Church and State in The United States: Historical Development and Contemporary Problems of Religious Freedom under the Constitution. In three volumes. By Anson Phelps Stokes, Former Secretary of Yale University, Former Canon of Washington Cathedral. Introduction by Ralph Henry Gabriel, Sterling Professor of American History in Yale University. (New York: Harper and Brothers. 1950. Pp, lxix, 936; 799; 1042. $25.00.)

Author(s):  
Caroline Corbin

Religious surveys are finding greater percentages of Americans who self-identify as secular. At the same time, religious exemptions under the Free Exercise Clause have become more difficult to obtain. However, religion jurisprudence in the United States has not become more secular for two reasons. First, this greater unwillingness to grant constitutional exemptions reflects a shift in constitutional jurisprudence from “separationism” to “neutrality.” Rather than building a wall between church and state, the Establishment Clause is now interpreted to impose fewer restraints on state-sponsored religion. Second, statutes like the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act and its state counterparts have not only reestablished separationist era levels of protection for religious liberty but increased them. The result is a religion jurisprudence where religion is accommodated more than ever, while the state has more leeway to advance religion. This combination has unfortunate consequences for both secular people and core secular values, such as antidiscrimination.


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