Founding Sins : How a Group of Antislavery Radicals Fought to Put Christ into the Constitution by Joseph S. Moore (2015, Hardcover)

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Product Identifiers

PublisherOxford University Press, Incorporated
ISBN-100190269243
ISBN-139780190269241
eBay Product ID (ePID)211196195

Product Key Features

Book TitleFounding Sins : How a Group of Antislavery Radicals Fought to Put Christ Into the Constitution
Number of Pages232 Pages
LanguageEnglish
TopicUnited States / Revolutionary Period (1775-1800), General
Publication Year2015
GenreReligion, History
AuthorJosephs. Moore
FormatHardcover

Dimensions

Item Height0.9 in
Item Weight15.6 Oz
Item Length9.2 in
Item Width6.3 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceTrade
LCCN2015-009829
Dewey Edition23
Reviews"Filling a gap in scholarship, Moore shows that the Scottish Covenanters in North America, despite their small size and wide dispersal, significantly shaped the outcomes of key moments in American history ... Moore provides a helpful and at times fascinating study." -- Stephen Wolfe, Religious Studies Review "Founding Sins is impressive in its concise presentation of the Covenanters' history and their interaction with American politics. It succeeds in its goal of telling the story of "the most important religious sect in American history that no one remembers today". Moore also convincingly demonstrates how the legacy of Samuel Rutherford, as embodied by the Covenanters, is opposed to that of John Locke and Thomas Jefferson, thus falsifying at least one key claim made about the Christian character of the American founding...Founding Sins is a helpful and important addition to a conversation that continues apace." -- Steven Wedgeworth, Christ Church Lakeland, Florida, The Journal of Religion "Joseph S. Moore contributes to this scholarly moment with a fresh study of an overlooked group within the Scottish Presbyterian Atlantic world: the Covenanters."--The Journal of Southern History "An engaging, well-researched, and ambitious book." --Journal of Religion "Slim but punches well above its weight a product of Moore s prodigious research. One comes away nodding in agreement when Moore calls his subjects 'the most important religious sect in American history that no one remembers today.'"--The North Carolina Historical Review "An exemplary history book. Thoroughly researched and skillfully crafted."--Journal of Southern Religion "[An] engaging book, one of value at all levels for persons interested in church-state relations and US religious history. Highly recommended."--CHOICE "Joseph Moore's comprehensive treatment of the Covenanting tradition explains why it arose in seventeenth-century Scotland, how it survived internal schisms and perilous migrations, and what large influence (as a small group) it exerted on American history in the era of the Civil War. The book offers particularly cogent explanations for how southern Covenanters could oppose slavery and why their understanding of 'Christian America' differed so dramatically from modern notions of that ideal. It is a fine book." --Mark Noll, author of In the Beginning Was the Word: The Bible and American Public Life, 1492-1783(2015) "The Covenanters are the most important forgotten religious sect in United States history. Long before political conservatives complained that the nation was not a Christian one, Covenanters did so. Long before many white Christians denounced slavery and racism, Covenanters did so. Founding Sins is a story that needs to be remembered: how these Scotch-Irish Presbyterians challenged every facet of the nation's religion and politics, its system of slavery, and its failures of freedom. This is an extraordinary book." --Edward J. Blum, co-author of The Color of Christ: The Son of God and the Saga of Race in America "How can the United States have been founded as a 'Christian nation' when Jesus was not mentioned in the Constitution and the Founding Fathers owned slaves? Joseph Moore's readers will be surprised to learn that this argument did not come from twenty-first century secularists, but from the Covenanters, a group of conservative Calvinists in early America. Moore tells their story with erudition and insight." --John Fea, author of Was America Founded as a Christian Nation?: A Historical Introduction "[A] deftly focused, often-witty account of the Scottish Covenanters Pithy and stylish."--Journal of American History, "Founding Sins is impressive in its concise presentation of the Covenanters' history and their interaction with American politics. It succeeds in its goal of telling the story of "the most important religious sect in American history that no one remembers today". Moore also convincingly demonstrates how the legacy of Samuel Rutherford, as embodied by the Covenanters, is opposed to that of John Locke and Thomas Jefferson, thus falsifying at least one key claim made about the Christian character of the American founding...Founding Sins is a helpful and important addition to a conversation that continues apace." -- Steven Wedgeworth, Christ Church Lakeland, Florida, The Journal of Religion "Joseph S. Moore contributes to this scholarly moment with a fresh study of an overlooked group within the Scottish Presbyterian Atlantic world: the Covenanters."