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Select Church-State Bibliography
al-Hibri, Azizah Y., Jean Bethke Elshtain and Charles C.
Haynes, Religion in American Public
Life: Living With Our Deepest Differences. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2001.
This book asserts that American
citizens themselves must assume leadership in reuniting and assuring the future
of the republic. It concludes with the conviction that “religious liberty is
the bedrock value that animates our republic, undergirds our civic morality,
and defines us as a people.”
Alley, Robert S.,
School Prayer: The Court, the
Congress, and the First Amendment. Buffalo:
Prometheus, 1994.
Robert Alley offers an examination
of the intentions behind the constitutional framers. He also recounts acts of congress and the
courts concerning prayer in the public schools.
Baker, Truett. Church-State Cooperation Without Domination:
A New Paradigm for Church-State
Relations. Copyright by C. Truett Baker: 2010.
This book highlights the
antecedents that led to the current church-state relations in the United States
and addresses the issues that have arisen from balancing “separation and
cooperation.” In terms of cooperation,
it focuses on “the use of a business relationship in which the government buys
services from the nonprofit, faith-based organization.” The final chapter presents a new model for
church-state separation.
Balmer, Randall. God
in the White House: A History: How
Faith Shaped the Presidency from John
F. Kennedy to George W. Bush. New York:
Harper One, 2008.
In God in the White House, Balmer examines
the role that religion has played in the
personal and public lives of American presidents from John F. Kennedy to George W. Bush. Blamer then seeks to explain the
“politicization of religion in the
last half of the twentieth century, as well as the ‘religionization’ of our politics.”
Balmer, Randall. Thy Kingdom Come. New
York: Basic Books, 2006.
Balmer, an
evangelical progressive, examines the politicization of conservative Christian ideals through the Republican Party
agenda. He reviews historical and theological information in order to
persuade the reader to embrace the true Christian
tradition, one that championed the causes of abolition, suffrage, and public education.
Brackney, William H., A
Capsule History of Baptist Principles. Atlanta: Baptist History and Heritage Society, 2009.
Brackney
provides a historical context for many major Baptist principles and characteristics and seeks to update Baptist
distinctives and adapt them to the 21st century.
The book offers continuing education to Baptists who may forget the importance of key principles while
leading those new to Baptist life to learn who Baptists
are and why.
Brinton, Henry G., Balancing
Acts: Obligation, Liberation, and Contemporary Christian Conflicts. Lima,
OH: CSS Publishing Company, Inc.,
2006.
Balancing Acts introduces readers
to the two major spiritual themes in today’s America-- obligation and liberation
– and examines how most Americans self-identify with one of those two themes. Those who identify with obligation seek a
moral and religious life, while those who identify with liberation see religion
as a freeing presence and stress God’s love for the oppressed of the
world. Brinton’s book contains a
chapter wherein he advocates for the abolishment of the senate chaplain
position in order to illustrate the harmful effects that church-state mixing
can have on the integrity of the church.
Carter, Stephen L., The Culture of Disbelief. New
York: Basic Books, 1993.
Stephen Carter explains that religion has an
appropriate and important role in American public life. Religion should not be relegated to the
periphery of public discourse. But
Carter also asserts that church and state must be separate and he argues
against the notion of a “Christian nation.”
Carter, Stephen
L., God’s Name in Vain: The Wrongs and Rights of Religion in Politics. New York: Basic Books, 2000.
Carter argues that those who would
cry the “separation of church and state” as an attempt to discourage religious
activism are wrong. However, activists should take care not to cause religion
“to lose its best and most spiritual self.”
Casey, Shaun. The Making of a Catholic President: Kennedy
vs. Nixon 1960. New York: Oxford,
2009.
This book
examines the election of 1960—specifically, religion’s role in both this
particular election but also in American politics today. His conclusion notes that Nixon’s religious
strategy foreshadowed the rise of the religious right and discusses the perils
of endorsements and alliances between faith communities and politicians. Also, there is a mention of Emmanuel Carlson
and the BJC (p.136) and how Baptists influenced the 1960 election.
Church, Forrest,
ed., The Separation of Church and State:
Writings on a Fundamental Freedom by America’s Founders. Boston: Boston Press, 2004.
Cookson, Catharine, Regulating Religion: The Courts and
the Exercise Clause. New York: Oxford University
Press, 2001.
Cookson
suggests that, in the realm of free-exercise law, examining each case on its own
merits and evaluating decisions in the context of specific circumstances would be
fairer than the traditional methods of using general precedents. She uses a plethora
of specific examples including Employment Div. v. Smith (1990) and City of Boerne v. Flores (1997).
Cothen, Grady C., and James M. Dunn, Soul Freedom:
Baptist Battle Cry. Macon, Georgia:
Smyth and Helwys Publishing, 2000.
Authors
have written and compiled several essays on contemporary issues that speak to
the Baptist tradition of “soul freedom,” including essays on human rights and
religion in higher education. They also
explain why both of these two prominent Southern Baptist expatriates are still
Baptist.
Curry, Thomas J., The First Freedoms: Church and State in
America
to the Passage of The First Amendment. New York:
Oxford University Press, 1986.
Thomas Curry has produced a study of the context in
which colonial America
adopted the idea of church-state separation to ensure religious liberty. His book
synthesizes written works predating the first amendment.
Davis,
Derek, Original Intent: Chief Justice Rehnquist and the Course of American Church/State Relations. Buffalo: Prometheus
Books, 1991.
Davis
provides an analysis of the opinions of Chief Justice Rehnquist and a summary
of the Justice’s views on church and state. He analyzes these views against the
backdrop of the of the court’s broader church-state jurisprudence.
Davis, Derek and Barry Hankins, eds., Welfare Reform
& Faith-Based Organizations. Waco, Texas: J.M. Dawson Institute of
Church-State Studies, 1999.
