George Washington's Baptism
Old Paths Bible Ministries © 2008 Richard St.James
By L.C. Barnes - Richard St.James, Editor
The John Gano Evidence of George Washington’s Religion
Research performed by Richard St.James at William Jewell College Library
in Liberty, Missouri, March 21, 2008
The following is intended by this editor to be a copy [except for
spelling update and/or conversion corrections] of the Bulletin of William Jewell College,
Series No. 24, September 15, 1926, No. 1,
By L.C. Barnes, "Entered April 2, 1909, at Liberty,
Missouri, as second-class Matter under Act of Congress of July 16,
1894."
The John Gano Evidence of George Washington’s Religion
None of the numerous sesquicentennial events in our land has deeper
significance than the dedication of a college chapel in the heart of
the country in memory of John Gano
“the fighting chaplain” of the
Revolutionary War and a close friend of George Washington. John Gano and
his sons stood preeminent in three particulars: patriotism, missions and
education. Heroic devotion to the country, heroic devotion to the
extension of the sway of Christ and heroic devotion to higher education
have seldom been so splendidly combined. Henry Clay said of the ministry
of John Gano at Lexington, Kentucky:
“He was a remarkably fervent
preacher and distinguished for a simple and effective manner. And of all
the preachers I ever listened to, he made me feel the most that religion
was a divine rea1ity, I never felt so religious under any one’s
preaching as under his,” -Sprague’s annals of the American Pulpit.
Washington in some rules of life, which he drew up at fourteen years of
age, said:
”Labor to keep alive in your breast that little spark of celestial fire
called conscience.”
In his first message to Congress he said,
”It would be peculiarly
improper to omit in this first official act, my fervent supplications to
the Almighty Being, who rules over the universe, who presides in the
councils of nations, and whose providential aids can supply every human
defect, that his benediction may consecrate to the liberties and
happiness of the people of the U. S. a government instituted by
themselves for these essential purposes, and may enable every instrument
employed in its administration, to execute with success the function
allotted to his charge. No people can be bound to acknowledge and adore
the invisible hand which conducts the affairs of men, more than the
peop1e of the U. S. Every step, by which we have advanced to the
character of an independent nation, seems to have been distinguished by
some token of providential agency.”
In the multitude of beguiling subjects which the day suggests let this
hour be given to the proof which John Gano has given to the world that
George Washington was an intense Christian. A brilliant biographer has
recently asserted once more that the Father of our Country was far from
that. It must be admitted that the intensity - mark my word – the
“intensity” of Washington’s personal religion, aside from the evidence
which I am about to adduce, is not easy to discover.
That Washington was a formal Christian, a sincere Christian and a noble
Christian is beyond question. Whoever reads thru the volumes of his
letters, ad-dresses and state papers finds explicitly Christian
acknowledgments frequent and the Christian spirit constant.
An instructive book could be written to this effect and without a word
of the Weems kind of adulation either. But the question would still
remain, was Washington a Christian of the intense type, what might be
called the personally evangelical type? Anything which bears on this
point is precious and worthy of thorough investigation.
It has long been asserted by those in the best position to know, that
General Washington insisted on being baptized by Chaplain Gano.
Washington became convinced that he had never personally obeyed one of
the explicit teachings of Christ, taught both by word and by example.
Having become convinced of his Lord’s command, with soldierly precision
he obeyed. Of course, baby George had been “Christened”. But someone
else did that, he had no voice in that - unless possibly an instinctive
wail, There was far more semblance of free volition in the thousands of
medieval Russians whom King Vladimir drove into the River Dnieper to be
immersed when he chose so called Christianity for his helpless subjects.
At the outbreak of the Protestant Reformation in Western Europe many
great scholars and also strong men of affairs, as well as hundreds of
thousands of the common people came to the conclusion that personal
religion could be carried out only personally, and not to any degree by
proxy. Consequently their infant baptism had no validity and they
insisted on being baptized by choice of their own wills. They did this
even when they knew that a tradition enslaved world would put them to
death for doing it. Hence they were known as Anabaptists, i.e. the
Re-baptized.
In the interest of correct historical understanding of such people, it
is a misfortune that the prefix, which was the important part of the
word, wore off in the course of centuries of hostile use. At the present
time most people imagine that the successors of those Reformation heroes
are called Baptists because they baptize by immersion. Whereas it is
essentially because they re-baptize, i.e. insist that proxy baptism is
not a spiritual reality, insist on voluntary instead of compulsory
baptism. It is merely incidental that a great majority of those who
became convinced that personal choice is indispensable to religious
values, also chose to perform the act of obedience in the original
apostolic form, immersion. Was Washington one of the long 1ine of
illustrious men, including the chief officers of Oliver Cromwell’s army,
who have been so intense in their conception of religion as to go on the
conviction that no one else can perform for any one a truly religious
act? He must do it himself, or it is ever done in reality, so far as he
is concerned.