--The Journal of Southern History "An engaging, well-researched, and ambitious book." --Journal of Religion "Slim but punches well above its weight a product of Moore s prodigious research. One comes away nodding in agreement when Moore calls his subjects 'the most important religious sect in American history that no one remembers today.'"--The North Carolina Historical Review "An exemplary history book. Thoroughly researched and skillfully crafted."--Journal of Southern Religion "[An] engaging book, one of value at all levels for persons interested in church-state relations and US religious history. Highly recommended."--CHOICE "Joseph Moore's comprehensive treatment of the Covenanting tradition explains why it arose in seventeenth-century Scotland, how it survived internal schisms and perilous migrations, and what large influence (as a small group) it exerted on American history in the era of the Civil War. The book offers particularly cogent explanations for how southern Covenanters could oppose slavery and why their understanding of 'Christian America' differed so dramatically from modern notions of that ideal. It is a fine book." --Mark Noll, author of In the Beginning Was the Word: The Bible and American Public Life, 1492-1783(2015) "The Covenanters are the most important forgotten religious sect in United States history. Long before political conservatives complained that the nation was not a Christian one, Covenanters did so. Long before many white Christians denounced slavery and racism, Covenanters did so. Founding Sins is a story that needs to be remembered: how these Scotch-Irish Presbyterians challenged every facet of the nation's religion and politics, its system of slavery, and its failures of freedom. This is an extraordinary book." --Edward J. Blum, co-author of The Color of Christ: The Son of God and the Saga of Race in America "How can the United States have been founded as a 'Christian nation' when Jesus was not mentioned in the Constitution and the Founding Fathers owned slaves? Joseph Moore's readers will be surprised to learn that this argument did not come from twenty-first century secularists, but from the Covenanters, a group of conservative Calvinists in early America. Moore tells their story with erudition and insight." --John Fea, author of Was America Founded as a Christian Nation?: A Historical Introduction "[A] deftly focused, often-witty account of the Scottish Covenanters Pithy and stylish."--Journal of American History, "Joseph S. Moore contributes to this scholarly moment with a fresh study of an overlooked group within the Scottish Presbyterian Atlantic world: the Covenanters."--The Journal of Southern History "An engaging, well-researched, and ambitious book." --Journal of Religion "Slim but punches well above its weight a product of Moore s prodigious research. One comes away nodding in agreement when Moore calls his subjects 'the most important religious sect in American history that no one remembers today.'"--The North Carolina Historical Review "An exemplary history book. Thoroughly researched and skillfully crafted."--Journal of Southern Religion "[An] engaging book, one of value at all levels for persons interested in church-state relations and US religious history. Highly recommended."--CHOICE "Joseph Moore's comprehensive treatment of the Covenanting tradition explains why it arose in seventeenth-century Scotland, how it survived internal schisms and perilous migrations, and what large influence (as a small group) it exerted on American history in the era of the Civil War. The book offers particularly cogent explanations for how southern Covenanters could oppose slavery and why their understanding of 'Christian America' differed so dramatically from modern notions of that ideal. It is a fine book." --Mark Noll, author of In the Beginning Was the Word: The Bible and American Public Life, 1492-1783(2015) "The Covenanters are the most important forgotten religious sect in United States history. Long before political conservatives complained that the nation was not a Christian one, Covenanters did so. Long before many white Christians denounced slavery and racism, Covenanters did so. Founding Sins is a story that needs to be remembered: how these Scotch-Irish Presbyterians challenged every facet of the nation's religion and politics, its system of slavery, and its failures of freedom. This is an extraordinary book." --Edward J. Blum, co-author of The Color of Christ: The Son of God and the Saga of Race in America "How can the United States have been founded as a 'Christian nation' when Jesus was not mentioned in the Constitution and the Founding Fathers owned slaves? Joseph Moore's readers will be surprised to learn that this argument did not come from twenty-first century secularists, but from the Covenanters, a group of conservative Calvinists in early America. Moore tells their story with erudition and insight." --John Fea, author of Was America Founded as a Christian Nation?: A Historical Introduction "[A] deftly focused, often-witty account of the Scottish Covenanters Pithy and stylish."--Journal of American History, "Slim but punches well above its weight a product of Moore s prodigious research. One comes away nodding in agreement when Moore calls his subjects 'the most important religious sect in American history that no one remembers today.'"--The North Carolina Historical Review "An exemplary history book. Thoroughly researched and skillfully crafted."