The Liberty
Window At its initial meeting in September 1774 Congress
invited the Reverend Jacob Duch (1738-1798), rector of Christ
Church, Philadelphia, to open its sessions with prayer. Duch
ministered to Congress in an unofficial capacity until he was
elected the body's first chaplain on July 9, 1776. He defected to
the British the next year. Pictured here in the bottom stained-glass
panel is the first prayer in Congress, delivered by Duch. The top
part of this extraordinary stained glass window depicts the role of
churchmen in compelling King John to sign the Magna Carta in
1215.
The
Prayer in the First Congress, A.D. 1774 Stained glass
and lead, from The Liberty Window, Christ Church, Philadelphia,
after a painting by Harrison Tompkins Matteson, c. 1848 Courtesy
of the Rector, Church Wardens and Vestrymen of Christ Church,
Philadelphia (101)
George Duffield,
Congressional Chaplain On October 1, 1777, after Jacob
Duch, Congress's first chaplain, defected to the British, Congress
appointed joint chaplains: William White (1748-1836), Duch's
successor at Christ Church, Philadelphia, and George Duffield
(1732-1790), pastor of the Third Presbyterian Church of
Philadelphia. By appointing chaplains of different denominations,
Congress expressed a revolutionary egalitarianism in religion and
its desire to prevent any single denomination from monopolizing
government patronage. This policy was followed by the first Congress
under the Constitution which on April 15, 1789, adopted a joint
resolution requiring that the practice be continued.
George
Duffield Oil on canvas by Charles Peale Polk,
1790 Independence National Historical Park Collection,
Philadelphia (103)
Military Chaplains
Pay This resolution directed that military chaplains,
appointed in abundance by Congress during the Revolutionary War,
were paid at the rate of a major in the Continental Army.
Congressional
resolution, paying military personnel [left page] - [right
page] Broadside, April 22, 1782 Rare Book and Special
Collections Division, Library of Congress (102)
Proposed Seal for the
United States On July 4, 1776, Congress appointed
Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson and John Adams "to bring in a
device for a seal for the United States of America." Franklin's
proposal adapted the biblical story of the parting of the Red Sea
(left). Jefferson first recommended the "Children of Israel in the
Wilderness, led by a Cloud by Day, and a Pillar of Fire by night. .
. ." He then embraced Franklin's proposal and rewrote it (right).
Jefferson's revision of Franklin's proposal was presented by the
committee to Congress on August 20. Although not accepted these
drafts reveal the religious temper of the Revolutionary period.
Franklin and Jefferson were among the most theologically liberal of
the Founders, yet they used biblical imagery for this important
task.
Legend for
the Seal of the United States, August 1776 [left side] - [right
side] Holograph notes, Benjamin Franklin (left) and
Thomas Jefferson (right) Manuscript Division, Library
of Congress (104-105)
Proposed
Great Seal of the United States: "Rebellion to Tyrants is
Obedience to God." Drawing by Benson Lossing, for Harper's
New Monthly Magazine, July 1856. General Collections,
Library of Congress. (106)
Congressional Fast Day
Proclamation Congress proclaimed days of fasting and of
thanksgiving annually throughout the Revolutionary War. This
proclamation by Congress set May 17, 1776, as a "day of Humiliation,
Fasting and Prayer" throughout the colonies. Congress urges its
fellow citizens to "confess and bewail our manifold sins and
transgressions, and by a sincere repentance and amendment of life,
appease his [God's] righteous displeasure, and through the merits
and mediation of Jesus Christ, obtain his pardon and forgiveness."
Massachusetts ordered a "suitable Number" of these proclamations be
printed so "that each of the religious Assemblies in this Colony,
may be furnished with a Copy of the same" and added the motto "God
Save This People" as a substitute for "God Save the King."
Congressional
Fast Day Proclamation, March 16, 1776 Broadside Rare Book and Special
Collections Division, Library of Congress (107)
Congressional
Thanksgiving Day Proclamation Congress set December 18,
1777, as a day of thanksgiving on which the American people "may
express the grateful feelings of their hearts and consecrate
themselves to the service of their divine benefactor" and on which
they might "join the penitent confession of their manifold sins . .
. that it may please God, through the merits of Jesus Christ,
mercifully to forgive and blot them out of remembrance." Congress
also recommends that Americans petition God "to prosper the means of
religion for the promotion and enlargement of that kingdom which
consisteth in righteousness, peace and joy in the Holy Ghost.'"
Congressional
Thanksgiving Day Proclamation, November 1, 1777 Broadside
Rare Book and
Special Collections Division, Library of Congress (108)
The 1779 Fast Day
Proclamation Here is the most eloquent of the Fast and
Thanksgiving Day Proclamations.
Congressional
Fast Day Proclamation, March 20, 1779 Broadside Rare Book and Special
Collections Division, Library of Congress (109)
Another Thanksgiving Day
Proclamation Congress set November 28, 1782, as a day of
thanksgiving on which Americans were "to testify their gratitude to
God for his goodness, by a cheerful obedience to his laws, and by
promoting, each in his station, and by his influence, the practice
of true and undefiled religion, which is the great foundation of
public prosperity and national happiness."
Congressional
Thanksgiving Day Proclamation, October 11, 1782 Broadside
Rare Book and Special Collections Division, Library of Congress
(110)
Morality in the Army Congress was
apprehensive about the moral condition of the American army and navy
and took steps to see that Christian morality prevailed in both
organizations. In the Articles of War, seen below, governing the
conduct of the Continental Army (seen above) (adopted, June 30,
1775; revised, September 20, 1776), Congress devoted three of the
four articles in the first section to the religious nurture of the
troops. Article 2 "earnestly recommended to all officers and
soldiers to attend divine services." Punishment was prescribed for
those who behaved "indecently or irreverently" in churches,
including courts-martial, fines and imprisonments. Chaplains who
deserted their troops were to be court-martialed.
