AMERICA IS UNIQUE. No other nation in the world has experienced the widespread levels of stability, individual prosperity, and personal freedoms that have defined this nation. What made us different from other nations? Was it the people, the principles, or the blessing of God? It was all three, and they caused America to become the most exceptional nation in the history of the world. Our past is filled with captivating accounts of the brave and the cowardly; of heroes and villains; of atrocities, corruption, and greed as well as self-sacrifice, honor, and redemption. America is not perfect. Yet we have a compelling story of those seeking religious and civil freedom, escaping oppression, pursuing opportunity, and often joining hands to achieve common goals. The American Story highlights this cooperation and presents some of the interesting moments and people that reveal God's Providence in America. We have a fascinating history that must be remembered.
David Barton is the Founder and President of WallBuilders, a national pro-family organization that presents America's forgotten history and heroes, with an emphasis on our moral, religious and constitutional heritage.
WallBuilders is a name taken from the Old Testament writings of Nehemiah, who led a grassroots movement to rebuild the walls of Jerusalem and restore its strength and honor. In the same way, WallBuilders seeks to energize the grassroots today to become involved in strengthening their communities, states, and nation.
David is the author of numerous best-selling books, with the subjects being drawn largely from his massive library of tens of thousands of original writings from the Founding Era. He also addresses well over 400 groups each year.
His exhaustive research has rendered him an expert in historical and constitutional issues and he serves as a consultant to state and federal legislators, has participated in several cases at the Supreme Court, was involved in the development of the History/Social Studies standards for states such as Texas and California, and has helped produce history textbooks now used in schools across the nation.
If you desire to know more about the Christian foundation of this country, you will be amazed to read this book and discover the clear influence the Bible, God's Word, has had on the founding and early settlement of America. Sadly though, you will also realize how far downward we have fallen away from Christian morals that God clearly blesses. I urge you to read this clear and simple to understand book. David and Tim Barton have done an excellent job making the book an easy read for everyone.
It's a shame that many people who disagree with the premise of this book may never get a chance to enjoy seeing a wonderfully refreshing perspective on American history. As a lifelong patriot, I relished reading every page and learned so much! You don't have to take the author's word for their sources either, as the book was well researched and includes hundreds of footnotes for doing your own homework. I highly recommend this book to any who love freedom or religion, and especially to every American who is an honest broker of truth. The book explores American history through the lens of the influence of God and Christianity in forming the country, from Columbus through the 14th and 15th Amendments. The authors use a wide range of primary and secondary sources to make a strong case that God does take an interest in the affairs of men and that the religious influence of Christianity and imperfect men who follow its precepts has allowed America to become the great country that it is. The book is full of diagrams and images as well that help tell the American story. Even if one vehemently disagrees with the argument, the book is worth the read and I find it to be convincing and certainly worth pondering for any reader.
I was really surprised at how captivated I was with this book. I love American history, and I love how this story was told. Chronological, short chapters, etc. It was very well-written and I love how focused they were on their message that the Bible and Christianity are both a huge part of the founding of this country. It's important not to forget that.
This is an excellent read about America’s faith history. Starting with the Pilgrims and ending with the abolition of slavery - you get a look at how the Christian faith was present in the founding of our country.
We used this as our homeschool history for the year and I supplemented with extra shorter books from the library.
Excellent book, very well written, quick easy read with 64 pages of footnotes. Very good rebuttal to the 1619 Project in the last 30 pages. Should be a required reading for all K-12 student.
This book SHOULD be read by every citizen of the United States, to help them better understand the founding principles of our "experiment" in a representative/republican form of government. I found this book to be an encouragement at this low point in our country's history. This book demonstrates that the United States' founding documents: The Declaration of Independence, The Articles of Confederation and the Constitution , all have the Bible as their "source" document. The book is well written and the information is exhaustively documented with a plethora of footnotes. Tim and David Barton are to be commended on their attempt to set the record straight about the real history of the United States and defining what must take place if the US ever endeavors to be a leader of the free world once again.
This is an absolutely fantastic book. It will remove the lie of the secularists that our country was meant to be a secular nation founded on slavery. Our nation is not perfect but it is full of idealistic people who fled religious persecution in Europe and then expanded across the West. Much of the westward expansion had an evangelistic intent. The Bible is baked into our founding documents. Barton does a great job giving us access to primary sources, original quotes from the likes of Jefferson and Franklin. What was really important was getting to know the real Christopher Columbus! Barton has done a great service at this time at which the Marxist and Maoist Left is trying to separate us from our history.
Written in the clean and direct style of today, this irrefutable testament to the noble efforts of American leaders belies the woke nonsense of modern progressives, particularly the heinous 1619 Project.
This inspiring and hope-filled history of Christianity in America shines the light of liberty, personal courage and divine guidance over generations to come.