--Journal of Southern Religion "[An] engaging book, one of value at all levels for persons interested in church-state relations and US religious history. Highly recommended."--CHOICE "Joseph Moore's comprehensive treatment of the Covenanting tradition explains why it arose in seventeenth-century Scotland, how it survived internal schisms and perilous migrations, and what large influence (as a small group) it exerted on American history in the era of the Civil War. The book offers particularly cogent explanations for how southern Covenanters could oppose slavery and why their understanding of 'Christian America' differed so dramatically from modern notions of that ideal. It is a fine book." --Mark Noll, author of In the Beginning Was the Word: The Bible and American Public Life, 1492-1783(2015) "The Covenanters are the most important forgotten religious sect in United States history. Long before political conservatives complained that the nation was not a Christian one, Covenanters did so. Long before many white Christians denounced slavery and racism, Covenanters did so. Founding Sins is a story that needs to be remembered: how these Scotch-Irish Presbyterians challenged every facet of the nation's religion and politics, its system of slavery, and its failures of freedom. This is an extraordinary book." --Edward J. Blum, co-author of The Color of Christ: The Son of God and the Saga of Race in America "How can the United States have been founded as a 'Christian nation' when Jesus was not mentioned in the Constitution and the Founding Fathers owned slaves? Joseph Moore's readers will be surprised to learn that this argument did not come from twenty-first century secularists, but from the Covenanters, a group of conservative Calvinists in early America. Moore tells their story with erudition and insight." --John Fea, author of Was America Founded as a Christian Nation?: A Historical Introduction, "Slim but punches well above its weight a product of Moore s prodigious research. One comes away nodding in agreement when Moore calls his subjects 'the most important religious sect in American history that no one remembers today.'"--The North Carolina Historical Review "An exemplary history book. Thoroughly researched and skillfully crafted."--Journal of Southern Religion "[An] engaging book, one of value at all levels for persons interested in church-state relations and US religious history. Highly recommended."--CHOICE "Joseph Moore's comprehensive treatment of the Covenanting tradition explains why it arose in seventeenth-century Scotland, how it survived internal schisms and perilous migrations, and what large influence (as a small group) it exerted on American history in the era of the Civil War. The book offers particularly cogent explanations for how southern Covenanters could oppose slavery and why their understanding of 'Christian America' differed so dramatically from modern notions of that ideal. It is a fine book." --Mark Noll, author of In the Beginning Was the Word: The Bible and American Public Life, 1492-1783(2015) "The Covenanters are the most important forgotten religious sect in United States history. Long before political conservatives complained that the nation was not a Christian one, Covenanters did so. Long before many white Christians denounced slavery and racism, Covenanters did so. Founding Sins is a story that needs to be remembered: how these Scotch-Irish Presbyterians challenged every facet of the nation's religion and politics, its system of slavery, and its failures of freedom. This is an extraordinary book." --Edward J. Blum, co-author of The Color of Christ: The Son of God and the Saga of Race in America "How can the United States have been founded as a 'Christian nation' when Jesus was not mentioned in the Constitution and the Founding Fathers owned slaves? Joseph Moore's readers will be surprised to learn that this argument did not come from twenty-first century secularists, but from the Covenanters, a group of conservative Calvinists in early America. Moore tells their story with erudition and insight." --John Fea, author of Was America Founded as a Christian Nation?: A Historical Introduction "[A] deftly focused, often-witty account of the Scottish Covenanters Pithy and stylish."--Journal of American History, "[An] engaging book, one of value at all levels for persons interested in church-state relations and US religious history. Highly recommended."--CHOICE "Joseph Moore's comprehensive treatment of the Covenanting tradition explains why it arose in seventeenth-century Scotland, how it survived internal schisms and perilous migrations, and what large influence (as a small group) it exerted on American history in the era of the Civil War. The book offers particularly cogent explanations for how southern Covenanters could oppose slavery and why their understanding of 'Christian America' differed so dramatically from modern notions of that ideal. It is a fine book." --Mark Noll, author of In the Beginning Was the Word: The Bible and American Public Life, 1492-1783(2015) "The Covenanters are the most important forgotten religious sect in United States history. Long before political conservatives complained that the nation was not a Christian one, Covenanters did so. Long before many white Christians denounced slavery and racism, Covenanters did so. Founding Sins is a story that needs to be remembered: how these Scotch-Irish