Center for Cultural Judaism
Center for Cultural Judaism
contact  
about
events
grants
bibliography
contemplate
communities
home
contact
-
BIBLIOGRAPHY

America Declares Independence

By Dershowitz, Alan
John Wiley & Sons, 2003, Hardcover, 196pp, ISBN: 0-471-26482-2, $19.95

These are dire times for the Declaration of Independence, Dershowitz believes.

The religious right has hijacked the document for its own wily purposes, holding that phrases such as "Nature's God," "Creator" and "Divine Providence" are proof that the Founding Fathers intended America to be an explicitly Christian nation. Not so, cries the noted Harvard Law School professor and prolific author.

To prove his case, Dershowitz focuses mainly on Thomas Jefferson, showing that the Declaration's principal author thought most of the Bible was superstitious drivel: he did not believe in miracles, the devil or anything in the Gospels except that certain words were spoken by Jesus. Rather, Jefferson believed in a deistic God, who set the world in motion and then went on vacation. Jefferson didn't think religion should have anything to do with politics. Thus, Dershowitz says, when Jefferson used the phrases "Nature's God" and "Divine Providence," his contemporaries-most of whom were also deists -understood and approved of his intent. From Barnesandnoble.com





CCJ