Morality in the
Navy Congress particularly feared the navy as a source
of moral corruption and demanded that skippers of American ships
make their men behave. The first article in Rules and Regulations of
the Navy (below), adopted on November 28, 1775, ordered all
commanders "to be very vigilant . . . to discountenance and suppress
all dissolute, immoral and disorderly practices." The second article
required those same commanders "to take care, that divine services
be performed twice a day on board, and a sermon preached on
Sundays." Article 3 prescribed punishments for swearers and
blasphemers: officers were to be fined and common sailors were to be
forced "to wear a wooden collar or some other shameful badge of
distinction."
Extracts
from the Journals of Congress, relative to the Capture and
Condemnation of Prizes, and filling out Privateers, together with
the Rules and Regulations of the Navy, and Instructions to
Private Ships of War [page 16] - [page
17] Philadelphia: John Dunlap, 1776 Rare Book and Special
Collections Division, Library of Congress (113)
Commander-in-Chief of
the American Navy Etched on this horn beaker is Esek
Hopkins (1718-1802), a Rhode Islander, appointed by Congress,
December 22, 1775, as the first commander-in-chief of the American
Navy. Hopkins was dismissed, January 2, 1778, after a stormy tenure
in which he achieved some notable successes in spite of almost
insuperable problems in manning the tiny American fleet.
Horn
beaker with scrimshaw portrait of Esek Hopkins Horn, c.
1876 Mariner's Museum, Newport News, Virginia (114)
Aitken's Bible Endorsed
by Congress The war with Britain cut off the supply of
Bibles to the United States with the result that on Sept. 11, 1777,
Congress instructed its Committee of Commerce to import 20,000
Bibles from "Scotland, Holland or elsewhere." On January 21, 1781,
Philadelphia printer Robert Aitken (1734-1802) petitioned Congress
to officially sanction a publication of the Old and New Testament
which he was preparing at his own expense. Congress "highly approve
the pious and laudable undertaking of Mr. Aitken, as subservient to
the interest of religion . . . in this country, and . . . they
recommend this edition of the bible to the inhabitants of the United
States." This resolution was a result of Aitken's successful
accomplishment of his project.
Congressional
resolution, September 12, 1782, endorsing Robert Aitken's Bible
[page 468] -- [page
469] Philadelphia: David C. Claypoole, 1782 from the
Journals of Congress Rare Book and Special
Collections Division, Library of Congress (115)
Aitken's
Bible Aitken published Congress's recommendation of
September 1782 and related documents (Item 115) as an imprimatur on
the two pages following his title page. Aitken's Bible, published
under Congressional patronage, was the first English language Bible
published on the North American continent.
The Holy
Bible, Containing the Old and New Testaments: Newly translated out
of the Original Tongues. . . . Philadelphia: printed
and sold by R. Aitken, 1782 Rare Book and Special
Collections Division, Library of Congress (116)
Settling the
West In the spring of 1785 Congress debated regulations
for settling the new western lands--stretching from the Alleghenies
to the Mississippi--acquired from Great Britain in the Peace Treaty
of 1783. It was proposed that the central section in each newly laid
out township be reserved for the support of schools and "the Section
immediately adjoining the same to the northward, for the support of
religion. The profits arising there from in both instances, to be
applied for ever according to the will of the majority." The
proposal to establish religion in the traditional sense of granting
state financial support to a church to be controlled by one
denomination attracted support but was ultimately voted down.
An
Ordinance for ascertaining the Mode of disposing of Lands in the
Western Territory, 1785. Broadside, Continental
Congress, 1785 Rare
Book and Special Collections Division, Library of Congress
(117)
Northwest
Ordinance In the summer of 1787 Congress revisited the
issue of religion in the new western territories and passed, July
13, 1787, the famous Northwest Ordinance. Article 3 of the Ordinance
contained the following language: "Religion, Morality and knowledge
being necessary to good government and the happiness of mankind,
Schools and the means of education shall be forever encouraged."
Scholars have been puzzled that, having declared religion and
morality indispensable to good government, Congress did not, like
some of the state governments that had written similar declarations
into their constitutions, give financial assistance to the churches
in the West.
An
Ordinance for the Government of the Territory of the United States,
North-West of the River Ohio, 1787 Broadside,
Continental Congress, 1787 Rare Book and Special Collections
Division, Library of Congress (118)
Christianizing the
Delawares In this resolution, Congress makes public
lands available to a group for religious purposes. Responding to a
plea from Bishop John Ettwein (1721-1802), Congress voted that
10,000 acres on the Muskingum River in the present state of Ohio "be
set apart and the property thereof be vested in the Moravian
Brethren . . . or a society of the said Brethren for civilizing the
Indians and promoting Christianity." The Delaware Indians were the
intended beneficiaries of this Congressional resolution.
Resolution
granting lands to Moravian Brethren. [left page] - [right
page] Records of the Continental Congress in the
Constitutional Convention, July 27, 1787 National Archives and
Records Administration, Washington, D.C. (119)
A Delaware-English
Spelling Book David Zeisberger (1721-1802) was a famous
Moravian missionary who spent much of his life working with the
Delaware Indians. His Spelling Book contains a "Short History
of the Bible," in the English and Delaware languages, on facing
pages.
Delaware
Indian and English Spelling Book for the Schools of the
Mission of the United Brethren [left page] - [right
page] David Zeisberger Philadelphia: Mary Cist,
1806 Rare Book and
Special Collections Division, Library of Congress (120)
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