Description

Book Synopsis
John Compton shows how evangelicals, not New Deal reformers, paved the way for the most important constitutional developments of the twentieth century. Their early-1800s crusade to destroy property that made immorality possible challenged founding-era legal protections of slavery, lotteries, and liquor sales and opened the door to progressivism.

Trade Review
John W. Compton’s The Evangelical Origins of the Living Constitution is an outstanding addition to the literature on American constitutional development. The book argues that the progressive critique of the Constitution in the early twentieth century that led to the New Deal was presaged and to some extent made possible by earlier social movements of evangelical Christians in the nineteenth century who sought to ban alcohol and lotteries. The idea that the Constitution’s practical meaning must adjust to changing social conditions is often associated with the progressive critique of the 1920s and 1930s. But Compton shows that evangelicals made similar moves decades before in order to reshape constitutional understandings and justify government power to ban alcohol and lottery sales… He shines new light on the history of American constitutional development. He does a tremendous service in recalling cases and debates that were once very important to constitutional theory but are no longer… The Evangelical Origins of the Living Constitution is a truly valuable book that greatly enhances our understanding of the development of constitutional law in the nineteenth century. After reading this book, and grasping its lessons, you will not be able to teach the basic Constitutional Law course the same way again. That is not true of many books, and it is a mark of its excellence and its importance. -- Jack Balkin * Balkinization *
[An] intriguing history of morals legislation and American constitutional history… Compton rightly points out that many of the classic histories of American law treat the 19th-century courts as consistently moralistic, without appreciating the dramatic shift that took place in judicial doctrine and the awkward tension this created with earlier cases. He has exposed a remarkable sequence of developments in American constitutional history… Compton rightly draws attention to the role that the morals cases played in the emergence of the living Constitution. -- David Skeel * Books & Culture *
Compton’s history is compelling… This is a fascinating book that sheds much light on how our views on the proper scope of government have changed—for the worse. -- George Leef * Forbes *
John Compton’s superb book provides a fascinating account of the influence that evangelical attempts to stamp out drinking and lotteries had on American constitutional development. That, in itself, is worth the price of admission. -- Mark Graber, University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law
The book’s clear, forcibly argued, and original thesis challenges some of the most influential scholarship in its field. -- Ken I. Kersch, Boston College
As scholars and pundits debate whether the New Deal order is coming to an end, questions about its inception are particularly timely, and the author’s engagement with the question of how morals can influence constitutional politics is quite salient at this time. -- Julie Novkov, University at Albany, State University of New York

The Evangelical Origins of the Living

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    A Hardback by John W. Compton

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      View other formats and editions of The Evangelical Origins of the Living by John W. Compton

      Publisher: Harvard University Press
      Publication Date: 17/03/2014
      ISBN13: 9780674726796, 978-0674726796
      ISBN10: 0674726790

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      John Compton shows how evangelicals, not New Deal reformers, paved the way for the most important constitutional developments of the twentieth century. Their early-1800s crusade to destroy property that made immorality possible challenged founding-era legal protections of slavery, lotteries, and liquor sales and opened the door to progressivism.

      Trade Review
      John W. Compton’s The Evangelical Origins of the Living Constitution is an outstanding addition to the literature on American constitutional development. The book argues that the progressive critique of the Constitution in the early twentieth century that led to the New Deal was presaged and to some extent made possible by earlier social movements of evangelical Christians in the nineteenth century who sought to ban alcohol and lotteries. The idea that the Constitution’s practical meaning must adjust to changing social conditions is often associated with the progressive critique of the 1920s and 1930s. But Compton shows that evangelicals made similar moves decades before in order to reshape constitutional understandings and justify government power to ban alcohol and lottery sales… He shines new light on the history of American constitutional development. He does a tremendous service in recalling cases and debates that were once very important to constitutional theory but are no longer… The Evangelical Origins of the Living Constitution is a truly valuable book that greatly enhances our understanding of the development of constitutional law in the nineteenth century. After reading this book, and grasping its lessons, you will not be able to teach the basic Constitutional Law course the same way again. That is not true of many books, and it is a mark of its excellence and its importance. -- Jack Balkin * Balkinization *
      [An] intriguing history of morals legislation and American constitutional history… Compton rightly points out that many of the classic histories of American law treat the 19th-century courts as consistently moralistic, without appreciating the dramatic shift that took place in judicial doctrine and the awkward tension this created with earlier cases. He has exposed a remarkable sequence of developments in American constitutional history… Compton rightly draws attention to the role that the morals cases played in the emergence of the living Constitution. -- David Skeel * Books & Culture *
      Compton’s history is compelling… This is a fascinating book that sheds much light on how our views on the proper scope of government have changed—for the worse. -- George Leef * Forbes *
      John Compton’s superb book provides a fascinating account of the influence that evangelical attempts to stamp out drinking and lotteries had on American constitutional development. That, in itself, is worth the price of admission. -- Mark Graber, University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law
      The book’s clear, forcibly argued, and original thesis challenges some of the most influential scholarship in its field. -- Ken I. Kersch, Boston College
      As scholars and pundits debate whether the New Deal order is coming to an end, questions about its inception are particularly timely, and the author’s engagement with the question of how morals can influence constitutional politics is quite salient at this time. -- Julie Novkov, University at Albany, State University of New York

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