Christian Institutions in a New World

Smith's book is an excellent reminder that conservatives should never prioritize an idealized individual or nation. Rather, we must work to preserve those institutions that point us to better lives.

Liberalism has not been wanting for obituaries in recent years. Academics such as Patrick Deneen have argued at length that the American experiment has failed and it is time for a new regime. Among Roman Catholics, the most extreme angst about political modernity finds expression as “integralism,” an ideology holding that the state ought to be subordinate to the church. Among evangelicals, these same anxieties sometimes manifest as the less sophisticated “Christian nationalism,” the quasi-theocratic position that Protestants need to “take back” America and return it to some earlier, more pristine set of social arrangements.  

But in his new book, Religion & Republic, Hillsdale College history professor Miles Smith IV takes a different tack from sounding liberalism’s death knell. Instead, he persuasively argues that the roots of American order go far deeper than liberalism’s critics allow, and he shows how the Founders saw Christian institutions playing a vital role in the life of the early republic. The generation that built this country largely existed in a distinctively Protestant stream of the Western tradition, which is sadly neglected today. By retelling this almost forgotten story, Smith unearths tools and principles that Christian Americans can deploy as we pursue cultural renewal today.

The book begins by distinguishing Protestant tradition from “evangelicalism.” In Smith’s analysis, religion in the early republic had much more to do with historic Anglican, Lutheran, and Calvinist expressions of the faith than the more charismatic or biblicist approaches common in nondenominational churches and evangelical seminaries today. As Publius put it in Federalist No. 2, Americans were one united people; a people descended from the same ancestors, speaking the same language, professing the same religion, attached to the same principles of government, very similar in their manners and customs. 

It would be an exaggeration to say that every American was a Christian, but Christian religion nonetheless formed the moral core of the republic.

Read more in Public Discourse.

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Ep. 34 | Russell Kirk's Conservatism with Michael Lucchese