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The Right Stuff
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11226 |
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BOOK WORLD
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5 / 1986 |
2,029 Words |
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David Tucker David Tucker, senior fellow of the Claremont Institute for the
Study of Statesmanship and Political Philosophy, has a
forthcoming book on Thomas Jefferson. |
WITHOUT GOD, WITHOUT CREED
The Origins of Unbelief in America
James Turner
Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1985,
316 pp., $26.50.
THE NAKED PUBLIC SQUARE
Religion and Democracy in America
Richard J. Neuhaus
Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans, 1984,
288 pp., $16.95.
When President Reagan spoke in religious terms to the National Association of Evangelicals in 1983, his remarks, particularly his description of the Soviet Union as the focus of evil in the world, incited a riot of comment. For example, in a New York Times column entitled "Onward, Christian Soldiers," Anthony Lewis ridiculed Reagan, calling him "primitive." "If there is anything that should be illegitimate in the American system," wrote Lewis, "it is such use of sectarian religiosity to sell a political program." Lewis concluded by implying that Reagan had done something unprecedented in our political life.
Apparently, Lewis has forgotten that at the nominating convention of the progressive Party in 1912, all those present sang "Onward, Christian Soldiers." In the election, the party's candidate, Theodore Roosevelt, came in second to his Democratic opponent, Woodrow Wilson, but not because Wilson stood for the separation of religion and politics. In a speech in Denver in 1911, Wilson
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