This book provides scholarly analysis of the debate
over Charitable Choice as a part of welfare reform. Since the book was published in 1999 it does
not address the Bush administration’s “Faith-Based Initiatives.” The book
concludes that: “Congress would do
better to offer incentives to corporate America for donations to faith
based institutions…”
Davis, Derek and Barry
Hankins, eds., New Religious Movements and Religious Liberty in America,
2d edition, Waco, TX: Baylor University Press, 2003.
Comprises articles from lectures delivered at a 2001
symposium on religious liberty, including an article by Davis on faith-based initiatives that
provides insight into problems encountered by churches that accept government
funds for their ministries.
DelFattore, Joan,
The Fourth R: Conflicts Over Religion
in America’s
Public Schools. New
Haven: Yale University
Press, 2004.
This book reveals America’s
meandering path toward genuine religious freedom in public schools showing how
the nation has come to recognize its religious pluralism and evolve from a
highly majoritarian view of school prayer toward an increasing deference to
individual choice. The author traces the
progress made in balancing the government’s responsibility to not advance
religion with the individual’s right to free exercise of religion.
Den Dulk, Kevin R., Bryan T.
Froehle, Douglas L. Koopman, Stephen V. Monsma, James
M. Penning, and Corwin E. Smidt, The Disappearing
God Gap: Religion in the 2008
Presidential Election. New York:
Oxford University Press Inc., 2010.
Authors
analyze the apparent lack of religious debate within the 2008 election. Countering an
argument which claims the role of religion is diminishing in the hearts and
minds of voters, this group of scholars sets out to show why our religious
beliefs still play an ever important role in American elections.
Dionne, E.J. Jr., and John J. Dilulio Jr., eds., What’s
God Got To Do With the American Experiment?. Washington
D.C.: Brookings Institution
Press, 2000.
Dionne and Dilulio have compiled essays from authors
representing differing positions. The key message of the book as given by James
Wilson, is that religious charities should receive government subsidies.
Dionne, E.J., Jr., Jean
Bethke Elshtain and Kayla M. Drogosz, eds., One Electorate Under God?: A
Dialogue on Religion & American Politics. Washington,
D.C.: Brookings Institution Press, 2004.
Provides an entry point into a
healthy discussion of the role of relgion in politics. It is based on a dialogue between Congressman
Mark Souder, presenting a conservative evangelical viewpoint, and former
governor, Mario Cuomo, presenting a liberal Catholic view. Articles following the dialogue discuss and
critique the opposing views.
Doerr, Edd and Albert J. Menendez, eds., Great Quotations
on Religious Freedom. Amherst, NY:
Prometheus Books, 2002.
Doerr and Menendez have produced an extensive
compilation of quotes on religious liberty.
The quotes come from a number of diverse sources but all maintain that
religion should be kept out of government affairs.
Drakeman, Donald
and John F. Wilson. Church and State in American History. Boulder, Colorado:
Westview Press, 2003.
These distinguished professors and
experts analyze and reproduce the most important historical documents, speeches,
and cases dealing with church and state issues in order to address the
question, “Is America one nation under God?”
Dreisbach, Daniel
L., Thomas Jefferson and The Wall of Separation Between Church and State. New York: New
York University
Press 2002.
Dreisbach examines the historical
context and motives for Jefferson’s famous
letter to the Danbury Baptist Association. The book offers an “in-depth examination
of the origins, controversial uses, and competing interpretations” of the
powerful metaphor of “the wall of separation between church and state.”
Edgar, Bob. Middle Church.
New York, NY: Simon and Shuster, 2006.
Bob Edgar,
former House Representative and General Secretary of the National Council of Churches, states that
while abortion is never mentioned and homosexuality
only a few time, the issues of poverty and peace are addressed over two thousand times. Edgar argues that Christians should return to
the unifying message of the Bible
instead of focusing on divisive political issues. He urges
progressive people of all faiths to do this by making a stand against the religious right.
Estep, William R., Revolution Within the Revolution. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1990.
Estep explains that for some of the early architects
of church-state separation, the struggle for religious freedom “became the
means by which they became patriots.” It
describes how a revolution of freedom of conscience fueled the revolutionary
principles of separation, and the founding of the country itself.
Feldman, Noah, Divided
by God. New York:Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2005.
Feldman investigates the church-state
struggle caused by the desire for a religiously diverse society and the influence
of the Christian majority upon politics and culture. He hopes to provide a solution for this problem
through looking into the relationship between church and state in the past and
today.
Flowers, Ronald B., That Godless Court? Second Edition. Louisville:
Westminster
John Knox Press, 2005.
This book offers an introduction to
the first amendment’s religion clauses. It discusses most of the courts’ church-state
decisions through 2004.
Foltin, Richard T., ed., Religious Liberty in the 1990’s.
New York:
American Jewish Committee, 1994.
Religious Liberty In the 1990’s is
an analysis of the Rehnquist Court’s
church state jurisprudence. The book takes a close look at the way the court
responded to the first amendment under Rehnquist leadership.
Folger, Janet L. The
Criminalization of Christianity.
Sisters, Oregon:
Multnomah Publisher, Inc., 2005.
Folger,
writing from a very conservative perspective, asserts that Christians are losing their freedoms worldwide. Very inflammatory in nature, she argues that Christians should have the freedom to
display the Ten Commandments, have school
wide prayer, and denounce homosexuality in virulent ways.
Frankel, Marvin E., Faith and Freedom. New York: Hill and Wang,
1994.
Examining the most notable court cases regarding
religious liberty, Frankel concludes that the separation of church and state
must be maintained. In the tradition of
Roger Williams, he argues that at worst only small concessions should be made
to accommodate the role of religion in public life.
Gaddy, Welton C., Faith and Politics: What’s a Christian
to do?. Macon, Georgia:
Smyth and Helwys Publishing,
Inc., 1996.
Gaddy speaks to the complex issue
of how Christians should appropriately respond to public policy. In his analysis he draws from his personal
experience, basic principles and common considerations regarding faith and
politics. He concludes by giving a vision of hope for the future.
