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  • Published: 4 August 2026
  • ISBN: 9781586424442
  • Imprint: Steerforth Press
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 160
  • RRP: $38.00

The Gospel of Intelligence

Robert Ingersoll on Religion and Politics




A powerful collection on religion, politics, and justice from one of America’s most pivotal free thinkers, challenging faulty logic and superstitions about our nation’s founding that persist today.

Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899) is one of the great lost figures in United States history, all but forgotten at just the time America needs him most. An outspoken and unapologetic agnostic, fervent champion of the separation of church and state, and advocate of the rights of women and Black Americans, he drew enormous audiences in the late 19th century with his lectures on “freethought.”

In The Gospel of Intelligence, Pulitzer Prize-winner Tim Page puts Robert Ingersoll back where he belongs at the forefront of independent American thought. Distilling copious letters, various newspaper interviews, and writings from the 12-volume set of his works, Page presents Ingersoll’s vast range of inquiry, from his strong critique of religion having a role in government, to the way he challenges the myths of our nation’s founding.

With admirers ranging from Mark Twain and Frederick Douglass, to Eizabeth Cady Stanton and Thomas Edison, Ingersoll remains one of America’s most articulate and entertaining public intellectuals. Featuring a new biographical introduction from Page, this popular collection of Ingersoll's work is an essential read for anyone looking for some of the best arguments ever articulated favoring the separation of church and state and critiquing religious beliefs.

  • Published: 4 August 2026
  • ISBN: 9781586424442
  • Imprint: Steerforth Press
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 160
  • RRP: $38.00

About the authors

Robert Ingersoll

Tim Page is the Pulitzer Prize—winning chief music critic for the Washington Post. He is the author of Dawn Powell: A Biography and editor of The Diaries of Dawn Powell (Steerforth Press, 1995) and Selected Letters of Dawn Powell.

Praise for The Gospel of Intelligence

Ingersoll "is a critical figure in the struggle for true freedom of conscience in America — meaning the freedom not to worship any god as well as to worship God in one's own way . . . Ingersoll did more than anyone to restore Americans' memory of their country's secular and rationalist tradition." — Susan Jacoby in Freethinkers

"Opponents of federal funding for church social programs and faith-based restrictions on medical research will find here the inspiration to keep fighting." — Washington Post

"Ingersoll's ideas force a reader to reexamine the words freedom, liberty, truth and democracy. This little paperback has the pleasant feeling of a morning spent listening to a lecture or sermon on a small-town green." — Los Angeles Times