Do scientists pray?

A young girl writes to Albert Einstein

Albert Einstein in 1951. Photo by Ernst Haas/Getty Images.

As one of the world’s great intellects and arguably the most famous of all scientists, Albert Einstein—born on this day, March 14 in 1879—was regularly questioned about his views on religion. In 1954, he broached the subject with Eric Gutkind, the author of a book he had recently read, in a letter which continues to generate debate to this date and from which this snippet is often quoted: 

Eighteen years before he wrote to Gutkind, in January 1936, a young girl named Phyllis wrote to Einstein on behalf of her Sunday school class, and framed the question a little differently. She simply asked, “Do scientists pray?” Einstein soon replied.


January 19, 1936 

My dear Dr. Einstein, 

We have brought up the question: Do scientists pray? in our Sunday school class. It began by asking whether we could believe in both science and religion. We are writing to scientists and other important men, to try and have our own question answered. 

We will feel greatly honored if you will answer our question: Do scientists pray, and what do they pray for? 

We are in the sixth grade, Miss Ellis’s class. 

Respectfully yours, 

Phyllis