Gaustad, Edwin S., Faith of Our Fathers: Religion and the
New Nation. San Francisco: Harper & Row Publishers, 1987.
Gaustad, Edwin S., Liberty
of Conscience. Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans Publishing Company,
1991.
Edwin Gaustad writes a biography of Roger Williams
that gives insights into his life and his convictions about religious
liberty. This book gives a good
introduction to the subject of religious liberty, and provides insight into the
influence that Williams’ had in his own time.
Gaustad, Edwin S., Roger Williams: Prophet of Liberty. New York: Oxford University Press, 2001.
Gaustad
offers a well-illustrated testament to the life of Roger Williams as a champion
of religious liberty and a defender of the rights of Native Americans. He
describes Williams’ Puritan roots and then tells how Williams would come to be
an important figure in future American life.
Gaustad, Edwin S., Roger
Williams: Lives and Legacies. New York: Oxford
University Press, 2005.
Gaustad’s second biography on Roger
Williams, founder of Rhode Island
and the First Baptist Church of America, presents a different kind of study of
Williams’ life. The book is organized around
the goals of Williams’ life, rather than chronologically, in order to provide a
concise, in-depth look into the life of Roger Williams.
Gaustad, Edwin S., Sworn on the Alter of God: A Religious
Biography of Thomas Jefferson. Grand
Rapids: Eerdmans, 1996.
Gaustad writes a biography that
speaks to Jefferson’s unique understanding of
the new republic. He examines Jefferson’s
religious convictions and how they shaped his worldview.
Gill, Anthony, The
Political Origins of Religious Liberty. New York:
Cambridge University Press, 2007.
Throughout
history, governments have attempted to control religious organizations and limit religious freedom.
However, over the past two hundred years
the world has witnessed an expansion of religious liberty. Gill argues that political leaders are more likely to
allow religious freedoms if such laws enhance economic
well-being or political power of their country.
Goldberg, Michelle. Kingdom Coming: The Rise of Christian
Nationalism. New York: W.W.
Norton & Company, Inc., 2006.
After
traveling across the United
States leading up to the 2004 election,
Goldberg noticed the rising tide
of fundamentalism and “dominionism.”
Goldberg explains the increasing
polarization between Christians and non-Christians, and explores the gap between the strong “secular
republic” of our founding fathers and our present
situation of legislators enacting their religion into law.
Gourley, Bruce. A Capsule History of Baptists. Atlanta: Baptist History
and Heritage Society, 2010.
This is a broad look at the first
400 years of Baptist life with an emphasis on how Baptists have stood apart
from other religious groups because of their emphasis on freedom, including the
separation of church and state. The book
underlines the irony that widespread denial of this separation has developed
within the ranks of Baptists.
Green, John C., Mark J. Rozell, and Clyde
Wilcox, The Christian Right In American Politics:
Marching to the Millennium. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown
University Press, 2003.
Through the twelve case studies
presented here, the reader receives a history of the organizational efforts
behind the “Christian Right”. In addition, the reader gains insight into the
feasible reasons behind the success and the failure of this movement.
Guinness, Os, The Great Experiment: Faith and Freedom in America.
In this book, Guinness uses
biographical sketches and primary source writings to establish the historical
context for the writing of the constitution. In doing so, he works to support
his general thesis that the constitution is the result of a people of faith and
their hope for America’s
future to allow such faith.
Hall, Timothy L., Separation
Church and State:
Roger Williams and Religious Liberty. Champaign: University
of Illinois Press, 1998.
Timothy Hall explores Roger
Williams’ dogged insistence on religious liberty and the separation of church
and state. Hall holds up Williams as an important intellectual source for
understanding today’s debates about the proper relationship between church and
state.
Hamburger,
Philip, Separation of Church and State. Cambridge,
MA: Harvard University Press, 2002.
Hamburger attacks the Jeffersonian
“wall of separation”. He attempts to
refute the principle by noting the presence of anti-Catholic attitudes in the United States
during the nineteenth and twentieth century secularism.
Hamilton, Marci
A., God vs. The Gavel: Religion and the
Rule of Law. New
York: Cambridge
University Press, 2005.
In this book, Hamilton challenges the view that all
religious acts are good and should be protected by the constitution. She argues that acts which are illegal under
the rule of law should not receive special standing through their religious
association.
Harris, Lawrence
H., The Origins and Growth of Baptist Faith: Twenty Baptist Trailblazers In
World History. Spartanburg, South Carolina:
The Reprint Company Publishers, 2001.
Lawrence Harris details the history
and heritage of the Baptist understanding of faith and outlines their
legacy. He describes the lives and
contributions of twenty great Baptist figures including, John Smyth and Roger
Williams, as well as Jimmy Carter and Martin Luther King Jr.
Harris, Sam. Letter
to a Christian Nation. New York, NY:
Knopf Publishers, 2006.
Harris, a modernist and scientist,
believes that either the Bible is the Word of God, or completely untrue. He argues from this standpoint to state that
religion is the cause for most problems.
Arrogantly written, he states that Christians, as well as members of all
religions, are wrong, and that their beliefs cause most of the strife in the
world today. Harris uses Bible verses
out of context and without any sort of academic exegetical work.
Hasson, Kevin
Seamus. The Right to be Wrong: Ending the Culture War Over Religion in America. San
Francisco:
Encounter Books, 2005.
By focusing on lessons from a series
of stories, Hasson tackles the struggle over religious diversity. Hasson focuses on the views of the extremes
and offers a solution that attempts to avoid the problems of both.
Haynes, Charles
C., Chaltain, Sam., Ferguson, John E. Jr., The
First Amendment in Schools: A Guide from the First Amendment
Center. Nashville,
TN: The
First Amendment Center,
2003.
The First Amendment in Schools
is a response to the need for general education on the first amendment. The
book is not written for legal scholars; it is instead a guide on teaching about
the origins and meaning of the first amendment.
Heclo, Hugh and
Wilfred M. McClay, Religion Returns to the Public Square: Faith and Policy in America. Baltimore, MD.: John
Hopkins University
Press, 2003.
