Since its founding, the United States of America has been influenced by individuals of faith and their public expressions of religion. From the nation\u27s birth, both religion and secularism have played significant roles in the development of the nation\u27s society, culture, and politics. Today, there appears to be a culture war between two main competing groups of ideologies driven by either a conservative or a progressive leaning worldview that ultimately manifests itself in the Republican or Democrat party platforms. This work is an attempt to challenge the presuppositions, biases, ideologies, and worldviews of both the author and the reader, with particular attention to discussing exactly what kind of nation the United States was foun...
The legal status of religion everywhere reflects the development ofreligious traditions and institu...
Movements dedicated to making the United States a “Christian nation” have been a recurrent feature i...
The article examines the widespread cultural debate in the U.S. regarding whether or not the country...
In comparative perspective, the American religion–state regime is generally considered as strictly s...
In the United States, religious people frequently ask whether America is a "Christian Nation," and t...
Church and state in the United States are not and have never been completely separate from one anoth...
The relationship between religion and U.S. public life is far more complicated than invocations of t...
From the Spanish Inquisition to the now theocratic state of Iran, the world is constantly adapting t...
Religion in America persisted along traditional Christian lines until the 1870s. It was then that th...
The interaction of religious and public life is one of the most important problems in any state. Th...
This study was motivated by the concern that the United States has been consistently diverging into ...
[Book abstract] Polarization between political religionists and militant secularists on both sides o...
From the founding of the United States, Americans have understood loyalty to their country as a reli...
A rapidly growing number of Americans are embracing life outside the bounds of organized religion. A...
This article draws upon leading works in the sociology of religion to assess what I shall call the ...
The legal status of religion everywhere reflects the development ofreligious traditions and institu...
Movements dedicated to making the United States a “Christian nation” have been a recurrent feature i...
The article examines the widespread cultural debate in the U.S. regarding whether or not the country...
In comparative perspective, the American religion–state regime is generally considered as strictly s...
In the United States, religious people frequently ask whether America is a "Christian Nation," and t...
Church and state in the United States are not and have never been completely separate from one anoth...
The relationship between religion and U.S. public life is far more complicated than invocations of t...
From the Spanish Inquisition to the now theocratic state of Iran, the world is constantly adapting t...
Religion in America persisted along traditional Christian lines until the 1870s. It was then that th...
The interaction of religious and public life is one of the most important problems in any state. Th...
This study was motivated by the concern that the United States has been consistently diverging into ...
[Book abstract] Polarization between political religionists and militant secularists on both sides o...
From the founding of the United States, Americans have understood loyalty to their country as a reli...
A rapidly growing number of Americans are embracing life outside the bounds of organized religion. A...
This article draws upon leading works in the sociology of religion to assess what I shall call the ...
The legal status of religion everywhere reflects the development ofreligious traditions and institu...
Movements dedicated to making the United States a “Christian nation” have been a recurrent feature i...
The article examines the widespread cultural debate in the U.S. regarding whether or not the country...