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Politics & Power Quote by George Washington

"It is impossible to rightly govern a nation without God and the Bible"

About this Quote

Washington’s line isn’t a Hallmark-style pledge of personal piety; it’s an argument about social mechanics. “Impossible” is doing the heavy lifting: not “hard,” not “preferable,” but structurally unworkable. The claim is less theological than managerial. In an 18th-century republic betting its future on self-government, the central fear wasn’t just foreign invasion or factionalism; it was moral free fall. God and the Bible function here as civic technology: a widely shared vocabulary for duty, restraint, and accountability that could bind citizens when the state’s coercive power was intentionally limited.

The subtext is pragmatic, even anxious. A new nation without a king needs something else to produce consent and compliance. Washington is effectively saying that laws alone can’t carry the load unless the people have internal brakes. In his broader public rhetoric (think of the period’s emphasis on “religion and morality”), religion serves as the scaffolding for virtue, and virtue is framed as the prerequisite for liberty. The Bible stands in not merely for belief, but for legitimacy: a stable reference point in a culture where institutions were young and fragile.

Context matters, too. This is a leader steeped in Enlightenment-era language about reason and civic order, yet operating in a predominantly Protestant public square where biblical literacy was common. Read that way, the quote is less a blueprint for theocracy than a warning: remove the moral consensus, and republican governance becomes a brittle experiment. It’s a sentence designed to steady a precarious political project by appealing to the deepest shared authority available.

Quote Details

TopicBible
Source
Later attribution: Morning and Evening Meditations from the Word of God (Michael J. Akers, 2014) modern compilationISBN: 9781490829180 · ID: PnY6AwAAQBAJ
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Google Books
Evidence:
... president of the United States. He also is credited with this quote: “It is impossible to rightly govern a nation without God and the Bible.” Micah 4:4 was George Washington's favorite verse of the Bible because he quoted the words from ...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Washington, George. (2026, February 11). It is impossible to rightly govern a nation without God and the Bible. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/it-is-impossible-to-rightly-govern-a-nation-27934/

Chicago Style
Washington, George. "It is impossible to rightly govern a nation without God and the Bible." FixQuotes. February 11, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/it-is-impossible-to-rightly-govern-a-nation-27934/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"It is impossible to rightly govern a nation without God and the Bible." FixQuotes, 11 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/it-is-impossible-to-rightly-govern-a-nation-27934/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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George Washington

George Washington (February 22, 1732 - December 14, 1799) was a President from USA.

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