I bought The Faiths of the Founding Fathers by David L. Holmes along with American Gospel : God, the Founding Fathers, and the Making of a Nation by Jon Meacham and found The Faiths of the Founding Fathers by David L. Holmes to be superior as far as learning the most about the founding fathers and what they believed along with what their wives believed and how they reared their children.
What makes this book a book you hate to set down is the indepth and interesting history of not only what they believed but how their beliefs evolved as they grew and matured. The first chapter deals mainly with the varies sects in the American colonies in the late 1770's, and how it varied from New England to the Middle Colonies and the Southern Colonies.
Chapter 3 is awesome as the author discusses The Enlightenment Religion of Deism. In fact I believe that if most Americans were to read this chapter they may well call themselves Deists. Then in Chapters 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, the authors specifically writes indepth about the Religious Views of Franklin, Washington, Adams, Jefferson, Madison and Monroe. He also writes about Paine whom I have grown to admire even more! In chapter 11 the author writes about the wives and children of the founding fathers and why Christian orthodoxy was so appealing to the women. As on page 111 where the author notes 'Third, any religion a woman embraced had to address suffering. In early America women constantly faces the specter of suffering, both physical and emotional,' and 'Fourth, Deism may not have accounted for the abundant mystery of life satisfactory enough to persuade women.' On page 110 he had noted 'Second, women were barred from another institution that propagated Deism: college. Young men would enter such institutions as Harvard or William and Mary, read and discuss such authors as Paine, Voltaire, Rousseau, Allen and Palmer, and often change their views of Christianity.'
Cannot recommend this book highly enough!!