It is hoped that the facts and thoughts presented in this little work will awaken more interest in the study of the Constitution of the United States, and may lead to a better understanding of men’s rights and liberties under it, than is commonly shown; and also to a closer study of the relation that should exist between civil government and religion, according to the words of Christ and the American Constitution.
This classic contains the following chapters:
Part I. Civil Government and Religion
I. Christianity and the Roman Empire
II. What Is Due to God, and What to Caesar?
III. The Powers That Be
Part II. The Rights of the People
I. The Rights of the People
II. How the United States Became a Nation
III. What Is the Nation?
IV. Who Made the Nation?
V. Religious Right in the United States
VI. Religious Right Invaded
VII. The People’s Right of Appeal
VIII. National Precedent on Right of Appeal
IX. The Buglers, the Miners and Sappers
X. The Sunday-Law Movement in the Fourth Century, and Its Parallel in the Nineteenth
XI. Will the People Assert and Maintain Their Rights?
XII. Religious Right in the States
This classic contains the following chapters:
Part I. Civil Government and Religion
I. Christianity and the Roman Empire
II. What Is Due to God, and What to Caesar?
III. The Powers That Be
Part II. The Rights of the People
I. The Rights of the People
II. How the United States Became a Nation
III. What Is the Nation?
IV. Who Made the Nation?
V. Religious Right in the United States
VI. Religious Right Invaded
VII. The People’s Right of Appeal
VIII. National Precedent on Right of Appeal
IX. The Buglers, the Miners and Sappers
X. The Sunday-Law Movement in the Fourth Century, and Its Parallel in the Nineteenth
XI. Will the People Assert and Maintain Their Rights?
XII. Religious Right in the States