Presbyterians challenged every facet of the nation's religion and politics, its system of slavery, and its failures of freedom. This is an extraordinary book." --Edward J. Blum, co-author of The Color of Christ: The Son of God and the Saga of Race in America "How can the United States have been founded as a 'Christian nation' when Jesus was not mentioned in the Constitution and the Founding Fathers owned slaves? Joseph Moore's readers will be surprised to learn that this argument did not come from twenty-first century secularists, but from the Covenanters, a group of conservative Calvinists in early America. Moore tells their story with erudition and insight." --John Fea, author of Was America Founded as a Christian Nation?: A Historical Introduction, "An exemplary history book. Thoroughly researched and skillfully crafted."--Journal of Southern Religion "[An] engaging book, one of value at all levels for persons interested in church-state relations and US religious history. Highly recommended."--CHOICE "Joseph Moore's comprehensive treatment of the Covenanting tradition explains why it arose in seventeenth-century Scotland, how it survived internal schisms and perilous migrations, and what large influence (as a small group) it exerted on American history in the era of the Civil War. The book offers particularly cogent explanations for how southern Covenanters could oppose slavery and why their understanding of 'Christian America' differed so dramatically from modern notions of that ideal. It is a fine book." --Mark Noll, author of In the Beginning Was the Word: The Bible and American Public Life, 1492-1783(2015) "The Covenanters are the most important forgotten religious sect in United States history. Long before political conservatives complained that the nation was not a Christian one, Covenanters did so. Long before many white Christians denounced slavery and racism, Covenanters did so. Founding Sins is a story that needs to be remembered: how these Scotch-Irish Presbyterians challenged every facet of the nation's religion and politics, its system of slavery, and its failures of freedom. This is an extraordinary book." --Edward J. Blum, co-author of The Color of Christ: The Son of God and the Saga of Race in America "How can the United States have been founded as a 'Christian nation' when Jesus was not mentioned in the Constitution and the Founding Fathers owned slaves? Joseph Moore's readers will be surprised to learn that this argument did not come from twenty-first century secularists, but from the Covenanters, a group of conservative Calvinists in early America. Moore tells their story with erudition and insight." --John Fea, author of Was America Founded as a Christian Nation?: A Historical Introduction, "Joseph Moore's comprehensive treatment of the Covenanting tradition explains why it arose in seventeenth-century Scotland, how it survived internal schisms and perilous migrations, and what large influence (as a small group) it exerted on American history in the era of the Civil War. The book offers particularly cogent explanations for how southern Covenanters could oppose slavery and why their understanding of 'Christian America' differed so dramatically from modern notions of that ideal. It is a fine book." --Mark Noll, author of In the Beginning Was the Word: The Bible and American Public Life, 1492-1783(2015) "The Covenanters are the most important forgotten religious sect in United States history. Long before political conservatives complained that the nation was not a Christian one, Covenanters did so. Long before many white Christians denounced slavery and racism, Covenanters did so. Founding Sins is a story that needs to be remembered: how these Scotch-Irish Presbyterians challenged every facet of the nation's religion and politics, its system of slavery, and its failures of freedom. This is an extraordinary book." --Edward J. Blum, co-author of The Color of Christ: The Son of God and the Saga of Race in America "How can the United States have been founded as a 'Christian nation' when Jesus was not mentioned in the Constitution and the Founding Fathers owned slaves? Joseph Moore's readers will be surprised to learn that this argument did not come from twenty-first century secularists, but from the Covenanters, a group of conservative Calvinists in early America. Moore tells their story with erudition and insight." --John Fea, author of Was America Founded as a Christian Nation?: A Historical Introduction
Dewey Decimal322/.10973
Table Of ContentAcknowledgementsAbbreviations, Terms, and LanguageIntroduction1. Presbyterian Empire2. The Failure to Found a Christian Nation3. Confronting the Godless Government4. Slavery and the Sin of Secular America5. Rejecting a Christian NationAfterward: Holy Scotland in the Contemporary Christian America DebateNotesBibliographyIndex
