Chapter 1 Preface Chapter 2 Rebellion To Tyrants is Obedience to God Chapter 3 From Medieval Birthpangs to Geneva's Fare: Contra Tyrannos ("Against Tyranny") Chapter 4 Calvin's Political Thought and Impact: Confoederus ("Covenant Together" Chapter 5 Post-Calvinistic Advances on the Continent: Nemo posse Dare ("One cannot give what he does not possess") Chapter 6 Calvin's Ideas Emigrate to Scotland and Great Britain: Lex Rex ("Law is King") Chapter 7 Colonial Calvinism in Church and State, 1607-1700: Puritans and Pilgrims Pro Libertas ("On Behalf of Liberty") Chapter 8 Before the Revolution, 1700-1776: Non potest civitas abscondi supra montem posita ("A city on a hill cannot hide its light") Chapter 9 Evidences of Calvin's Themes in the American Founding: Post Tenebras Lux ("Light after darkness")
David W. Hall is an author, pastor, conference speaker, and political commentator. He is the founder and Senior Fellow of the Kuyper Institute, a political think tank in Oak Ridge, Tennessee.
In this learned and illuminating study, David W. Hall argues
compellingly that to understand the political thought and culture
of the American founding one must first understand John Calvin and
his Geneva. This thoroughly researched and thoughtful volume is
sure to challenge and change conventional thinking on the
intellectual origins of the American republic.
*Daniel L. Dreisbach, American University*
David Hall has done a superb job not only of tracing the
development of Calvinist political thought but also of
demonstrating its profound influence on the theory and practice of
America's founding fathers.
*E. Calvin Beisner, Knox Theological Seminary*
David Hall goes behind the stage sets of the "Enlightenment" from
which most historians begin the story of the founding, and tells of
earlier actions that set the drama in motion. For instance, the
shocking idea, "Rebellion to Tyrants is Obedience to God," which
Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson proposed as the motto for
the new United States, sprang from the reflections of John Knox in
1558. So also, John Calvin's insistence on limited government,
human sinfulness and unreliability, and liberty as God's great gift
shaped the thinking of the great majority of Americans prior to
1787, even those who (like Jefferson) were not Calvinists. These
great brakes on Enlightenment enthusiasm spared America the agonies
of France and much of Europe for the next two hundred years.
*Michael Novak, former U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Human Rights
Commission, 1994 Templeton laureate*
His book makes a serious contribution. It is based on wide reading
and is packed with informative detail.
*Themelios*
This volume needs to be in the possession of history and political
science students, as well as all who are interested in the
theological foundations that formed America.
*Chalcedon*
Ask a Question About this Product More... |