Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Christiani­ty and the Capitol

- SARAH PULLIAM BAILEY

The girls in red, white and blue plaid skirts and boys in khaki pants climbed aboard the bus with their parents before it pulled away from the Red Lion Inn in Arlington, Va.

The 46 Mississipp­i sixth-graders from Tupelo Christian Preparator­y School were headed to the National Mall for a conservati­ve “Christian history” tour, a theme among many given the city’s role as host to tours for practicall­y every interest.

“We are a nation founded by people who put their trust in God,” said Stephen McDowell, co-founder of the Providence Foundation, the conservati­ve Christian educationa­l nonprofit group in Charlottes­ville, Va., that sponsors the tours.

“What’s our motto?” McDowell called out to the students.

“In God We Trust!” they yelled back in unison.

The tours attempt to explain the buildings, monuments and symbols in the nation’s capital through a Christian lens, as visible proof of religious foundation­s upon which the country was built.

McDowell, who has organized the trips for about 30 years, describes them as a kind of calling. God, he says, has been ignored in the schools, in the government, in the media and in official tours of our nation’s historic sites. But if tourists can peel back the secular layers of government and media, they will behold a nation birthed by God, he said, and thus conclude that without Christiani­ty, there would be no United States.

“Watch for things the tour guides aren’t going to tell you,” McDowell told the students, by now in Washington and preparing to tour the Capitol, over three days that would include Arlington National Cemetery and George Washington’s Mount Vernon home.

“What happened in 1492?” McDowell asked the students on the bus.

“Columbus sailed the ocean blue!” they shouted back.

Most people know that part, he said, but they don’t know that Christophe­r Columbus toward the end of his life wrote The Book of Prophecies, which contained hundreds of biblical scriptures and promoted the spread of Christiani­ty.

After Columbus opened up the “New World” for exploratio­n, what would become the United States was colonized in the midst of the Protestant Reformatio­n with a focus on getting the Bible into the hands of ordinary people, McDowell noted.

Inside the Capitol rotunda, the group looked at a large oil painting by John Vanderlyn that depicts Columbus in the West Indies.

Another of the paintings by various artists depicted the baptism of Pocahontas.

“She was the most famous convert. Her baptism is a reflection of why the colonies were establishe­d,” McDowell had noted before the official tour that Pocahontas was baptized so she could marry English settler John Rolfe.

Many historians take issue with the idea of a tour that focuses on national history solely through a conservati­ve Christian perspectiv­e.

“People like McDowell get some facts wrong, but my real issue with them is the way they try to spin the past to promote their present-day political agenda,” said John Fea, a professor of American history at Messiah College, a Christian school in Mechanicsb­urg, Pa. “They cherry-pick … This is not how historians work.”

The Christian history tour group freely shared its views.

Students and parents watched Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) give an address in the Senate chambers about labor rights for American Indians, his opposition to Trump’s stance toward Russia and the recent tax reform law.

“He sounded like he was from somewhere in the North,” Julia Jane Averette, 12, said over lunch. “I wish a Republican had been talking when we went through.”

Julia said she is inspired to become president some day. “I would lower taxes and spend money on things that are useful, like protecting the country, not what Obama did,” she said.

The girl’s mother, Jennifer Averette, said it was her first trip to Washington and that she had heard the monuments were strategica­lly placed to form a cross. (Historians say Pierre L’Enfant did not employ this concept when he planned the city in the early 1790s.)

“The Bible should shape policy, because that’s how America was founded,” she said.

The group visited the Library of Congress, where some students tapped out notes on their cellphones. “The first book printed on the Gutenberg press was what?” McDowell asked the students.

“The Bible,” they yelled back.

“It’s important we have it on display because the Bible is the bedrock upon which our nation rests,” McDowell said, noting the 15th-century Gutenberg Bible that sits on display in the library.

 ?? The Washington Post/ALLISON SHELLEY ?? Parents and students from Tupelo Christian Preparator­y School in Tupelo, Miss., listen to a Capitol tour guide in front of a statue of Franciscan priest Junipero Serra in National Statuary Hall in the Capitol.
The Washington Post/ALLISON SHELLEY Parents and students from Tupelo Christian Preparator­y School in Tupelo, Miss., listen to a Capitol tour guide in front of a statue of Franciscan priest Junipero Serra in National Statuary Hall in the Capitol.

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