Following The Founders on God and Government (CH, Dec\u2705, 43-2139; same editors), these essays focus on important Revolutionary generation individuals\u27 little-known views on religion and society. Arguing that historians and the Supreme Court give too much significance to the religious writings of Madison, Jefferson, Franklin, Adams, and Washington, these essays concentrate on the impact of the religious perspectives of now-neglected founding fathers and mothers, including religious radicals Tom Paine and Benjamin Rush; the devout Roger Sherman, Oliver Ellsworth, John Jay, Sam Adams, and (in late life) Alexander Hamilton; and the moderate Edmund Randolph, Patrick Henry, Abigail Adams, and Mercy Warren. All supported religious liberty a...
William Brewster and the independents. By E.D. Mead.--Roger Williams and his doctrine of soul libert...
Jefferson’s axioms of separation of church and state and discouragement of public religion are well ...
William Brewster and the independents. By E. D. Mead -- Roger Williams and his doctrine of soul libe...
Muñoz (Notre Dame) argues that Supreme Court decisions on religion that have cited the Founding Fath...
Holmes (William and Mary) argues that many of the most important Founding Fathers were neither ortho...
The first part of my study concerns the meaning of religious freedom as revealed through the funda...
The eighteenth-century American founders believed that religion is special and deserves special cons...
America\u27s most original legal invention may be the First Amendment guarantee that \u27\u27Congres...
The debate over the framers’ concept of freedom of religion has become heated and divisive. This scr...
West (political science, Seattle Pacific Univ.) argues that the political activities of evangelicals...
This accessible introduction tells the American story of religious liberty from its colonial beginni...
From a religiously restrictive colony controlled by the established church to an exemplar of religio...
These essays, developed from seminars at the University of Virginia\u27s Institute for Advanced Stud...
While Thomas Jefferson’s theory of strict separation of church and state has long captured the 20th ...
Sandwiched between two great religious awakenings, the American founding occurred at a time when E...
William Brewster and the independents. By E.D. Mead.--Roger Williams and his doctrine of soul libert...
Jefferson’s axioms of separation of church and state and discouragement of public religion are well ...
William Brewster and the independents. By E. D. Mead -- Roger Williams and his doctrine of soul libe...
Muñoz (Notre Dame) argues that Supreme Court decisions on religion that have cited the Founding Fath...
Holmes (William and Mary) argues that many of the most important Founding Fathers were neither ortho...
The first part of my study concerns the meaning of religious freedom as revealed through the funda...
The eighteenth-century American founders believed that religion is special and deserves special cons...
America\u27s most original legal invention may be the First Amendment guarantee that \u27\u27Congres...
The debate over the framers’ concept of freedom of religion has become heated and divisive. This scr...
West (political science, Seattle Pacific Univ.) argues that the political activities of evangelicals...
This accessible introduction tells the American story of religious liberty from its colonial beginni...
From a religiously restrictive colony controlled by the established church to an exemplar of religio...
These essays, developed from seminars at the University of Virginia\u27s Institute for Advanced Stud...
While Thomas Jefferson’s theory of strict separation of church and state has long captured the 20th ...
Sandwiched between two great religious awakenings, the American founding occurred at a time when E...
William Brewster and the independents. By E.D. Mead.--Roger Williams and his doctrine of soul libert...
Jefferson’s axioms of separation of church and state and discouragement of public religion are well ...
William Brewster and the independents. By E. D. Mead -- Roger Williams and his doctrine of soul libe...