|
|
|
Reviews of Books
Conscience and Community: Revisiting Toleration and Religious Dissent in Early Modern England and America. By ANDREW R. MURPHY. (University Park: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 2001. Pp. xxii, 337. $45.00.)
|
Does the principle of religious toleration,
articulated in seventeenth-century England and carried over to colonial
America, lead directly to the modern, secular premium on freedom
of choice? To prominent political philosophers such as John Rawls,
that is exactly the case; contemporary liberalism constitutes for
them "the logical extension of religious toleration" (p.
273)
. Andrew R. Murphy, senior fellow at the Martin Marty Center, University
of Chicago Divinity School, disagrees. In Conscience and Community,
he complicates this simple connection and points the way toward
a more historically sensitive understanding of the origins of liberal
values. To this end he employs an adroit study of political and
polemical battles between tolerationists and antitolerationists
in England and America in the seventeenth century. Religious toleration,
he maintains, did not begin as a fight for abstract principle; rather,
it involved a struggle by dissenting minorities to win exemption
from persecution by civil and religious authorities for the practice
of their faith. Such privilege offered only "negative freedom" in
the unified world of church and state, and it took many decades,
Murphy argues, for this negative freedom to blossom into the positive
principle of toleration. |
1
|
|
Designed primarily as a contribution
to political philosophy, Conscience and Community is simultaneously
a first-rate historical account of the place of religious toleration
in seventeenth-century Anglo-America. Three chapters of political
philosophy bracket five of historical narrative situating colonial
American events in their contemporary English context. "Colonial
America was, in a sense, a great laboratory for English colonizers,"
where "plans for American institutions were formulated in response
to problems identified in England." Religious toleration developed
from the "complex interplay of hopes and expectations" between the
"ideal of America (and its presentation in English debates) and
the ideal of England (its usage in American debate)" (p.
10
). As Murphy shows, the American context also played a pivotal role
in English debates on toleration. Neither side of the Atlantic nor
any single individual, party, act, or event can claim exclusive
credit for achieving religious toleration. |
. . . |
There are about 1085 more words in this article.
Please log in (or, if you are not yet an
authorized user, please go to the
User Setup page) to gain full access rights. Or if you're already logged in register your subscription.
|