editor. 18 volumes.
The Writings of George Washington
being the Correspondence, Addresses, Messages and other Papers,
Official and Private by Jared Sparks, Boston, 1838. 12 volume.
J. T. Smith, Life and Times of
Rev. John Leland, The Baptist Quarterly, V, 230‑256.
Philadelphia, 1871.
Reuben A. Guild, The
Denominational Work of President Manning, The Baptist Review,
III, 74‑85. Cincinnati, 1881.
John T. Christian, The Religion of
Thomas Jefferson, The Review and Expositor, XVI, 295‑307.
Louisville, 1919.
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