Religion, Federalism, and the Struggle for Public Life: Cases from Germany, India, and America
In the past decade, the struggle for new forms of federal order and public life has exploded in central Europe, the former Soviet Union, and South Africa. Religious traditions and organizations have played a crucial role in these revolutions, and have also been critical to the establishment of constitutional orders in post-colonial countries like India. Moreover, they continue to undergird and to challenge the understanding of public life in the United States, whether in church-state conflicts or Native American religious claims. William Everett examines the role of religious traditions in the development of modern federal republicanism, seeking answers to such questions as: How have patterns of religious organization shaped federal republican orders? How do different cultures weave together these political and religious threads into a living fabric that fits their own cultural heritage? How are Western religious traditions of covenant and conciliarism relevant for understanding religion and constitutional developments in non-Western cultures? The author argues that a better comparative grasp of these dynamics is essential to our understanding of the establishment, sustenance, and development of federal republican governance. He presents, as a first step toward this goal, a detailed and comparative study of these patterns in India, Germany, and the United States.
1012428153
Religion, Federalism, and the Struggle for Public Life: Cases from Germany, India, and America
In the past decade, the struggle for new forms of federal order and public life has exploded in central Europe, the former Soviet Union, and South Africa. Religious traditions and organizations have played a crucial role in these revolutions, and have also been critical to the establishment of constitutional orders in post-colonial countries like India. Moreover, they continue to undergird and to challenge the understanding of public life in the United States, whether in church-state conflicts or Native American religious claims. William Everett examines the role of religious traditions in the development of modern federal republicanism, seeking answers to such questions as: How have patterns of religious organization shaped federal republican orders? How do different cultures weave together these political and religious threads into a living fabric that fits their own cultural heritage? How are Western religious traditions of covenant and conciliarism relevant for understanding religion and constitutional developments in non-Western cultures? The author argues that a better comparative grasp of these dynamics is essential to our understanding of the establishment, sustenance, and development of federal republican governance. He presents, as a first step toward this goal, a detailed and comparative study of these patterns in India, Germany, and the United States.
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Religion, Federalism, and the Struggle for Public Life: Cases from Germany, India, and America

Religion, Federalism, and the Struggle for Public Life: Cases from Germany, India, and America

by William Johnson Everett
Religion, Federalism, and the Struggle for Public Life: Cases from Germany, India, and America

Religion, Federalism, and the Struggle for Public Life: Cases from Germany, India, and America

by William Johnson Everett

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Overview

In the past decade, the struggle for new forms of federal order and public life has exploded in central Europe, the former Soviet Union, and South Africa. Religious traditions and organizations have played a crucial role in these revolutions, and have also been critical to the establishment of constitutional orders in post-colonial countries like India. Moreover, they continue to undergird and to challenge the understanding of public life in the United States, whether in church-state conflicts or Native American religious claims. William Everett examines the role of religious traditions in the development of modern federal republicanism, seeking answers to such questions as: How have patterns of religious organization shaped federal republican orders? How do different cultures weave together these political and religious threads into a living fabric that fits their own cultural heritage? How are Western religious traditions of covenant and conciliarism relevant for understanding religion and constitutional developments in non-Western cultures? The author argues that a better comparative grasp of these dynamics is essential to our understanding of the establishment, sustenance, and development of federal republican governance. He presents, as a first step toward this goal, a detailed and comparative study of these patterns in India, Germany, and the United States.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780195355970
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 11/27/1997
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 386 KB

About the Author

Andover Newton Theological School

Table of Contents

Introduction 3(7)
The Religious Cradle of Federal Republicanism 5(2)
The Frame of Inquiry 7(1)
The Plan of the Book 8(2)
ONE Envisioning the Engagement
10(18)
Religion and Federal Republicanism
11(9)
The Concept of Covenantal Publicity
20(2)
Religion and Political Order in Sociological Perspective
22(4)
Summary
26(2)
TWO The Churches and Germany's "Peaceful Revolution" of 1989-90
28(35)
Key Historical Considerations
28(7)
The Church in the Revolution of 1989-90
35(18)
Key Issues in the German Experience
53(6)
Trust and Reconciliation in a Covenantal Public
59(2)
Covenantal Publicity and the Partial Revolution
61(2)
THREE Religious Organization and Constitutional Justice in India
63(42)
The Ancient Matrix of Religion and Governance
64(5)
The "Historic" Religions: Islam and Christianity
69(5)
The Drive for Independence and Constitutional Order
74(3)
The Federal Constitution of 1950
77(2)
Redressing Past Inequities: Compensatory Discrimination and Soosai the Cobbler
79(7)
From Religious Tutelage to a Common Civil Code: The Case of Shah Bano
86(6)
Ecclesiology and Constitutional Order: The United Basel Mission Church Case
92(7)
Critical Issues in India's Struggle for Covenantal Publicity
99(6)
FOUR Sacred Lands and Religious Assemblies in America
105(44)
The Molding of the American Experience
106(11)
Summary
117(1)
Methodism and the Quandaries of Republican Federation: The Pacific Homes Case
118(16)
Sacred Lands and Native Peoples in Federal Contestation
134(15)
FIVE Assessing the Engagement, Evaluating the Inquiry
149(22)
The Critical Role of Ecclesiology
151(2)
Ecclesiology and the Federal-Republican Struggle
153(8)
Roles of Religion in the Federal-Republican Project
161(3)
Religion, Reconciliation, and the Republican Struggle
164(3)
The Concept of Covenantal Publicity: An Evaluation
167(2)
An Afterword
169(2)
Notes 171(26)
Index 197
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