Heclo and McClay have compiled a collection of
essays that describe the longstanding involvement of religion in politics. A relationship between the two is
unavoidable. Both religion and politics
“claim to give authoritative answers to important questions about how people
should live.”
Holmes, David L., The
Faiths of the Founding Fathers. New York: Oxford University Press, 2006.
In this
compact book, Holmes offers a concise look at the spirituality of our founding fathers. Although the founding
fathers were religious men, Holmes shows
that it was a faith quite unlike the Christianity of today's evangelicals. He offers an informative account of the
religious culture of the late colonial era, examines
the individual beliefs of a variety of important men and women in our nation’s history, discusses the role of
religion in the lives of the presidents since World
War II, and reflects on the modern evangelical resurgence.
Hull, William E., The Meaning of the Baptist Experience. Brentwood, TN:
Baptist History and
Heritage Society, 2007.
Hull
produces a 24-page discourse on the history of Baptists, focusing on the ideas
of soul freedom and separation of church and state. He focuses on Christianity in the post-9/11
world and how religion must be sure not to be co-opted by government in order
to ensure freedom for all.
Hutson, James H., Church
and State in America:
The First Two Centuries. New York: Cambridge University
Press, 2008.
This book
describes American ideas about and policies toward the relationship between government and religion from the
founding of Virginia
in 1607 to the presidency of Andrew
Jackson, 1829-1837. Four principles were paramount during this period: the importance of religion to the public
welfare; the resulting obligation of
government to support religion; liberty of conscience and volunteerism; the requirement that
churches be supported by free will gifts, not taxation.
The relevance of the concept of the separation of church and state during this period is examined in detail.
Hutson, James, Forgotten Features of the Founding: The
Recovery of Religious Themes in the
Early American Republic. Lanham,
MD: Lexington
Books, 2003.
On the
heels of Hutson’s previous work, Religion and the Founding of the American
Republic, this collection of essays further examines the religious influence
on the American founding. These
evocative writings draw from primary
sources, as well as more recent texts, to challenge traditional assumptions.
Irons, Peter, God on
Trial: Dispatches from America’s Religious Battlefields. New
York, NY: Viking, 2007.
Noted constitutional scholar Irons
examines key church-state disputes in 20th century America. By including the writings and statements of
plaintiffs, lawyers and others actually involved in these famous disputes,
Irons provides a non-traditional look at the most hotly-debated church-state
issues. Irons examines the
constitutionality of public religious displays, the pledge, and intelligent
design lessons.
Ivers, Gregg, Lowering the Wall: Religion and the Supreme
Court in the 1980’s. New York:
Anti-Defamation League, 1991.
Lowering the Wall is an
appeal to defenders of church-state separation to remain vigilant. Ivers
criticizes many decisions in the 1980’s that weakened the traditional
interpretation of the First Amendment religion clauses.
Ivers, Gregg, Redefining the First Freedom. New Brunswick, NJ:
Transaction Publishers, 1993.
Ivers’ book warns of the erosion of church-state
separation. Ivers speaks of the willingness of the courts and politicians to
allow the majority religion to ignore traditional church-state views.
Kennedy-Townsend, Kathleen,
Failing America’s
Faithful: How Today’s Churches are Mixing God with Politics and Losing their Way. New York,
NY: Warner Books. 2007.
Kennedy-Townsend examines America’s Christian landscape,
comparing it to its rich history of involvement and leadership in social
justice and civil rights issues, from the revolutionary period to the civil
rights era. She notes that the recent
history of American Christianity is dominated by the religious right, and its
emphasis on far-right Republican politics, rather than the gospel. She also examines how in small ways, that
landscape is beginning to change, and demonstrates how Christians can reclaim
the faith.
Kidd, Thomas S., God of Liberty.
New York:
Basic Books, 2010.
The
Revolutionary War marked a time when evangelical Christians, influenced by the First Great Awakening, and
founders of the country, enlightened deists, rallied together
in opposition to the British. Kidd provides a historical account of the role religion played
in the era, revealing that despite their ability to put their differences
aside, the divide between liberal and evangelical Christians was as wide then
as it is today.
Kimball, Charles, When Religion Becomes Evil. New York: HarperCollins,
2002.
Kimball is direct and
compelling in describing the dangers of religion when important principles are
either exploited or ignored. He provides warning signs for religious corruption
insisting that all religion has the capacity for good and evil.
Kimball, Charles, When
Religion Becomes Lethal. San
Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2011.
Kimball
addresses the dangerous and lethal outcomes of religion and politics becoming
intertwined in today’s world. Focusing on Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, the
author presents both historical and current examples of such troubling cases. He
also provides an encouraging strategy for avoiding such circumstances in the
future.
Kramnick, Isaac and Moore,
R. Laurence, The Godless Constitution: The Case Against Religious Correctness. New York: W.W. Norton
& Co., 1996.
The Godless Constitution is a
rebuke of the view that the founders did not intend a a religiously neutral
state. The book provides a scholarly analysis of John Locke, Roger Williams,
Thomas Jefferson and several others.
Kuo, David, Tempting Faith: An Inside Story of Political
Seduction, New York, NY: Free Press, 2006.
David Kuo, an evangelical and
former White House staffer, documents how the Bush administration has exploited
the religious right in the last two general elections, and then calls for a
“fast” of sorts from politics. It does
not preclude the religious from politics, but instead delivers a cautionary
tale about what can happen when religion is exploited for political gain.
Lambert, Frank, The Founding Fathers and the Place of
Religion in America.
Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 2003.
Dividing his book into three
distinct sections that address religious regulation, religious competition, and
religious freedom, the author looks at how the views of colonists shifted from
initially desiring the establishment of religion in the New England colonies,
to ultimately, as the U.S. Constitution was drafted, adopting a view of
distinct separation of church and state.
Lambert, Frank, Religion
in American Politics: A Short History. Princeton,
NJ: Princeton University Press, 2008.
