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called "The Godless Constitution: the case against religious correctness." by Isaac Krammick and R. Laurence Moore, 1996.
There's a ton of good stuff in this book - much of it about Jefferson.
The book refutes the Religious Right's claims of a Christian nation or commonwealth pointing out that this battle was fought at the time the Constitution was written:
"That's not what happened in 1987. God and Christianity are nowhere to be found in the American Constitution, a reality that infuriated many at the time. The US Constitution, drafted in 1787 and ratified in 1788, is a godless document. It's utter neglect of religion was no oversight; it was apparent to all." (27)
This book also tells a part of Jefferson's story that I'm sure he would love to be known far and wide. Part of it relates to the Jefferson Memorial... the quote in the rotunda, "I have sworn upon the altar of God eternal hostility against every form of tyranny over the mind of man." Well, as it turns out Jefferson actually was a Christian, a fact that he kept completely private, but the quote came from a letter in which he was complaining about the priests in the churches in Philadelphia who were bad-mouthing him during the election. If there is any doubt about what a low opinion Jefferson had of priests meddling in politics, here's this quote in a letter to Adams written after they had left politics:
" 'We should all, then, like Quakers, live without an order of priests' who he called 'genus irritabile vatum' (the irritable tribe of priests) likening them to aristocrats, saying 'the priest has been hostile to liberty. He is always in alliance with the despot, abetting his abuses in return for protection to his own.' " (98)
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