SynopsisIn Founding Sins, Joseph Moore examines the forgotten history of the Covenanters, America's first Christian nationalists. He explores how they profoundly shaped American's understandings of the separation of church and state and set the acceptable limits for religion in politics for generations to come., The Covenanters, now mostly forgotten, were America's first Christian nationalists. For two centuries they decried the fact that, in their view, the United States was not a Christian nation because slavery was in the Constitution but Jesus was not. Having once ruled Scotland as a part of a Presbyterian coalition, they longed to convert America to a holy Calvinist vision in which church and state united to form a godly body politic. Their unique story has largely been submerged beneath the histories of the events in which they participated and the famous figures with whom they interacted, making them the most important religious movement in American history that no one remembers.Despite being one of North America's smallest religious sects, the Covenanters found their way into every major revolt. They were God's rebels - just as likely to be Patriots against Britain as they were to be Whiskey Rebels against the federal government. As the nation's earliest and most avowed abolitionists, they had a significant influence on the fight for emancipation. In Founding Sins, Joseph S. Moore examines this forgotten history, and explores how Covenanters profoundly shaped American's understandings of the separation of church and state. While modern arguments about America's Christian founding usually come from the right, the Covenanters have a more complicated legacy. They fought for an explicitly Christian America in the midst of what they saw as a secular state that failed the test of Christian nationhood. But they did so on behalf of a cause - abolition - that is traditionally associated with the left. Though their attempts to insert God into the Constitution ultimately failed, Covenanters set the acceptable limits for religion in politics for generations to come., The United States was not founded as a Christian nation, since slavery was in the Constitution but Jesus was not. The Covenanters, America's first Christian nationalists, berated the Founding Fathers and challenged generations of Americans with this message. Having once ruled Scotland as a part of a Presbyterian coalition, they longed to convert America to a holy Calvinist vision in which church and state united to form a godly body politic. Their unique story has largely been submerged beneath the histories of the events in which they participated and the famous figures with whom they interacted, making them the most important religious sect in American history that no one remembers.For more than two hundred years Covenanters tried to create a Christian America by amending the Constitution to acknowledge God. Despite being one of North America's smallest religious sects, they found their way into every major revolt. They were God's rebels--just as likely to be Patriots against Britain as they were to be Whiskey Rebels against the federal government. Along the way, they helped American secularists create their own identity as liberals, and demonstrated to Protestant fundamentalists the acceptable outer limits of moral reform. As the nation's earliest and most avowed abolitionists, they also had a significant influence on the fight for emancipation.In Founding Sins, Joseph Moore examines this forgotten history, and explores how Covenanters profoundly shaped American's understandings of the separation of church and state. He shows that while modern arguments about America's Christian founding often make their case from the right, the Covenanter legacy flies in the face of that claim. They fought for an explicitly Christian America in the midst of what they saw as a secular state that failed the test of Christian nationhood. Though their attempts to insert God into the Constitution ultimately failed, Covenanters set the acceptable limits for religion in politics for generations to come., The Covenanters, now mostly forgotten, were America's first Christian nationalists. For two centuries they decried the fact that, in their view, the United States was not a Christian nation because slavery was in the Constitution but Jesus was not. Having once ruled Scotland as a part of a Presbyterian coalition, they longed to convert America to a holy Calvinist vision in which church and state united to form a godly body politic. Their unique story has largely been submerged beneath the histories of the events in which they participated and the famous figures with whom they interacted, making them the most important religious movement in American history that no one remembers. Despite being one of North America's smallest religious sects, the Covenanters found their way into every major revolt. They were God's rebels--just as likely to be Patriots against Britain as they were to be Whiskey Rebels against the federal government. As the nation's earliest and most avowed abolitionists, they had a significant influence on the fight for emancipation. In Founding Sins , Joseph S. Moore examines this forgotten history, and explores how Covenanters profoundly shaped American's understandings of the separation of church and state. While modern arguments about America's Christian founding usually come from the right, the Covenanters have a more complicated legacy. They fought for an explicitly Christian America in the midst of what they saw as a secular state that failed the test of Christian nationhood. But they did so on behalf of a cause--abolition--that is traditionally associated with the left. Though their attempts to insert God into the Constitution ultimately failed, Covenanters set the acceptable limits for religion in politics for generations to come.
LC Classification NumberBR516.M6657 2016

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