From the
election of 1800, when Federalist clergy charged that deist Thomas Jefferson was unfit to lead a
"Christian nation," to today, when some Democrats want to embrace the so-called Religious
Left in order to compete with the Republicans
and the Religious Right, religion has always been part of American politics. In Religion in American Politics,
Frank Lambert tells the story of the uneasy
relations between religion and politics from the founding to the twenty- first century.
Levy, Leonard W., The Establishment Clause: Religion and
the First Amendment. New York:
Macmillan Publishing Company, 1986.
This
book provides a substantive rebuttal to the suggestion that the Establishment Clause only about prohibits government from preferring one religion to
another. Levy argues that any
responsibility not given to the federal government in the constitution rests in
the hands of the people and for the federal government to provide aid for
religion would be to assume a responsibility it does not have.
Long, Carolyn N., Religious Freedom and Indian Rights:
The Case of Oregon
vs. Smith. Peter Charles Hoffer
and N.E.H. Hull, eds. Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of
Kansas, 2000.
Carolyn
Long analyzes the implications of the Supreme Court case Oregon v. Smith
that set a new precedent for how the courts would decide cases involving the
free exercise of religion. She describes how the treatment of Native Americans
is a warning sign of the erosion of our religious liberties.
Lynn, Barry, Marc D. Stern, and Oliver S. Thomas, The
Right to Religious Liberty: The Basic
ACLU Guide to Religious Rights. Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press, 1995.
This book, as its subtitle suggests is a “basic ACLU
guide to religious rights.” It is in an easy to read question and answer format
addressing a variety of church-state issues.
Maddox, Robert L., Separation of Church and State:
Guarantor of Religious Freedom. New York:
Crossroad Publishing, 1987.
Maddox provides a primer on the importance of the
separation of church and state to religious liberty. He offers critical concerns about the current
state of church- state relations as well as historical perspective on the
European roots that gave way to the American experience.
Mapp, Alf, Jr., The Faiths of Our Fathers: What America’s
Founders Really Believed. Lanham, MD:
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2003.
Mapp’s book
is a collection of biographical sketches of prominent founding fathers and
how their faiths informed their political philosophies and public deeds. These
essays examine facets of the lives of these men that have until now been ignored or,
as Mapp seems to suggest, misunderstood to some degree.
Marsh, Charles, Wayward Christian
Soldiers: Freeing the Gospel from Political Captivity. New York, NY: Oxford
University Press, 2007.
Marsh, an evangelical theologian,
critiques the current levels of political activism by conservative evangelical
leaders. In decrying the state of
American evangelicalism, Marsh explores how the right redefined Christianity in
terms of political ideology, rather than scripture and tradition. In addition, he calls progressive and
moderate evangelicals to reclaim the gospel and enter into a time of
hospitality, peacemaking, and contemplative prayer.
Marshall,
Paul., God and the Constitution: Christianity and American Politics. Lanham, MD: Rowan &
Littlefield Publishers, 2002.
Directed to a more general reader
rather than to specialists, Marshall
works to present a general approach to deal with current issues associated with
biblical teaching as it is related to theological and political reflection. For
Marshall, this
entire argument is based on the foundation of an understanding rooted and
influenced by one’s faith.
Marty, Martin E., When
Faiths Collide. Malden,
Massachusetts: Blackwell
Publishing Ltd., 2006.
Marty
writes that collisions of faith are the most threatening conflicts around the world at
the beginning of the twenty-first century. In these instances, he suggests parties
should risk hospitality towards one another as opposed to the traditional plea for tolerance. He focuses his
argument on countries which have free, democratic, or open governments such as
the United States and United Kingdom.
McCollum, Dannel. The
Lord Was Not on Trial: The Inside Story of the Supreme Court’s Precedent-Setting McCollum Ruling. Silver Spring, MD:
Americans for Religious Liberty,
2008.
McCollum
chronicles the battle his mother, Vashti McCollum, brought to the Supreme Court in 1948 over the Champaign, Illinois
school district’s on-campus release
time program.
McConnell, Michael W., John H. Garvey, and Thomas C. Berg, Religion
and the Constitution. New York: Aspen Law
& Business, 2002. (Casebook)
Meacham, John, American
Gospel: God, the Founding Fathers, and the Making of a Nation. New
York, NY: Random
House, 2006.
Meacham examines the intersection
of religion and politics during the founding period and through the 20th
century. Beginning with John Winthrop,
and examining figures all the way through Reagan, Meacham takes a fairly
centrist view on church-state issues. He
emphasizes the importance of civil religion and preventing to government from
interfering with citizens’ free exercise.
Menendez, Albert J. The
Religious Factor in the 1960 Presidential Election: An Analysis of the Kennedy Victory Over Anti-Catholic
Prejudice. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers, 2011.
This book
examines the statistical analysis of state-by-state voting in the 1960 election concerning the affect of Kennedy’s
religious allegiance on voters. The book seeks to debunk the myth that Kennedy
inappropriately used his Religion to win
the election and that he won the election because of an increase in Protestant tolerance, rather than an increase in
Catholic Support. Emmanuel Carlson and the BJC
on mentioned regarding Kennedy’s meeting with the Director during his campaign. (Pg. 35)
Micklethwait, John and Adrian Wooldridge. God is Back. New
York: Penguin Books, 2010.
This book examines the way in which
religion has been revived and remains an force in the world, especially what
the authors define as “American-style evangelism.” The book’s final few chapters propose
universalizing the American ideal of separation of church and state,
specifically as a way to halt the spread of violence that can occur in the name
of religion.
Miller, Robert T.
and Ronald B. Flowers, Toward Benevolent Neutrality: Church, State, and the
Supreme Court, 5th Ed. Waco, Texas:
Baylor University Press, 1996. (Casebook)
Miller, William Lee, The First Liberty. New York: Paragon House Publishers, 1988.
Miller has recreated the early debate over religious
liberty by describing the conversations among Thomas Jefferson, James Madison
and Roger Williams. The book contains many primary sources including the
Virginia Statute for Religious Freedom.
