MILLER’S EARLY YEARS
The high pitched whistling that signaled the approach of a shell snapped Captain Miller to attention. He looked up just in time to make out the blur of the projectile as it whizzed towards the ground and exploded not two feet from him. The force of the blast injured three of the men who stood around him but he managed to walk away without a scratch.
He was engaged in the Battle of Plattsburg on the shores of Lake Champlain on the 11th of September 1812. The British forces numbered 15,000 men on land and a small but well equipped naval fleet out on the lake. By comparison, the American troops numbered 5,500 with a smaller naval fleet on the lake for support. The odds were heavily stacked against the Americans but as it turned out they walked away victorious.
After the victory, Miller returned home to his farm in Poultney, Vermont a changed man. He had been born into a Baptist family in 1782 and raised by deeply spiritual parents. His maternal grandfather and one of his uncles were both Baptist ministers. But Miller, in the lead up to the Battle of Plattsburg had been a confirmed deist.
Deism was something that Miller had naturally fallen into as a result of his deep love of learning. At a time when nine-tenths of the American population were farmers and at a time when farmers were not the most educated social demographic, Miller distinguished himself as a farmer who became a self-educated scholar.
He had a voracious appetite for reading and spent countless hours as a young boy scouring the local libraries for any reading material he could get his hands on. Every evening, after the entire family had gone to bed, William would stay awake reading by the light of the crackling pine knots in the household fireplace.
Miller was an avid reader of the Enlightenment thinkers of the late 17th century. Men like Voltaire, Hume, and Paine drew his attention and slowly converted him away from his traditional Baptist upbringing to embrace Deism. Deism is a skeptical belief system that rejects Christianity with all of its miracles and supernatural flavor without dispensing with the existence of a supernatural being. The thesis of Deism is that God, like an ancient watchmaker, wound up the world, thousands (perhaps even millions) of years ago and then walked away from it in search of bigger and better projects, allowing it to slowly tick on and plot its own trajectory through history. Miller was drawn to this impersonal view of Divine being.