'This book provides a timely and tightly focused study of the many ways in which politically active Christians have attempted to influence public policy since the founding of the Republic, and the manner in which courts have responded to such efforts. Highly Recommended.' William G. Ross, Journal of Church and State
Introduction; 1. Prologue: colonial America perpetuates state religion; 2. Revolution in thought and social organization: the legal; hegemony of Jeffersonian liberalism, 1776–1828; 3. A Christian counter-revolution and a new vision of American society, 1828–65; 4. Regulating behavior and teaching morals: the uses of religion, 1865–1937; 5. The rights revolution, 1937–2014; 6. Epilogue: the significance of history and a reconsideration of original intent; Bibliographic essay; Index.