
Every American worships at the same altar, and most of us have never noticed the church.
We call it math. Science runs on its spine. And whether you clutch a rosary, a crystal, or a MAGA hat, you practice the faith every day.
Consider tax season. Roughly 85 million Americans hand their returns to a preparer or a software program each year. Nobody checks the arithmetic. We sign the form, believe the number, and mail our money to Washington. H and R Block asks for our faith, and we give it with less hesitation than a Sunday collection plate.
Consider your commute. GPS satellites correct for Einstein’s relativity, 38 microseconds a day, or your phone would miss your driveway by miles within a week. Billions of us follow that blue dot like a star over Bethlehem. We understand the physics about as well as medieval peasants understood the Latin Mass. We believe anyway.
Even the mystics kneel. Astrology, the supposed rival of science, runs entirely on celestial mechanics. An astrologer casting your chart consults planetary tables computed by the same equations NASA uses to land rovers on Mars. The horoscope is math with incense.
The Pew Research Center reported in January that 77 percent of Americans express confidence in scientists to act in the public interest. That figure beats clergy. The pews have quietly shifted, and the congregation follows the lab coat now.
The skeptics will object here. Using math, they say, is hardly worship. But look at how we treat it. Worship means trust without full understanding. Fewer than one in three Americans can explain how their phone works, yet we stake our savings, our marriages, and our medical care on its calculations. That is faith by any definition a theologian would recognize.
And the faith reaches everyone, believer and denier alike. The Trump supporter who scorns the scientific establishment still lives inside its cathedral. The cult of personality itself is a measured psychological phenomenon, documented in journals, replicated in studies. His devotion runs on dopamine, and dopamine runs on chemistry, and chemistry runs on math. He worships whether he consents or not.
Ancient texts felt this pull long before Pew took a poll. Scripture is full of physics, seas parting, suns standing still, water becoming wine. Miracles are simply math violations, and for 2,000 years science has forced religion to adapt around each one. Galileo moved the Earth. Darwin moved the family tree. Each time, the church redrew its map and the equations stayed put.
Even theology’s sharpest minds now argue from the equation. William Lane Craig, the Christian philosopher who debates atheists for a living, offers mathematics as proof of God. His argument runs simply: if God does not exist, the fit between math and the physical world is a happy coincidence, and the fit is too perfect for coincidence, therefore God.
Craig built the case on physicist Eugene Wigner’s 1960 paper about the unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics.
Notice what happened there. The faith’s leading defender walked into the debate hall and pointed at the altar of numbers. He rests the existence of heaven on the reliability of arithmetic. The theologian and the physicist kneel in the same church and argue only about who built it.
Which brings us to the last holdouts on the planet. The Sentinelese of North Sentinel Island have rejected every visitor for centuries, including an American missionary named John Allen Chau, who arrived in 2018 carrying a Bible and left in a burial. They want no religion, no government, no contact. Yet every arrow they loose flies a parabola. Every tide they read obeys the moon. Every spear strike solves a calculus problem their brains compute faster than any laptop. They refused the church and practice the faith anyway, the purest congregation on Earth.
This is the claim of Evidentialism, the framework I have written about in this space before. Math deserves recognition as a faith system, because we already treat it as one. We simply refuse to say the word. Perhaps faith needs a companion term, earned faith, belief that has paid its dues through proof. Religious faith asks you to believe without evidence. Earned faith hands you the evidence and asks only that you trust the arithmetic, the way you trust the bridge will hold when you drive across it.
Because you do trust the bridge. You trusted it this morning. You trusted the elevator, the traffic light, the pacemaker in your neighbor’s chest, the autopilot on your last flight. You performed 100 acts of devotion before lunch and called it Tuesday.
So the question stops being whether you worship math. The question is only to what degree.
The atheist worships openly. The astrologer worships through a costume. The conspiracy theorist worships in denial. And on a small island in the Bay of Bengal, the last uncontacted people on Earth draw their bows, and the arithmetic flies true.
They didn’t built the church. They didn’t have to.