Read and teach these words and principles so eloquently offered by geniuses of our nation’s legacy. Refresh your love of freedom by reading this book.
I absolutely loved this book! In my opinion, it is a book that everyone should be required to read. I learned so many fascinating facts about history that I never knew. I love that everything has a source so you know where the information is coming from. I gained a new love and appreciation for this great country of ours.
I found the book very interesting and full of facts I didn't know. Of course, much of it we learned in history class, but that was mainly the big picture. One thing is certain--our nation was founded and built upon Christian principles.
I well-researched broad overview of the Christian beginnings of the USA. It combats the woke narrative of American history with facts, examples, and hundreds of endnotes for further research, if desired. A good basis for understanding American history.
David Barton shows the undergirding of our American story to be a unique and providential one. Take the time to read it, I believe it will change your perspective on our story and continuing history.
-There are many misconceptions that we carry about past periods in history. The history of this country is no different. The background of this United States, how it came to be and why those who braved death to first come on these shores; what our founding fathers believed in and why they worded the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution as they did, and why there was a need for a Bill of Rights, are all parts of our history that have been distorted over time. -Only by examining original documents penned by those same persons who lived in the periods we’re examining, and looking at events that were happening that were occurring at that time, can we begin to understand the intent of the founding fathers when they wrote the documents that form the bedrock of our country. -The authors have done a tremendous job in dispelling many of the falsehoods that we have come to accept as truth, only because, like a child playing the game of “telephone”, facts have been modified, but in our current time those modifications are being broadcast in order to suit the arguments of those whose agenda runs contrary to that of the original intent of the founders of this country. This book, alongside the book by Mary Grabar, who wrote the highly informative “Dubunking the 1619 Project”, should be required reading for any citizen of this country, and is a vital read for anyone involved in government. -The primary theme which runs through the entire book is how much our founders, and those who came to this country beginning from the early 17th century, had God as the focus of their lives, and were always governed by biblical teachings. -We know that there were many people that came to the New World for religious freedom, but we learn here that the major nations of that time, though all under the Christian umbrella, each promoted their own sect to the point that worship of any other branch of Christianity was punished severely. England was governed by the crown and the Anglican Church; France by Catholicism and in Germany, it was the Protestant Church established through Martin Luther. -Though many examples of the harsh treatment by European governments against those who chose to worship differently are given, the story of William Penn is representative of what people who differed with the state religion went through. William Penn, we learn, was the son of a distinguished military officer, also named William Penn, and who was knighted for his service to the King. When the younger Penn was influenced in college to the Quaker belief, it appeared to him to be a purer form of worship than the official Anglican religion. Though his father tried to protect him, the younger Penn, who now was actively advocating for the Quaker faith, was put into prison but successfully argued for his own release in front of a jury. After the death of Penn’s father, the King sent Penn to the New World and bequeathed land to him (Pennsylvania) in payment of a debt owed to Penn’s father. But the story only begins there. -Where stories abound of the new settlers stealing land and cheating the natives out of property, Penn believed (in line with the thinking of other northern colonists) that fairness to all peoples was a credo that all had to live by, and he purchased whatever land he was “given” by the crown, sometimes purchasing the same land several times from each of several tribes who all claimed ownership. He was also an advocate for religious freedom, where all people in the lands he controlled were able to worship as they chose. -Those coming to the New World weren’t just looking for a new land where they could freely worship. The intent, which is repeated in documents by the founding fathers and was incorporated into our founding documents, was preventing a state religion from being established as was prevalent throughout Europe. The Constitutions of each of the founding colonies was based on biblical models, but, as opposed to the practice in Europe, the colonists were granted the freedom to practice religion as they chose. -Jumping ahead through time, though continuing with the subject of religion, we are exposed to the expression, coined by Thomas Jefferson, “separation of church and state”. But the meaning of that wasn’t the elimination of religion. It was referring to what’s known as the “Establishment Clause”, which states that no state religion shall be established. He was reiterating the ideas which those early colonists wanted as the foundation of this new land, that, though religious morals and guidance was vital for any country to succeed, the government should never control how each citizen was to worship. In Jefferson’s words “I contemplate with sovereign reverence that act of the whole American people which declared that their legislature should make no law respecting the establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof, thus building a wall of separation between Church and State.” He was stating that the government may never create an official state religion, nor can the government prohibit the worship of any religion. In the words of the author, this “definitely was not intended to create the type of religion-free public square desired by current activist groups.” -Joseph Story, a founder of Harvard Law School, a US Supreme Court judge and who “in 1833, penned an authoritative legal commentary on the US Constitution - a work still used today” is quoted as saying “The promulgations (promotion) of the great doctrines of religion - the being, and the attributes, and Providence of one Almighty God; the responsibility to Him for all our actions, founded upon moral accountability; a future state of