Calumet Editions

James Madison’s Religion

James Madison’s Religion reveals how Madison’s private convictions shaped America’s public liberty. Drawing on letters, debates, and overlooked manuscripts, it traces his journey from Anglican Virginia and Presbyterian schooling through Enlightenment influence to the Constitutional Convention, showing how his conscience-first philosophy became the blueprint for the First Amendment. Madison saw pluralism as strength and state control of religion as a path to oppression. Blending biography, intellectual history, and political analysis, the book explores his debates with Jefferson and Hamilton, why the amendment’s wording mattered, and how his “theology of liberty” still informs today’s fights over belief, speech, and the public square.

Description

What happens when the most private conviction shapes the most public liberty? In James Madison’s Religion, discover how James Madison’s lifelong wrestling with belief—born in Anglican Virginia, sharpened by Enlightenment reason, and tested in the furnace of politics—became the blueprint for the First Amendment.

Drawing on letters, debates, and long-overlooked manuscripts, this gripping narrative follows Madison from his Presbyterian schooling to the Constitutional Convention and beyond, revealing a statesman who viewed conscience as sacred, pluralism as strength, and state power over religion as the surest path to oppression. Far from a tidy “separation” slogan, Madison’s theology of liberty was a rigorous moral realism—one that still guides today’s fiercest debates over church, state, and free expression.

Inside you’ll discover:

  • Madison’s evolution of faith—from Anglican roots to an independent, conscience-first philosophy.
  • The intellectual sparring with Jefferson, Hamilton, and others that refined his political theology.
  • The road to the First Amendment—how ideas became law, and why wording mattered.
  • Religion’s double edge—its power to elevate civic virtue or enforce conformity.
  • Why Madison’s pluralism endures—and what it means for modern disputes over speech, belief, and the public square.

This book blends biography, intellectual history, and political analysis to offer a fresh, deeply researched portrait of a founder who believed the freedom of the soul is the cornerstone of a free republic.

If you care about how belief and liberty can coexist—this is the founding story you’ve been waiting for.

Product Details

PublishedNovember 3, 2025
ImprintWisdom Editions
LanguageEnglish
Print length314
ISBN-139781962834599
Dimensions6 x 0.79 x 9 inches