foxnews Press
Ben Carson, Riley Gaines fight scrubbing of faith from kids' US history books for America's 250th
Images
For America's 250th birthday, former HUD Secretary Dr. Ben Carson, author and retired neurosurgeon, tells Fox News Digital that faith is inseparable from America's founding. His new book is "Built on Faith," a hardcover picture book for children (Brave Books, June 2026).
A new report alleges that public libraries and publishers are censoring faith from the American story while actively pushing progressive, revisionist history to young readers.
The study by conservative publisher Brave Books, titled "The America 250 Faith Gap," analyzed more than 300 books across 25 reading lists curated by children's publishers, public libraries and other institutional sources for the nation’s upcoming 250th anniversary. The study reportedly found zero titles directly addressing faith, religious liberty or Christianity's role in the founding of the United States, despite religious liberty being enshrined in the First Amendment.
While books on the Great Awakening, the faith lives of the Founders and the Black church's role in American history were completely absent, according to the report, the lists included Ibram X. Kendi’s "Stamped for Kids" and Nikole Hannah-Jones’s "Born on the Water," a picture book tied to the controversial 1619 Project, instead.
Several recommended titles focused heavily on transgender activism during the 1969 Stonewall Riots, including a picture book for young children. Lists also heavily promoted Kate Messner's History Smashers series, which claims to expose "myths, lies, and secrets" in American history, as well as sympathetic biographies of former President Joe Biden and former Vice President Kamala Harris, with no equivalent biographies of Republican leaders.
Several titles on children's recommended reading lists for America's 250 presented "revisionist" views of U.S. history, according to a new Brave Books report. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel)
JUSTICE GORSUCH HIGHLIGHTS HUMANITY, HISTORY IN CHILDREN'S BOOK CELEBRATING AMERICA'S 250TH ANNIVERSARY
According to Brave Books, the most common themes across lists were the American Revolution, minority perspectives, Black history, civil rights and women's history. Books focused on American symbols, the classics, the Founders and civics made up the minority of the recommendations.
The lists frequently use words like "complicated," "hidden" and "untold" to describe American history, in what Brave Books says is an effort to reframe the American story rather than celebrate it.
Brave Books noted that while many of these titles have literary merit and share important historical perspectives, the exclusion of faith leaves the next generation with a skewed view of U.S. history.
The report's findings drew sharp criticism from former HUD Secretary Dr. Ben Carson and OutKick host Riley Gaines, who are both Brave Books authors.
Brave Books' new report analyzed over 300 titles on recommended children's reading lists and reportedly found zero titles centered on faith or religious liberty. (In Pictures Ltd./Corbis via Getty Images)
AMERICA HAS FOUNDING FATHERS. A CATHOLIC SAINT WAS A FOUNDING MOTHER
"Faith is not a footnote in the American story," Carson told Fox News Digital. "It is the foundation of it."
"The Declaration of Independence says our rights come from our Creator," he continued. "Benjamin Franklin called the Constitutional Convention to prayer before they produced a document that has stood for 250 years. George Washington survived battle after battle in ways that defied all human explanation. These men knew where their strength came from."
Carson argued it is essential for young people to understand the role faith and religious liberty played in U.S. history to truly appreciate their freedoms.
"A generation that does not know where their freedoms come from will not know why those freedoms are worth fighting for," he continued. "Ronald Reagan said freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. He was not exaggerating. He was being precise. When you raise children on a version of history that calls America complicated and unfinished and never once tell them that this country was founded by men of extraordinary faith and courage who believed they were accountable to God for what they built, you are not educating them. You are making them vulnerable."
Former United States Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Ben Carson spoke to Fox News Digital about the new "Faith Gap" report. (Lev Radin/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images)
$20M ‘ONE SMALL STEP’ CAMPAIGN AIMS TO REBUILD AMERICAN PRIDE AHEAD OF 250TH ANNIVERSARY
Gaines added that teaching children to love their country does not mean ignoring its flaws, but it also does not mean embellishing them.
"The problem is that many institutions have become so focused on emphasizing what's broken, unfinished, or flawed that they've stopped teaching kids what makes America the greatest, freest, most prosperous nation in the world," Gaines said. "That's why so many people from all across the world try to live, work, and start a family here through whatever means necessary."
Author, athlete, activist and podcast host Riley Gaines spoke to Fox News Digital about why she believes instilling a love for America is especially important now. (Brave Books)
"As we celebrate America's 250th birthday, kids deserve more than a story about what's wrong with America. They deserve to know why generations of people around the world have looked to America as a beacon of hope, opportunity, and freedom. That's not indoctrination. That's telling the whole story."
Brave Books CEO Trent Talbot said the report exposes a systemic problem in education where he says there is an intentional push to erase Christianity's influence from the nation's past.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE COVERAGE OF MEDIA AND CULTURE
"When reading lists for America's 250th anniversary don't include a single book acknowledging Christianity's role, that's not an oversight. That's a choice," Talbot told Fox News Digital. "What this report confirms is something parents have suspected but couldn't quantify: the bias isn't geographic, it's institutional. Red state, blue state… it doesn't matter when the gatekeepers are all aligned ideologically and share the same assumptions."
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP
In response to these findings, the conservative publisher has launched its own book campaign for America's 250th focused on providing a more positive view of U.S. history.
Carson's new book, "Built on Faith," along with Riley Gaines' picture book, "One Two Three We Are Free," and Kirk Cameron's "Built by the Brave," are new releases from the publisher. The company intends for the series to be for families looking for alternative books that celebrate America's history of "faith, bravery and achievement."
"We started Brave Books because we saw this coming," Talbot said. "The library system, among other institutions, doesn't have a diversity problem. It has a uniformity problem. Every major institution has quietly agreed on what children should think about America, and faith, patriotism, and earned pride didn't make the cut."
Kristine Parks is a reporter for Fox News Digital. Read more.
Get all the stories you need-to-know from the most powerful name in news delivered first thing every morning to your inbox.
By entering your email and clicking the Subscribe button, you agree to the Fox News
Privacy Policy
and
Terms of Use
, and
agree to receive content and promotional communications from Fox News. You understand that you can
opt-out at any time.
Subscribed
You've successfully subscribed to this newsletter!