Description: Isaac Backus on Church, State, and Calvinism. Pamphlets, 1754-1789. Edited by William G. McLoughlin. Belknap Press, Harvard. 1968. "Isaac Backus, whose career spanned the sixty years from the First to the Second Great Awakening, was the most forceful and effective spokesman for the evangelical theory of the separation of church and state that America produced. In this respect, as William McLoughlin points out in his detailed and perceptive Introduction, Backus deserves to rank with Roger Williams and Thomas Jefferson. His ambition, not finally achieved until a generation after his death, was to obtain religious liberty and equality for all sects through the disestablishment of the Congregational churches in New England. "This collection of his writings emphasizes his contribution to the movement for the separation of church and state. He himself, however, valued most highly his contribution to the founding and advancement of the Separate-Baptist persuasion and to the defense of Calvinism, to him the only true interpretation of Scripture." Format: 6 x 9" hc w dj & clear wraps, 525pp, guide to works, endnotes, bibliographic glossary, index.
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All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Features: Dust Jacket, Ex-Library
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication Year: 1968
Topic: Christian Theology / History, Christianity / Baptist
Book Title: Isaac Backus on Church, State, and Calvinism : Pamphlets, 1754-1789
Language: English
Genre: Religion
Item Weight: 33.7 Oz
Author: Isaac Backus
Book Series: The John Harvard Library
Format: Hardcover