Monsma, Stephen V. and J. Christopher Soper, Equal
Treatment of Religion in a Pluralistic
Society. Grand Rapids:
William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1998.
This book discusses the emergence of the ideology of
“equal treatment,” which has gained popularity in congress and in the courts.
The eight contributors in this book analyze the origins and consequences of
this position from varying viewpoints.
Moore, R. Jonathan, Suing
For America’s Soul: John
Whitehead, The Rutherford Institute
and Conservative Christians in the Courts. Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing
Company, 2007.
In this book, Moore
explores the development of conservative legal activism in America. He examines how and why these different
Christian coalitions came into existence and measures their success in the
courts. He focuses on John Whitehead and
The Rutherford Institute.
Noll, Mark A., One Nation Under God? Christian Faith and
Political Action in America.
San
Francisco: Harper & Row Publishers, 1988.
Noll
examines the “history of Christian political involvement.” He writes unapologetically about the
contributions of Christianity to the American experiment although he encourages
Christian political involvement. He also warns: “Christian values do the most
good for a nation when believers remember the difference between God’s kingdom
and their country.”
Noll, Mark A. and Luke E. Harlow, eds., Religion and American Politics: From the Colonial Period to the Present. New York:
Oxford University Press, 1990 (2007).
Noll and
Harlow address how religion and politics interact in America, how that relationship has changed over time,
and why American religious and political thought
have sometimes developed along a parallel course while at other times moved in opposite directions. For the
2007 edition, Noll and Harlow offer a completely
new introduction, and also commission several new pieces and eliminate several that are now out of
date.
Noonan, John
T.Jr., The Lustre of Our Country: The
American Experience of Religious Freedom. Los Angeles:
University of California Press 1998.
Noonan champions the cause of
religious freedom considering it “America’s greatest moral
contribution to the world.” He details the painful history of religious
persecution in the United
States.
Noonan’s book is illustrated with photographs and stories.
Noonan, John T. Jr. and Edward McGylnn Gaffney Jr., Religious
Freedom: History, Cases, and Other
Materials on the Interaction of Religion and Government. New York:
Foundation Press, 2001. (Casebook)
Nord, Warren A. and Charles C. Haynes, Taking Religion
Seriously Across the Curriculum.
Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and
Curriculum Development, 1998.
Nord and Haynes have
provided a resource for those teaching about religion in public schools. The
book underscores the point that while schools cannot practice religion,
religion should be taken seriously and included in the curriculum.
Parry, Pam, On Guard for Religious Liberty: Six Decades
of the Baptist Joint Committee. Macon, Georgia:
Smyth and Helwys, 1996.
Pam Parry tells the story of the long history and
contributions of the Baptist Joint Committee on Public Affairs. With a Foreword
by Senator Mark Hatfield and with first hand accounts of the victories won for
religious liberty, this book provides unique insight and serves as a testament
to the work of the BJC.
Pfeffer, Leo, Church, State, and Freedom. Boston: Beacon Press,
1967.
Church, State, and Freedom is
an extensive study of the subject of religious liberty. Divided into sixteen chapters and over five
hundred pages, the book covers in great detail the origins and “present”
understandings of the church state relationship.
Pinson, William
M. Jr. Baptists and Religious Liberty: The Freedom Road. Dallas, Texas: BaptistWay Press, 2007.
Baptists
and Religious Liberty: The Freedom Road is a simple, concise, almost
too-easy-to-read statement of why Baptists historically have fought for church
and state separation, as well as why Baptists should continue to do so. While perhaps too oversimplified for
religious scholars, the book provides for the layperson a great general
overview of the historical Baptist movement, as well as the doctrinal reasons
for freedom of and from religion on the part of a government.
Pleasants,
Phyllis R., Freedom for the Journey. Richmond, Virginia:
Center for Baptist Heritage and Studies, 2002.
Freedom for the Journey is a
thoughtful guide to understanding some of the distinguished principles of early
Baptists. The book is structured around
four freedoms “Freedom to Assemble, Freedom to Read and Interpret Scripture,
Freedom to Follow and Freedom for Religion.”
Posner, Sarah. God’s
Profits: Faith, Fraud, and the Republican Crusade for Values Voters. Sausalito, CA:
PoliPointPress, LLC., 2008
Posner, an
investigative journalist, examines the “shady” financial and political activities of prominent prosperity gospel
televangelists who use their reinterpretation
of the Bible to profit from the hopes and fears of their congregants, thus reaping the means to wield
influence within the Republican Party and
the Bush White House.
Pullen, Bruce
Reed, Profiles in Faith: Discovering
Baptist Beginnings. West Conshohocken, PA:
Infinity Publishing, 2006.
Pullen combines history, travel, and
photography to offer a guide on exploring the formation of Baptist
beliefs. He recommends places to visit,
and examines the contributions of related historical figures such as Roger
Williams, Charles Spurgeon, Thomas Helwys, etc, to the emergence of the free
church tradition.
Ragosta, John A., Wellspring
of Liberty.
New York: Oxford University
Press, 2010.
Ragosta
offers a history of the role Virginia
played in shaping the separation
of church and state present in today’s society. Originally a strict Anglican
colony, Virginia
needed the support of the many religious dissenters in the
state once the revolution broke out. Having demanded religious tolerance in exchange
for men to join the state militia, dissenters in Virginia started a debate that would
shape our constitution.
Ramsay, William M., The Wall of Separation: A Primer on
Church and State. Louisville:
Westminster/John Knox Press, 1989.
Ramsey offers an
introduction to church and state. He
outlines contemporary threat to church-state separation.
Reichley, James
A., Faith in Politics. Washington
D.C.: Brookings Institution Press 2002.
Reichley provides a critical look
at the practical and philosophical questions inspired by religious involvement
in politics. He examines the historical
evolution of church - state debate in the country. He finally concludes with a defense of the
presence of religion in civic life.
