Nature’s God: The Heretical Origins of the American Republic by Matthew Stewart - review by Darrin M McMahon

Darrin M McMahon

Faith of the Founders

Nature’s God: The Heretical Origins of the American Republic

By

W W Norton 566pp £17.99
 

Sometime in the second half of the 18th century, Benjamin Franklin wrote to an acquaintance with advice on the subject of attacking religion in North America: ‘He that spits against the wind, spits in his own face.’ The acquaintance in question may or may not have been Thomas Paine, whose provocative tract The Age of Reason elicited similar responses from those of America’s Founding Fathers who knew which way the wind blew. John Adams was arguably the most direct, though he was hardly an anomaly. ‘The Christian religion’, he noted in his diary in 1796, ‘is, above all the religions that ever prevailed or existed in ancient or modern times, the religion of wisdom, virtue, equity and humanity, let the Blackguard Paine say what he will.’

Readers of Matthew Stewart’s Nature’s God will find few such observations in its pages: this is a book intended to free Americans from the shackles of their religious past. To ‘understand aright the history of the United States’, Stewart maintains, is to behold ‘a society founded on the principles of