rewards and punishments; the cultivation of all the personal, social, and benevolent virtues - these never can be a matter of indifference in any well-ordered community. It is, indeed, difficult to conceive, how any civilized society can well exist without them.” -The author takes us on a tour of the background of our country, dispelling myths about the Boston Tea Party; giving revelations about the many battles for our independence which only by “the finger of God” were we able to be victorious, and the sacrifice and losses that the signers of the Declaration had to endure because of their stand against the British. -Among the many other subjects which the authors have examined is the slave trade, and like so much of history, can’t be pigeon-holed into a choice of slavery or non-slavery, but is also nuanced. Rather than being denounced as a slave country, the United States pushed for freedom of all people. Frederick Douglass, a former slave himself, is quoted as defending the founders, and gave many proofs that this country was not created to support slavery. Though we now know that slavery is a horrible practice, in the 17th and 18th century it was commonplace throughout the world. Those who came to these shores, though, especially the Pilgrims and Quakers, actively preached against the practice. Documents show that in 1646, when a ship bearing slaves came on their shores, they freed those slaves and arrested the slave owners. Many of the Northern colonies even passed laws prohibiting slavery. In contrast, the Southern colonies, starting with Virginia and being mainly Anglicans, believed that the king would provide for them. When hardship came, they were not prepared to put in the effort as they always expected help to arrive from England, and so, they welcomed slaves who would do the work for them. As compared to the total population, slaves owners were still a small minority. -Though slavery was present in the south in much greater proportions than in the North, blacks also owned slaves. In fact, it was normal for that time period for people who lost in battle to be taken as slaves by the victors. (Mary Grabar, in her book, “Debunking the 1619 Project”, goes into greater detail on this subject, and presents facts which would be astonishing to those whose only exposure to black history is that presented by organizations like “Black Lives Matter”. ) Many of the first groups of workers that came to this country, though, were actually indentured servants who could win their freedom. The first case of a landowner successfully bringing a case to court, for him to acquire as a slave a man who came here as an indentured servant, was in 1654 where the landowner was a black man (who came to these shores himself as an indentured servant, but who became successful) and who won the right to keep another black man who was an indentured servant as a permanent slave. Slaves then, over time, were held by both whites and blacks. But the writings of most of the founding fathers proved that the majority felt that it was an abhorrent practice that had to be done away with. -The book is filled with numerous other fascinating areas covered by the authors. In reading this book, I’ve highlighted passages on almost every other page as the book is filled with information I’d never heard before, or had the wrong impression of. -Other subjects covered are equally interesting, like the story of Columbus, which corrects history’s account of him as killing the natives and being greedy for wealth; the explanation of why so many of our founding fathers who were anti-slavery were prevented from freeing their slaves due to the laws present in the states at that time; the similarities between the Constitution and Bill of Rights and biblical teachings which reveal that our whole government is based on the Bible; etc. In short, it’s a fact filled journey from the time of Columbus to the current time which reveals so much of the history of this country, along with the religious convictions our founders. -This is such a well documented book and encompasses so many facets of our early era, that it would be a point of reference for anyone’s library, and is especially important in the face of the many liberals and progressives who downplay the role that religion has always played in our nation’s founding and continued success, and who have distorted the legacy of the great men who founded this country.
This is not to be missed. It includes some eye opening facts about Christopher Columbus, Pocahontas, the origins of America’s early Colleges, Ministers, the Bible, Salem Witch Trials, origins of slavery in America, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings, James Armistead, God’s providence through the war and more. An interesting book that has some statements that dispute what we have in our mind as truth. An excellent book to have on your book shelf for future reference.
A MUST read. I regret everything I ever said while teaching US History from the ignorant, biased curriculum I was given. This book is enlightening and empowering. The true story of our country’s founding is far better than what we’ve been conditioned to believe.
As always with Barton, a rapid-fire hailstorm of facts. It doesn't read like a novel, but instead hits you in bullet points, the way Barton speaks. Even so, the book is worth the price for the 64 pages of endnotes alone, full of primary and early sources begging to be further delved into. I am awed by Barton's research capabilities, the wide scope of his knowledge, his ability to synthesize information, and his passion to disseminate truth. Truly a hero of American history.
I really enjoyed this book, which covers United States History from discovery to the Civil War. While that is a substantial range of US history to cover, this book focus mainly on the Christian influences and contributions which are often omitted from modern academic and popular history texts.
The contributions that Christendom made to the foundation of The United States of America are undeniable and easily discernible when looking at primary sources with an understanding of the Bible. As the book shows in numerous episodes, even many of the “non-religious” Founding Father quote freely from the Bible in speeches, documents, and letters, but do not site chapter and verse as they expect their audience at the time to maintain an equivalent understanding.
It is for this reason that the author rely mainly on original source documents for citations, of which there are an almost unfathomable amount. If I remember correctly, the organization that the authors work for boast one of the largest privately held collection of documents from the Founding Fathers. The volume of citation is such that hardly a paragraph, and sometimes a sentence, goes by with our a footnote or citation.