Rougeau, Vincent D., Christians
in the American Empire: Faith and Citizenship in the New World Order. New York: Oxford
University Press, 2008.
Rougeau
argues Christianity has been appropriated and distorted to justify American imperialism and the military
violence necessary to expand it. Rougeau suggests
that it is unwise for Christians to focus on hot-button issues as an appropriate way to actualize faith
commitments in the public realm. Ultimately, Rougeau
calls on American Christians to reject the vision of faith or notion proffered by the religious right in favor of a
Christian cosmopolitanism.
Schaaf, Gregory, Franklin,
Jefferson & Madison: On Religion and the State. Santa
Fe, NM: CIAC Press,
2004.
By addressing the formative views
of the founding fathers, this book sheds light on the “original intent” of
Constitution and Bill of Rights, and in particular shows that each of these men
desired separation of church and state and disapproved of any federal tax
dollars being appropriated to favored religious groups or churches. Franklin
is quoted as follows: “When a religion is good, I conceive it will support
itself.”
Schippe, Cullen & Chuck Stetson, The Bible and its Influence. BLP Publishing, 2005.
This is a textbook designed for
public high school courses in biblical literacy. Based on the idea that the Bible has had an
undeniable influence on Western culture, the book attempts to demonstrate that
influence through a re-telling of scripture.
The body of the primary text of the book traces the narrative of
scripture, and the margins are the forum where certain aspects of scripture are
shown in some form of pop culture, but without context. While there may be little direct religious
instruction, the book comes off as an attempt to clarify the Bible and
Christianity as the source of the all significant culture.
Shoemaker, H. Stephen, Being
Christian in an Almost Christian Nation. Nashville: Abingdon
Press, 2006.
Shoemaker
looks at a post-9/11 America
from the perspective of both a Christian and a
minister. He focuses on how American
Christians should act in light of America’s defining
mission, religion and politics, religious pluralism, economic globalization,
moral “culture wars”, and the separation of church and state.
Shurden, Walter B., ed., Proclaiming the Baptist Vision:
Religious Liberty. Macon:
Smyth and Helwys, 1997.
Shurden
has edited a collection of sermons pertaining to the Baptist contribution to
religious freedom. Running through the text is the central theme that the United States
has never been a Christian nation and that the principle of freedom of conscience
and the separation of church and state defines what it means to be Baptist.
Stark, Rodney, The
Victory of Reason: How Christianity Led to Freedom, Capitalism, and Western Success. New York: Random House, 2005.
Stark
advances the idea that Christianity and its related institutions are, in fact, directly responsible for the most significant
intellectual, political, scientific, and economic
breakthroughs of the past millennium. Christian theology, Stark asserts, is the very font of reason: while the
world’s other great belief systems emphasized mystery,
obedience, or introspection, Christianity alone embraced logic and reason as the path toward enlightenment,
freedom, and progress.
Stokes, Anson Phelps and Leo Pfeffer, Church and State in
the United States.
New York: Harper and Row, 1950.
Church and State in the United
States examines the “foundations of American church-state separation and
religious freedom,” “the establishment and adjustment of churches independent
of the state,” and what were “modern and contemporary problems and their
solution.”
Strauss, David A., The Living Constitution. New York: Oxford
University Press Inc., 2010.
Arguing
against those who view the constitution as unchanging and set in stone, Strauss
provides historical evidence and analysis revealing the constitution as a living
document. Not only is it subject to change, but there is a judicial precedent of
it within the nation’s history.
Suarez, Ray. The Holy Vote. New
York, NY:
HarperCollins, 2006.
Suarez examines the polarization
occurring in the realm of religion and politics. He interviews people on both sides of the ideological
front about hot button issues like
gay marriage and the creationism/evolution debate in public schools, helping the reader to understand why we are a
nation divided.
Sullivan, Winnifred
Faller. The Impossibility of
Religious Freedom. Princeton,
NJ: Princeton University Press, 2005.
Sullivan
offers that laws protecting religious freedom, once so fiercely defended for the good of all people, are now hindering
such liberties. Using the case of Warren
vs. Boca Raton, she shows how hard it can be to exercise these precious freedoms.
Thames, H. Knox, Chris
Seiple, and Amy Rowe, International
Religious Freedom Advocacy: A Guide to
Organizations, Law, and NGOs. Waco,
TX: Baylor University Press, 2009.
This book
quips activists and policymakers alike with an intimate knowledge of the governmental institutions, NGOs, and laws
that work to safeguard religious liberties
abroad. Beginning with an overview of international legal protections, these advocacy veterans explain the
intricacies of and resources available within the
United Nations, European Union, Council of Europe, Organization of American States, African Union, and more.
Thomas, Oliver, 10 Things Your Minister Wants to Tell You
(But Can’t Because He Needs the Job). New York, NY: St. Martin’s Press,
2007.
Thomas addresses some of the
controversial issues facing Christianity -- including homosexuality, separation
of church and state, evolution v. intelligent design, women in the pulpit – and
in so doing emphasizes that religion is not built on certainty, but faith. Thomas calls Christians to a more authentic
and biblical faith, and recognizes the importance of religious freedom to that
goal.
Waldman, Steven, Founding
Faith: Providence, Politics, and the Birth of
Religious Freedom in America. New York: Random House, 2008.
Waldman
narrates the story of how our nation’s Founders forged a new approach to religious liberty. Founding Faith vividly
describes the religious development of five Founders: Benjamin Franklin, John Adams, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, and James Madison. Waldman reveals
the history of religious freedom to
be dramatic, unexpected, paradoxical, and inspiring.
Walker, J. Brent, Church
State Matters: Fighting for Religious Liberty in Our Nation’s Capital. Macon,
GA: Mercer
University Press, 2008.
Walker articulates a
cogent Baptist understanding of the importance of the First Amendment’s religion clauses in
protecting our God-given religious liberty. This collection of essays, speeches, sermons, and congressional
testimony provides a living history of
the modern era of the life of the Baptist Joint Committee.
