Abbreviations
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Ch. 1: John Adams: A Church-Going Sage
Ch. 2: James Madison: Champion of Religious Liberty
Ch. 3: John Quincy Adams: A Republic of Virtue
Ch. 4: Andrew Jackson: Providentialist President
Ch. 5: William McKinley: America as God's Instrument
Ch. 6: Herbert Hoover: Individual Faithfulness and Cooperative
Association
Ch. 7: Harry S. Truman: The Golden Rule President
Ch. 8: Richard Nixon: A Private and Enigmatic Faith
Ch. 9: George H. W. Bush: "One Nation under God"
Ch. 10: Bill Clinton: Sin, Atonement, and Repairing the Breach
Ch. 11: Barack Obama: "We Are Our Brother's Keeper"
Ch. 12: Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Gary Scott Smith is Chair of the History Department at Grove City College. He is the author of numerous books on history and religion including Faith and the Presidency: From George Washington to George W. Bush, and Heaven in the American Imagination.
"Smith's research is exemplary and extensive, a model of his
thoroughness in both primary and secondary sources [His] excellent
reference volume thus will find an ample and immediate audience
among students and scholars, even interested browsers."--H. Larry
Ingle, Quaker Studies
"Religion in the Oval Office is an impressive work that fully
presents for the reader the different ways in which faith has
helped shape presidential character, political philosophy, and the
interplay between beliefs and policies. Smith conducted extensive
archival
research, and the notes and sources make up about one third of the
book. This fascinating book will have particular appeal to readers
interested in the presidency and the role of religion in
politics."--The Journal of American Studies
"Religion in the Oval Office is meticulously researched, drawing on
primary sources as well as previous scholarship. Mr. Smith...has a
nice way of upending readers' assumptions about various presidents'
religious views."--Wall Street Journal
"This work is valuable not only for Smith's excavation of the
religious lives of these 11 presidents, but even more so because
Smith asks us to take them seriously....One great feature of
Smith's work is that...each chapter can stand alone as an essay on
an individual president."--Christian Scholar's Review
"The religiosity of American presidents has been a subject of great
interest among historians, political scientists, religion scholars,
and lay persons alike. I always appreciate sound, historical
research that tries to understand presidents contextually, taking
into account the whole breadth of their lives and not merely select
quotations. Gary Smith of Grove City College has produced a
magisterial work that surveys the religious lives and beliefs of
11
presidents, beginning with John Adams, and ending with Barack
Obama. In some ways this book is a follow up to [Faith and the
Presidency]. Yet it stands on it its own in terms of readers being
able to pick it
up, and read about any particular president who interests them.
Smith has done a great service to those genuinely interested in
this topic."--Helwys Society Forum
"[E]xplicating the Presidents' career trajectories by means of
their religious convictions that the book is in fact far more than
this."--Journal of American Studies
"The book is well researched, balanced, and relentlessly
interesting. Smith covers 11 presidents (Adams, Madison, Adams,
Jackson, McKinley, Hoover, Truman, Nixon, Bush 41, Clinton, Obama)
and makes a compelling case that religion--though vastly different
in many instances--was nevertheless genuinely important for each of
these men."--The Gospel Coalition
"At over 600 pages, this may be Smith's magnum opus. This new book
[is as] equally meticulous and exhaustively researched, as his
Faith and the Presidency."--Center for Public Justice
"[Smith's] thorough and thoughtful book is a welcome reminder that
political positions informed by religious faith have been a part of
the fabric of this nation from its founding."--Booklist
"[Smith explains how eleven presidents' religion influenced
their]...'political and policy choices...with admirable
fairness.'"--First Things
"[Religion in the Oval Office] not only provides a wealth of
information, but it is also a delight to read. Smith excels in
portraying the religious traits of presidents."--Congress and the
Presidency
"[Smith's] prodigious research features meticulous documentation.
Readers broadly interested in religion and politics will find this
book to be informative and insightful as will aficionados of
presidential biography. Smith succeeds in making his case that
students of the presidency should pay more attention to the role
that religious belief plays in the lives of the occupants of the
White House."--Politics and Religion
Praise for Faith and the Presidency:
"Smith draws on extensive archival research to describe how faith
helped shape presidential character, political philosophy and the
interplay between beliefs and policies. What resounds on page after
fascinating page is that, despite all the handwringing over the
role of religion in American public life, in reality we've known
very little about the steadfast beliefs of our past
presidents."--Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
"A magisterial work-exhaustively researched, comprehensive in
scope, and pitch-perfect in its critical analysis....[T]his book
will be the standard by which future volumes on religion and the
U.S. presidency should be judged."--Journal of Law and Religion
"This brief review only scratches the surface of Smith's
meticulously crafted tome, one that will likely become a standard
reference work on the subject"--Journal of American History
"Wonderfully informed...[O]ne could do far worse than approach his
text as an alternative biographical portrait of certain chief
executives. But he does such a fantastic job of explicating the
Presidents' career trajectories by means of their religious
convictions that the book is in fact far more than this."--Journal
of American Studies
"Perceptive, engaging, and richly documented....Smith deftly
penetrates the mythology surrounding various presidents,
independently evaluating their public images in search of their
authentic faiths....Few works demonstrate a greater command of the
broad sweep of American political history and a deeper
understanding of presidential politics or Christian beliefs and
practices."--Journal of American History
"At a time when presses (and readers) groan under the weight of
panicky punditry on religion and the presidency, it is a welcome
relief to possess Smith's well-researched, balanced and fair-minded
study of a perennially interesting topic."--Christian Century
"This book offers important insights on American religiosity and
the presidency."--Peter J. Kastor, Journal of Church and State
"Like its predecessor, [Religion in the Oval Office] is built on
extensive archival research combined with a comprehensive mounding
up of popular and scholarly published sources too. The author uses
sources with great care; he is careful to consult not only what
presidents said for public consumption but also their private
musings and the observations of colleagues and critics alike. The
result is a very sturdy, benchmark sort of work."--Journal of
Ecclesiastical History
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