All this talk about who wrote the constitution and what are they, and what affiliation are the founding fathers.
Of course we recognize them as diests which just means they didn't think the bible was holy and they didn't believe in the trinity but they still had the Christian view with the Christian God right?
If that is the case then the diests who founded the US was based on Christian Views.
right?
It's been a while since I visited this forum. I can address this question.
The Founders created two documents, the Declaration of Independence, and the Constitution. The Declaration defined the US creed, our core philosophy. The Constitution defined the US government.
The authors of the Declaration were mostly Christian. A minority were what are called rational theists. The rational theists believed in God. They believed that God can intervene in the world. They did not consider divine revelation, as in prophets, saints and christs. That doesn't mean they didn't necessarily believe in divine revelation. That means that when they considered practical matters, such as the application of law, they did not look to divine revelation for direction. They only looked to naturalism instead. As one of the Christian Founders put it, they rendered unto Caesar that which is Caesar's.
Some rational theists were Christian. Some, like Jefferson, were basically Deists who believed that divine revelation was valuable for giving a society moral direction. Some, like Franklin, believed as Jefferson did, but they believed that God did intervene in human affairs, so they were non-Christian rational theists.
Today we accept rational theism as being a type of Deism. Deism is a general classification of similar beliefs, not a specific belief. The main things that Deistic faiths have in common are the belief in God, and the non-acceptance of divine revelation.
The Declaration was based very much on rational theism, which is based on naturalism. In naturalism, God's will with respect to worldly affairs is natural truth. God's will with respect to spiritual affairs is not considered. Rational theism declares that spiritual affairs are best left between God and the individual. The government has no place stepping in between God and the individual, so the Christians accepted this arrangement of rational theism in the Declaration.
The Framers of the Constitution were almost all Christians. They kept to the idea of keeping government from coming between God and the individual.
Both the Framers and Founders believed in the value of faith in providing moral guidance. The phrase in the Declaration "the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God" literally means "God's natural law and the moral principles found in religious faiths." They were intentionally unspecific about which religious faith because they wanted to avoid religious schisms. The Constitution requires an oath of office for certain government positions. An oath in the language of the day meant swearing on your faith in God. (Taken literally, this means that atheists and agnostics cannot serve in government roles that require an oath.) In both the Declaration and the Constitution God is required to be present, but divine revelation is forbidden. The core values are naturalism, not Christianity.
I hope I answered the original poster's question.
In the meanwhile, I write about this kind of stuff at length in by blog at
my Amorian Deism site. (I would give a link, but the forum doesn't let me do that until I have 15 posts. Try "amorian dot org".)