George Washington and the Catholic Church

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Throughout his life Washington had Catholic friends, including John Carroll, the first Catholic bishop in the US. He would sometimes attend Mass, as he did during the Constitutional Convention when he led a delegation of the Convention to attend Mass in Philadelphia as he had attended Protestant churches in that town during the Covention. This sent a powerful signal that under the Constitution Catholics would be just as good Americans as Protestant Americans.

Washington underlined this point in response to a letter from prominent Catholics, including Charles and John Carroll, congratulating him on being elected President:

*[March 15], 1790

Gentlemen:

While I now receive with much satisfaction your congratulations on my being called, by an unanimous vote, to the first station in my country; I cannot but duly notice your politeness in offering an apology for the unavoidable delay. As that delay has given you an opportunity of realizing, instead of anticipating, the benefits of the general government, you will do me the justice to believe, that your testimony of the increase of the public prosperity, enhances the pleasure which I should otherwise have experienced from your affectionate address.

I feel that my conduct, in war and in peace, has met with more general approbation than could reasonably have been expected and I find myself disposed to consider that fortunate circumstance, in a great degree, resulting from the able support and extraordinary candor of my fellow-citizens of all denominations.

The prospect of national prosperity now before us is truly animating, and ought to excite the exertions of all good men to establish and secure the happiness of their country, in the permanent duration of its freedom and independence. America, under the smiles of a Divine Providence, the protection of a good government, and the cultivation of manners, morals, and piety, cannot fail of attaining an uncommon degree of eminence, in literature, commerce, agriculture, improvements at home and respectability abroad.

As mankind become more liberal they will be more apt to allow that all those who conduct themselves as worthy members of the community are equally entitled to the protection of civil government. I hope ever to see America among the foremost nations in examples of justice and liberality. And I presume that your fellow-citizens will not forget the patriotic part which you took in the accomplishment of their Revolution, and the establishment of their government; or the important assistance which they received from a nation in which the Catholic faith is professed.

I thank you, gentlemen, for your kind concern for me. While my life and my health shall continue, in whatever situation I may be, it shall be my constant endeavor to justify the favorable sentiments which you are pleased to express of my conduct. And may the members of your society in America, animated alone by the pure spirit of Christianity, and still conducting themselves as the faithful subjects of our free government, enjoy every temporal and spiritual felicity.

G. Washington*

(emphasis mine)

Pope Leo XIII
recalled the attitude of Washington towards Catholics in his encyclical Longinqua:

4. Nor, perchance did the fact which We now recall take place without some design of divine Providence. Precisely at the epoch when the American colonies, having, with Catholic aid, achieved liberty and independence, coalesced into a constitutional Republic the ecclesiastical hierarchy was happily established amongst you; and at the very time when the popular suffrage placed the great Washington at the helm of the Republic, the first bishop was set by apostolic authority over the American Church. The well-known friendship and familiar intercourse which subsisted between these two men seems to be an evidence that the United States ought to be conjoined in concord and amity with the Catholic Church. And not without cause; for without morality the State cannot endure-a truth which that illustrious citizen of yours, whom We have just mentioned, with a keenness of insight worthy of his genius and statesmanship perceived and proclaimed. But the best and strongest support of morality is religion. She, by her very nature, guards and defends all the principles on which duties are founded, and setting before us the motives most powerful to influence us, commands us to live virtuously and forbids us to transgress. Now what is the Church other than a legitimate society, founded by the will and ordinance of Jesus Christ for the preservation of morality and the defence of religion? For this reason have We repeatedly endeavored, from the summit of the pontifical dignity, to inculcate that the Church, whilst directly and immediately aiming at the salvation of souls and the beatitude which is to be attained in heaven, is yet, even in the order of temporal things, the fountain of blessings so numerous and great that they could not have been greater or more numerous had the original purpose of her institution been the pursuit of happiness during the life which is spent on earth.
 
Thanks for that, Eucharisted. I am especially impressed with two points that Pope Leo made. First, his praise for America provided that we are “conjoined in concord and amity” with the moral teachings of the Catholic Church. We have obviously strayed far from that goal, but it’s a good reminder for how we can right our ship. And second, his last point that the Catholic Church not only provides the path and graces necessary for eternal life, but She also provides an abundance of blessings so that we can have life in abundance right here on Earth - a point that doesn’t get made often enough. So thanks again! God bless.
 
Eucharisted,

Thanks very much for that. While I am Canadian, my ancestors were colonial American ultra-protestants (in fact, I may very well be the first Catholic convert in my family since the Reformation). As such, I was always raised with the idea that America was a “Protestant” creation, and that civil liberty was the natural progression of those who had managed to rid themselves from Papal “abuses”. I see now that this is a falsely skewed history. This letter from Washington now emphasizes two things in my mind: 1) The founders of the United States thought that Roman Catholics made great Americans because they shared the same “manners, morals and piety” as the protestant majority. 2) Non-catholics have largely failed to hold to Washington’s ideals; for the rebelious spirit, inherent within protestantism, has, since that time, redivided the body of the Church in America over and over again… to the point where its influence on the body politic has utterly ceased to exist. If Washington were alive today, he might very well feel more at home in the bosom of the Catholic church than anywhere else.

Christ created ONE church, placed ONE visible head over that church, and (in the same breath) clearly stated that that ONE church would NOT fail. It is only that ONE church which can (and will) restore America to its former glory. Amen.
 
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