Description
Book SynopsisFor the first time, the national constitution's religion clauses were extended by the United States Supreme Court to all state and local governments. This title tells the stories of passionate believers who turned to the law and the courts to facilitate a diversity of spiritual practice.
Trade ReviewA masterful study…insightful and provocative, well-written and entertaining. I know of no other book like it. -- Mark Silk, author of
One Nation, Divisible: How Regional Religious Differences Shape American PoliticsThis dazzling book explores the Jehovah's Witnesses, Black Muslims, white evangelical Protestant women, and others who, beginning in the 1940s, made law crucial to religious life. It is a wonderful read that brilliantly illuminates the creative tension between law and religion in recent American history. -- Laura Kalman, Professor of History, University of California, Santa Barbara
Gordon puts flesh and blood on the most heated law and religion disputes of the last seven decades. Looking at these disputes primarily through the religious eyes of colorful activists committed to making a constitutional difference, she makes legal and religious history come alive in an important and engaging way. -- Steve Shiffrin, author of The Religious Left and Church-State Relations
Gordon demonstrates how the dazzling variety of religious expression in America since the 1930s has outpaced the capacity of judges and legal theorists to construct a stable constitutional law of religion. By implication, the book also raises questions about whether any constitutional theory can keep pace with the dynamic pluralism of American constitutional argument. -- William E. Nelson, Weinfeld Professor of Law, New York University School of Law
By exploring the odd and interesting lives and lawsuits of dissenting twentieth-century believers, Sarah Barringer Gordon provides us with a novel and compelling modern constitutional history of American religion. -- Hendrik Hartog, author of
Man and Wife in America: A HistorySally Gordon turns the accepted wisdom neatly on its head by demonstrating that it is the extraordinary power of the religious impulse that has shaped--and continues to shape--American law, not the other way around...[An] excellent book. -- Burt Neuborne * Forward *
The Spirit of the Law subtly suggests that the era of strong evangelical influence in America culture may be at least temporarily over. -- David Skeel * Books & Culture *
Table of Contents* Preface * The New Constitutional World * The Worship of Idols * The Almighty and the Dollar * Faith as Liberation * Holy War * Covenants of Love * Epilogue * Notes * Acknowledgments * Index