Walker, J. Brent, The Trophy of Baptists:
Words to Celebrate Religious Liberty. Macon
GA: Smyth & Helwys, 2003.
The Trophy of Baptists is a
collection of sermons and essays on the Baptist heritage of religious
liberty. The sermons and essays were
written by Baptists who run the breadth of the political and ideological
spectrum. It is a good resource for churches, classes and sermons.
Walker, J. Brent, Religious Liberty and
Church-State Separation. Brentwood, TN: Baptist History and Heritage Society, 2003
Religious Liberty and
Church-State Separation is a short resource for the current debate on the
separation of church and state. It gives a brief discourse on Baptist history
and an explanation of contemporary attitudes and challenges within the debate.
Wallis, Jim. God’s
Politics: Why the Right Gets It Wrong and the Left Doesn’t Get It. New
York: Harper Collins Publishers, 2005.
Wallis critiques recent partisan
attempts “to politicize God” by focusing on the religious right and secular
fundamentalists. He discusses his
beliefs on what role religion should play and how religion should be regarded
in politics and public life.
West, Ellis. The Religion Clauses of the First Amendment.
Lanham, Maryland: Lexington Books, 2011.
This is an
in-depth look at the Religion Clauses of the Constitution—particularly at the formation and intent that led
to their inclusion. It examines the
merits of the argument that the
religion clauses are included to ensure states’ rights. Ultimately, the book finds that the
religion clauses are a protection for individuals’ rights, not those of
the states.
Wills, Garry.
(2007). Head and Heart: American
Christianities. Penguin Press: London,
England
The struggle within American
Christianity, Garry Wills argues, now and throughout America’s history, is between the
head and the heart: between reason and emotion, Enlightenment and
Evangelicalism. With eloquence and authority, Wills explains the history of
Christianity in America, the
importance of the Disestablishment of the Church and State and how religiosity
in America
thrived only due to the protections of religious freedom. Wills takes the
reader through the modern movements of Christianity and the “faith-based”
administration of George W. Bush. He examines the political prowess of Karl
Rove and his ability to build a vast republican majority on the shoulders of
Christian Evangelicals. Finally, Wills provides insight into a way past Rove
and the empowerment of the majority of moderates who wish to calm religious extremism
in this country.
Witte, John, Religion
and the American Constitutional Experiment, 2nd edition. Boulder:
Westview Press, 2005.
Witte
argues “The First Amendment…is a synthesis of both the theological convictions
and the political calculations of the eighteenth-century American founders.”
Witte uses this understanding with key theological and political understandings
of the founders to provide a fresh criticism of the recent debates over the
first amendment. This new edition analyzes recent court decisions and includes
summaries of 161 Supreme Court cases on religious liberty. He views America not as a “Christian
Nation,” but as a nation with the soul of a “sanctuary” of churches and
consciences.”
Witte, John, God's
Joust, God’s Justice: Law and Religion in the Western Tradition. Grand
Rapids, MI: William
B. Eerdman’s Publishing Company, 2006.
Witte
covers more than 2,000 years of legal history, examining the points at which
religion and law have collided. He
discusses many topics -- the contributions of religion to historical advances
in human rights, the separation of church and state – and provides an effective
survey of the history of intersections of religion and law.
Whitten, Mark Weldon, The Myth of Christian America: What
You Need to Know about the Separation of Church and State. Macon: Smyth and
Helwys,1999.
This book seeks to refute the claims of
“conservative Christians” that the founders of the United States established a
“Christian America.” Whitten attacks
this myth by pointing to the intentions of the founding fathers and detailing
what he feels is the real legacy of the first amendment, church and state
separation.
Wogaman,
Philip J., Christian Perspectives On Politics: Revised and Expanded. Louisville, Kentucky: Westminster
John Knox Press, 2000.
Christian Perspectives On
Politics explores the contributions that Christians have made to civil
society, examining the origins of political activity as an essential part of
human society. The book is divided into
four parts and ends with an epilogue that reiterates Gods involvement in human
affairs through history by way of the Christian community.
Wood, James E., ed., First Freedom: Religion and the Bill
of Rights. Waco, Texas: J.M. Dawson Institute of
Church-State Studies, 1990.
James
Wood has edited a collection of essays originally composed for a symposium on
Church-State issues at Baylor
University. The
contributions include essays on the theological sources on the religion clauses
by David Little as well as analysis on the status of the Bill of Rights and
their incorporation.
Wright, Nigel G.
(2005). Free Church, Free State: The positive baptist vision.
Paternoster Press: London, England.
Nigel Wright attempts to offer as
indicated by Paul Avis on the books cover, “An accessible and non-polemical
introduction to Baptist ecclesiology.” Wright accomplishes this by offering the
historical and theological underpinnings for two Christian traditions: Catholic and Baptist. Wright intentionally does not capitalize the traditions to
imply that each represents a larger grouping of Christian faith traditions than
those typically associated to the Roman Catholic Church and the Protestant
Baptist denomination. Rather, he defines Baptist
as traditions that stem from the radical wing of the Reformation, all valuing
the autonomy of the local church, the freedom of conscience, and the believer’s
baptism; such as Mennonites, Bretheren, Pentecostals, Disciples of Christ, and
in contemporary terms would encompass independent and nondenominational
churches. All of these traditions could more commonly carry the terms
‘baptistic’ or ‘Baptist-compatible.’ The term catholic, Wright defines as, the larger grouping of Catholic and
Orthodox doctrines, placing greater emphasis on the tradition and governance of
the Church.
Wright concludes his book
suggesting strategies that clearly demonstrate his hope for the promotion of a
pluralistic society and understanding as well as engagement between the two
faith traditions. Wright warns against the dangers of habitual fragmentation,
so often seen in Baptist traditions.
He also highlights lessons from catholic governance that the Baptists could apply to their own
conventions, but warns that the organization of Catholics can be viewed as a threat to soul freedom and church
autonomy.
J. Brent Walker
Rev. 1/2011
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