Separation of church and state / Philip Hamburger.
2002
KF4865 .H35 2002 (Map It)
Available at Cellar
Items
Details
Author
Title
Separation of church and state / Philip Hamburger.
Published
Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 2002.
Call Number
KF4865 .H35 2002
ISBN
0674007344 (alk. paper)
9780674007345 (alk. paper)
0674013743
9780674013742
9780674007345 (alk. paper)
0674013743
9780674013742
Description
xiii, 514 pages ; 25 cm
Other Standard Identifiers
9780674007345
System Control No.
(OCoLC)48958015
Summary
In a powerful challenge to conventional wisdom, Philip Hamburger argues that the separation of church and state has no historical foundation in the First Amendment. The detailed evidence assembled here shows that eighteenth-century Americans almost never invoked this principle. Although Thomas Jefferson and others retrospectively claimed that the First Amendment separated church and state, separation became part of American constitutional law only much later. Hamburger shows that separation became a constitutional freedom largely through fear and prejudice. Jefferson supported separation out of hostility to the Federalist clergy of New England. Nativist Protestants (ranging from nineteenth-century Know Nothings to twentieth-century members of the K.K.K.) adopted the principle of separation to restrict the role of Catholics in public life. Gradually, these Protestants were joined by theologically liberal, anti-Christian secularists, who hoped that separation would limit Christianity and all other distinct religions. Eventually, a wide range of men and women called for separation. Almost all of these Americans feared ecclesiastical authority, particularly that of the Catholic Church, and, in response to their fears, they increasingly perceived religious liberty to require a separation of church from state. American religious liberty was thus redefined and even transformed. In the process, the First Amendment was often used as an instrument of intolerance and discrimination.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1
Conclusion
479
Index
493
I
Late Eighteenth-Century Religious Liberty
19
II
Early Nineteenth-Century Republicanism
109
III
Mid-Nineteenth-Century Americanism
191
IV
Late Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Constitutional Law
285
1Separation, Purity, and Anticlericalism
21
2Accusations of Separation
65
3The Exclusion of the Clergy
79
4Freedom from Religious Establishments
89
5Demands for Separation: Separating Federalist Clergy from Republican Politics
111
6Keeping Religion Out of Politics and Making Politics Religious
130
7Jefferson and the Baptists: Separation Proposed and Ignored as a Constitutional Principle
144
8A Theologically Liberal, Anti-Catholic, and American Principle
193
9Separations in Society
252
10Clerical Doubts and Popular Protestant Support
268
11Amendment
287
12Interpretation
335
13Differences
360
14An American Constitutional Right
391