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"A history of religion's role in the American liberal tradition through the eyes of seven transformative thinkers. Today we associate liberal thought and politics with secularism. When we argue over whether the nation's founders meant to keep religion out of politics, the godless side is said to be liberal. But the role of religion in American politics has always been far more nuanced and complex than today's debates would suggest and closer to the heart of American intellectual life than is commonly understood. American democracy was intended by its creators to be more than just a political system, and in The Religion of Democracy, historian Amy Kittelstrom shows how religion and democracy have worked together as universal ideals in American culture--and as guides to moral action and the social practice of treating one another as equals who deserve to be free. The first people in the world to call themselves 'liberals' were New England Christians in the early republic, for whom being liberal meant being receptive to a range of beliefs and values. The story begins in the mid-eighteenth century, when the first Boston liberals brought the Enlightenment into Reformation Christianity, tying equality and liberty to the human soul at the same moment these root concepts were being tied to democracy. The nineteenth century saw the development of a robust liberal intellectual culture in America, built on open-minded pursuit of truth and acceptance of human diversity. By the twentieth century, what had begun in Boston as a narrow, patrician democracy transformed into a religion of democracy in which the new liberals of modern America believed that where different viewpoints overlap, common truth is revealed. The core American principles of liberty and equality were never free from religion but full of religion. The Religion of Democracy re-creates the liberal conversation from the eighteenth century to the twentieth by tracing the lived connections among seven thinkers through whom they knew, what they read and wrote, where they went, and how they expressed their opinions--from John Adams to William James to Jane Addams; from Boston to Chicago to Berkeley. Sweeping and ambitious, The Religion of Democracy is a lively narrative of quintessentially American ideas as they were forged, debated, and remade across our history"--
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
Politics and government, Democracy, Intellectual life, Christianity and politics, Religion, Politicians, Christians, Intellectuals, Moral conditions, Liberalism, Biography, History, United states, moral conditions, HISTORY / United States / 19th Century, HISTORY / United States / General, RELIGION / History, EnlightenmentPlaces
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Religion of Democracy: Seven Liberals and the American Moral Tradition
2017, Penguin Publishing Group
in English
0143108131 9780143108139
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The religion of democracy: seven liberals and the American moral tradition
2015, Penguin Press
in English
1594204853 9781594204852
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Book Details
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Includes bibliographical references and index.
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- Created July 18, 2019
- 9 revisions
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| October 25, 2025 | Edited by MARC Bot | import existing book |
| January 15, 2023 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
| December 20, 2022 | Edited by MARC Bot | import existing book |
| December 10, 2022 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
| July 18, 2019 | Created by MARC Bot | Imported from marc_openlibraries_sanfranciscopubliclibrary MARC record |

