Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 208
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7425-2248-0 • Hardback • August 2002 • $30.95 • (£25.00)
Paul Marshall is the author of Their Blood Cries Out and many other books on religion and politics. He is a senior fellow at the Claremont Institute in California and at the Center for Religious Freedom at Freedom House in Washington, D.C.
Chapter 1 Attacks on Religion in Public Life
Chapter 2 The Church and the World
Chapter 3 The Beginning of Politics and Justice
Chapter 4 Democracy and Rights
Chapter 5 Understanding the Modern World
Chapter 6 Church, State, and Religious Freedom
Chapter 7 Politics and Morality
Chapter 8 International Relations
Chapter 9 Concluding Reflections
One will learn more about the meaning and purpose of government, the process of American politics, the contemporary dynamics of religion and politics, and the actual message of the Bible in this book than in any other on the market. Marshall is informed, astute, critical, wise, and open about his own beliefs all at the same time.
— James W. Skillen, executive director, The Center for Public Justice
Paul Marshall writes with intelligence, compassion, and practicality. He sets a high standard.
— Michael Novak, former U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Human Rights Commission, 1994 Templeton laureate
Some truths are so blindingly obvious that many of us are blinded to them. One such truth is that our constitutional order is on the side of the vigorous public engagement of the many truths by which the American people live, including those truths often excluded because they are categorized as 'religious.' Paul Marshall's argument invites us to the high adventure of renewing the political task envisioned by the Founders.
— Rev. Richard John Neuhaus, editor-in-chief, First Things
Marshall is not merely rehashing Christian positions on issues, nor is he advocating theocracy. Readers will find food for thought no matter where they stand on the issues, as he insightfully addresses such subjects as church and state, religious freedom, democracy, and rights. Recommended.
— Library Journal
To anyone who is in political office or involved in public policy and advocacy and who is uncertain about the way religion and poitics should mix, as they inevitably do mix: waste no time in getting and reading this book. It is an eminently readable and well-informed statement of the basics, which, if learned and practiced, might renew the political task envioned by the Founders.
— First Things
A succint and thoughtful analysis.
— WORLD
Essential reading for anyone interested in the intersection of the Bible and civil government. There is a great deal of helpful material here.
— Biblical Worldview
This book will appeal to those interested in political theory and US church-state relations.
— Choice Reviews
Provides a truly helpful introductory approach to politics from a Christian perspective. God and the Constitution provides a helpful guide for understanding the central questions for determining what is truly political and properly belongs to the domain of government. Marshall's argument is so well reasoned that one need not be remotely Kuyperian to appreciate this book. In fact, even a non-hostile non-Christian could read God and the Constitution and appreciate it as a gateway to understanding and participating in politics.
— Family Policy Review