
The rise of a militant secularism, one equally hostile to Israel and to America's Judeo-Christian values and institutions, has unexpectedly drawn Jews and Christians closer together. In the face of a common civilizational threat, the study of the two traditions' joint contributions to the West has risen to the fore. Jewish Roots of American Liberty illustrates how the free institutions, principles, and liberties that we value so much in today's America--including Christianity itself--are securely grounded in Jewish antecedents.
The twenty-one chapters that comprise this book offer a sampling of the many ways--Biblical, cultural, literary, and political--that the Hebraic tradition has contributed to the treasury of American self-understanding. Topics range from the titanic influence of the Hebrew Bible on the political culture of the American Founding, to the distinctly Hebraic vision of figures like John Milton, Nathaniel Hawthorne, and Abraham Lincoln, to the Biblical heroes whose examples run through the canon of the American imagination, and more.
Suitable for both classroom use and stand-alone reading, the highly accessible contents of Jewish Roots of American Liberty will inform and inspire those who want to illuminate the bond between the American and Jewish stories and convey the blessings of that bond to a rising generation.
Both secularists and religionists insist that America is a nation of freedom. In the midst of our raging debates over the meanings of America and its freedom, this book shows persuasively that neither America nor freedom can be separated from their Hebraic roots. All Americans, both religious and secular, will learn from this volume much they did not know about both the American project and its connection to the God of Israel.
--Gerald McDermott, author of A New History of Redemption
From Lincoln to the Liberty Bill, this volume is brimming with revelations about the Judaic dimensions of our national life. Its contributors remind us afresh that the Jewish tradition is profoundly central to America's own.
--Andrew Porwancher, author of The Jewish World of Alexander Hamilton