This book also attempts to demonstrate the Hand of God at work in, not only the founding, but the development of the emerging nation. It posits that not only were the Founding Fathers mostly believers in the Christian God, and seekers of his divine providence, but recipient of that which they sought, bringing manifest blessings on the burgeoning nation.
This books brevity and plain language make it eminently readable and accessible to a wide audience. It could possibly be used as a supplemental text in a US History class for students at a wide variety academic levels. It would also make a good quick reference guide to the original source documents which are cited in the back third of the book.
I really enjoyed this book. This book focuses mainly on the Christian influences and contributions, which are omitted from modern academic and popular history texts.
The contributions that Biblical principles made to the foundation of the United States of America are undeniable and easily discernible when looking at primary sources. The book shows in numerous episodes, even many of the “non-religious” Founding Fathers, quote freely from the Bible in speeches, documents, and letters.
The author relies mainly on original source documents for citations, of which there is an uncomprehensible amount. Wall builders have one of the largest privately held collections of documents from the Founding Fathers. The volume of citation is such that hardly a paragraph, and sometimes a sentence, goes by without a footnote or citation.
This book clearly and precisely demonstrates the Hand of God at work in not only the founding of America but also the development of this great nation. It It proves through clear documentation that not only were the Founding Fathers mostly believers in the One and only true and Living God, but recipient of the manifest blessings of His divine providence on their endeavors starting this great nation
With over 110,000 originally documents in their own personal collection, the Barton’s have a wealth of informed source material to draw on. The chapters and sections are broken up into very easily digestible chunks, and it’s written in a more engaging way than the standard history book. It’s also nice to finish the book sooner than expected, as the last 65 pages are just the 1,000+ endnotes/citations. They certainly lean more towards addressing the Biblical principles that were a part of USA’s founding, as modern history has tried to purge it from public knowledge ever since the 1960’s. They also don’t deny the shortcomings that were also present. With plenty of modern sources happy to judge history based on its worst moments, the Barton’s give American history it’s fair due by presenting the less acknowledged positive aspects of America’s founding era.
The authors are in complete denial of reality. They create nonexistent arguments against the existence of Christianity in the US in order to "prove" its existence. They also defend genocide and assimilation of Native peoples, and they go to great lengths to excuse specific founding fathers for enslaving people.
This is not a history book; it's a poorly written and poorly researched argumentative religious propaganda essay that claims the secular world is actively erasing Christianity from history with no basis for such a claim.
Half of the book is just the authors pointing at quotes containing the word "God" and saying, "See?! The founding fathers WERE Christian!" even though nobody said they weren't.
At a time where the story of America is under attack, the Barton’s deliver a book full of truth about our country’s rich history and reveal facts with detailed documentation to show that what much of the fake media would have you believe to be true, is filled with lies and twisting of the past. EVERY American should read this book. It is a great read, diving into the Christian roots of our nation and it’s founding, and reminding us of just how beautiful and rich our country is and the incredible sacrifices made to make America the most powerful nation ever. Truly, we have been given a great inheritance bought with the blood and tears of those who went before us.
Great intro into so many important details about our countries history overlooked in our current climate.
I love the short easy to read chapters with so much documentation. It’s hard to believe how we ever thought our nation was ever founded on different principles. Thankful for this book that exposes the lie that many who have had control over what our children have been taught in schools. I cannot recommend this book enough for even the most ardent of history lovers. We all can learn and glean important details that are necessary to understand in order to return our country back to the constitutional republic it was created to be.
David Barton is one of America's foremost historians. He illustrates how God's blessing and intervention has permeated America's founding and growth from the pilgrim/Puritan days of the 1600's through the Civil War of the 1860's. His quotations of important players, particularly related to slavery in the early years, will hopefully set the record straight. Long on facts. He emphasizes the "golden thread" of God's providence for America through trying times. Many times our experiment could have failed, but it didn't. God's hand continued to rescue, guide and strength our cause.
I bought this book to read some history, and was delighted to see a Christian perspective on the history of America. This book works to redeem that which has been demonized by the present. They use annotations, they cite sources, and they make a great book in doing so. I’ve been exposed to knowledge I’ve never even thought of before, and this book presents this information to you masterfully. Gift this book to someone who enjoys American history but feels that he isn’t being given the whole story by common sources.
Absolutely an amazing book. Hands down. David Barton & Tim Barton hit the nail on the head with this highly historical and accurate book. Debunking several historical myths in American Founding and teachings. They clearly mark the importance of God and the Bible in civil society, point out errors and issues in various topics about the Founding Fathers, to Early America and issues debates on controversial topics witch is not shown in many forms of media.
A well documented, well sourced and clear understanding of real history.