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Table of Contents
Intro
Foreword
Contents
Notes on Contributors
Chapter 1: Introduction
Part I: Religion and State in Philosophy
Chapter 2: Religious Reasons in Political Discourse
Introduction
Public Reason Liberalism
The New Traditionalism
Minimalist Liberalism
Religious Citizens for Public Reasons
Related Topics
Further Reading
References
Chapter 3: A Plantingan Response to Public Reason Accessibilism
Phenomenal Conservatism
Reformed Epistemology
Arguments for Other Minds
The Dilemma
Accessibilism and Self-Harm
Conclusion
Further Reading
Natural Law Theory Develops in Rome
Natural Law Theory Matures in England
Natural Law and the American Founding
Religious Liberty and the American Founding
Conclusion
Related Topics
Further Reading
References
Part II: Religion and State in Theology
Chapter 7: Pope John Paul II on Church, State, and the Ground of Religious Freedom
Part 1: The Practice of Religion as a Human Right
Part 2: The Differentiation of Church and State and the Integration of Faith and Life
Further Reading
References
Chapter 8: The Christian Ruler in a Secular State: Augustine's Mirror of the Christian Prince
Church and State
The Christian Prince and the State
The Christian Prince and the Church
The Christian Prince After Donatism
Further Reading
References
Chapter 9: Niebuhr's Christian Realism on Religion, Politics, and Today's Crises
Niebuhr and Times of Crisis
Depression: Economic Apocalypse
Resisting Nazism and Communism
Cold War: American Virtue and Ironies
Niebuhr on Human Nature, Politics and Religion
Freedom, Finitude, and Morality
Moral Resolution, Moral Humility
Substantive Norms in Niebuhr's Thought
The Defense of Liberal Democracy
The Contributions and Dangers of Religion
Niebuhr and Current Crises
Polarization and the Crisis of Democracy
Niebuhrian Diagnoses and Remedies
Humility, Forgiveness, and Prophetic Religion
Niebuhr and Critical Social/Political Theories
Niebuhrian Critical Arguments: Social Sin, Self-Deception, and the Inequality of Guilt
Niebuhr's Failures: Caution and a Privileged Perspective
Niebuhrian Resources for Social Justice
Conclusion
References
Foreword
Contents
Notes on Contributors
Chapter 1: Introduction
Part I: Religion and State in Philosophy
Chapter 2: Religious Reasons in Political Discourse
Introduction
Public Reason Liberalism
The New Traditionalism
Minimalist Liberalism
Religious Citizens for Public Reasons
Related Topics
Further Reading
References
Chapter 3: A Plantingan Response to Public Reason Accessibilism
Phenomenal Conservatism
Reformed Epistemology
Arguments for Other Minds
The Dilemma
Accessibilism and Self-Harm
Conclusion
Further Reading
Natural Law Theory Develops in Rome
Natural Law Theory Matures in England
Natural Law and the American Founding
Religious Liberty and the American Founding
Conclusion
Related Topics
Further Reading
References
Part II: Religion and State in Theology
Chapter 7: Pope John Paul II on Church, State, and the Ground of Religious Freedom
Part 1: The Practice of Religion as a Human Right
Part 2: The Differentiation of Church and State and the Integration of Faith and Life
Further Reading
References
Chapter 8: The Christian Ruler in a Secular State: Augustine's Mirror of the Christian Prince
Church and State
The Christian Prince and the State
The Christian Prince and the Church
The Christian Prince After Donatism
Further Reading
References
Chapter 9: Niebuhr's Christian Realism on Religion, Politics, and Today's Crises
Niebuhr and Times of Crisis
Depression: Economic Apocalypse
Resisting Nazism and Communism
Cold War: American Virtue and Ironies
Niebuhr on Human Nature, Politics and Religion
Freedom, Finitude, and Morality
Moral Resolution, Moral Humility
Substantive Norms in Niebuhr's Thought
The Defense of Liberal Democracy
The Contributions and Dangers of Religion
Niebuhr and Current Crises
Polarization and the Crisis of Democracy
Niebuhrian Diagnoses and Remedies
Humility, Forgiveness, and Prophetic Religion
Niebuhr and Critical Social/Political Theories
Niebuhrian Critical Arguments: Social Sin, Self-Deception, and the Inequality of Guilt
Niebuhr's Failures: Caution and a Privileged Perspective
Niebuhrian Resources for Social Justice
Conclusion
References