The evidence, such as it is, that George Washington did this, is of two
classes, direct and circumstantial. Neither class is a mathematical
demonstration. That, how-ever, is true of the argument for the existence
of God.
The present study is not even an argument. It is only an examination of
evidence. Sectarian pre-judgment against it will be natural on the part
of many. Sectarian pre-judgment in favor of it on the part of any would
be foolish. Washington never joined the Baptist denomination any more
than did McKinley. President William McKinley was bred and died in the
Methodist Episcopal church of which he was a noble son. It is recorded
that when he chose Christ as his personal savior and Lord he demanded in
spite of the persuasions of his mother (to whom he was always fondly
devoted) and of his pastor, demanded that, in place of his parents’
choice when he was an unconscious infant, now, by his own choice, he be
baptized in the emblematic burial of the selfish life and resurrection
to new life with Christ. George Washington was bred and died in the
Protestant Episcopal church of which he was a noble son.
Everyone ought to rejoice at evidence, … however trivial the nature of
the evidence in the opinion of some, ... evidence that such men as
Washington and McKinley stood the supreme test of Christian religion,
personality in place of formality.
With both of them this was regarded not as an ecclesiastical but as a
strictly personal matter and of no concern to the public. Hence no
record of it is to be expected in published documents.
Washington paid particular attention to the preservation of such papers
as he cared to leave for the public. He kept copies of his letters as he
wrote them, and during the years in question he thought so much of the
matter as to employ three men for two years and a half, in transcribing
and arranging his correspondence.
“In the form of transcripts the mass
pertaining to the Revolution makes forty-four large volumes, in a
chronological arrangement, with an index to each.” In all there are now
more than 200 bound volumes of Washington manuscript.
Washington was
exceedingly careful and politic as to anything which might develop lack
of sympathy on the part of any one, on any account, with the American
cause as personated in its leader. He was too wise a man to make pub1ic
in any way a purely private religious matter, which the bulk of
Americans, even Christians, would have thought at best a foolish scruple
of conscience He was the last to break to the public his personal
reserve in such a case. Of the General and President we know much, and
so have come to feel that we know all about Washington. But of his
interior and private life comparatively little is known. He wrote
hundreds of letters to his wife. But two of them are extant.
Five years after the war had closed, in a letter to Noah Webster,
Washington himself said: “Notwithstanding most of the papers, which
may perhaps be deemed of official, are preserved; yet the knowledge of
innumerable things of a more delicate and secret nature is confined to
the perishable remembrance of some few of the present generation.”
Since this was true of the affairs of the army and of the nation, to a
how much greater extent was it true of events with which the public, as
such, had no concern. The probability as to the baptism of Washington,
arising from the general knowledge or lack of knowledge concerning it,
is precisely indicated by these words from his own pen. It is one of the
“innumerable things of a more delicate and secret nature, the knowledge
of ‘which’ is confined to the perishable remembrance of some few of the
present generation.”
The matter of his baptism belonged to the general public of that time a
thou-sand fold less than the things of which he spoke in those words. It
was simply a matter of conscience between a man of conscience and his
God. At most only
“some few of the (then) present generation” would know
it. The surest to know it would be the family of the administrator. The
evidence is simply the most natural of evidence, the
“remembrance” of
the children of John Gano. It was, indeed,
“perishable”, and so far as
the father was concerned allowed to perish. The personal confidences of
Gano and Washington were doubly sealed by their mutua1 Masonic vows. But
Gano’s children could not quite consent to let the remembrance utterly
perish. Their children at least must know such a fact as that. From them
it has floated into an occasional paragraph in print. A careful
examination of this
“perishable remembrance” has accomplished three
things, It has disclosed it in most certain shape, a whole generation
further back than was before made public. It has reduced it to the form
of legal evidence. It has brought into formal comparison two and
disclosed a third, producing in all, three strictly independent lines of
the direct transmission of the
“remembrance” from John Gano to us. The
testimony is of the same character in this respect, as much of the
testimony in the New Testament concerning the life of Christ. It is more
direct than some of that. In the present case it is as if we had
explicit testimony concerning the Baptism of Jesus given by children of
John the Baptist.
The Direct Evidence - The John Gano
Evidence of George Washington’s Religion
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