The Founders on Religion: A Book of QuotationsJames H. Hutson Princeton University Press, 2009 M11 10 - 288 páginas What did the founders of America think about religion? Until now, there has been no reliable and impartial compendium of the founders' own remarks on religious matters that clearly answers the question. This book fills that gap. A lively collection of quotations on everything from the relationship between church and state to the status of women, it is the most comprehensive and trustworthy resource available on this timely topic. |
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... hope, be persuaded that sound scholarship is not their sworn enemy, as many have been led to believe. I use a wider variety of sources than is employed in the quote books. Many of them rely exclusively on secondary sources and are ...
... hope, be immediately apparent. Organization by proper name creates a sense of incoher- ence, because the self-contained sections make it difficult, even with incessant page turning, to spot common threads running through the volume and ...
... hope and belief of a glorious immortality, the sure reward of a virtuous life. O! The fatal effect of unbridled and habitual vice, which can pervert. 1 Carroll is quoting (but not literally) from the Vulgate, the authorized Catholic ...
... hope of finding mercy before my judge and of being happy in the life to come, a happiness I wish you to participate with me by infusing into your heart a similar hope. Should this letter produce such a change it will comfort me, and ...
... Hope. If it is a Fraud, we shall never know it. We shall never resent the Imposition, be grateful for the Illusion, nor grieve for the disappointment. John Adams to Thomas Jefferson, May 3, 1816. Cappon, Adams- Jefferson Letters, 2:471 ...