
Contents
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Possession and dispossession: religion in Native America Possession and dispossession: religion in Native America
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Revolution and religious freedom Revolution and religious freedom
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A wall of separation A wall of separation
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Revivalism Revivalism
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Great awakenings Great awakenings
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Pentecosts Pentecosts
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From the margins From the margins
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Revivalism and the evangelical consciousness Revivalism and the evangelical consciousness
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Roots of the American paradox Roots of the American paradox
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3 (page 58)p. 58Looking Back: Uneasy Inheritances
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Published:September 2008
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Abstract
‘Looking Back’ argues that the history of religion in America is no grand narrative of patriarchal heroes of religious freedom and tolerance. It is, rather, a past riddled with conflicts involving countless experiences and perspectives. Three historical influences are particularly significant: the dispossession of Native Americans and their indigenous religious traditions; the struggle for religious freedom; and revivalism and the rise of a uniquely American evangelical consciousness. These are controversial issues, uneasy inheritances, which continue to inspire, and haunt, religion in America. Today, the Christian Right envisions a Christian nation whose Manifest Destiny does not leave room for religious differences, especially when those differences are incompatible with its political platform.
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