Introduction
Part I. Creating a Bible Civilization
1) The Bible after Independence and before Paine
2) The Paine Provocation
3) Custodial Protestants vs. Sectarian Protestants
4) Francis Asbury and the Methodists
Part II. A Protestant Bible Civilization
5) The Bible Civilization in American History
6) Naming, Writing, and Speaking in a Hebrew Republic
7) Publishing
8) Personal Religion
9) The African American Bible
Part III. Fractures
10) Slavery and the Bible before the Missouri Compromise
11) Slavery and the Bible, 1819-1833
12) Democracy
13) The Law and a Christian America
14) The Common School Exception
Part IV. The Eclipse of Sola Scriptura
15) 1844
16) Whose Bible? (Catholics)
17) Whose Bible? (Lutherans, Jews, Nay-sayers, Natives)
18) Whose Bible? (Women)
19) The War Before the War
20) Scriptural Arguments in Context
21) The Civil War
Part V. After the Bible Civilization
22) 1865-1875
23) The Centennial Divide: 1876 and After
24) Protestant Wounds of War
25) Protestant Realignments
26) Marginal No More (Jews and Catholics)
Part VI. Toward the Present
27) Still A Bible Nation
28) An Enduring Cultural Landmark
29) Civil Religion
30) Still Under a Bushel
Epilogue
Short Titles for Notes
Notes
Acknowledgments
General Index
Scripture Index
Index of Scriptural Persons and Events
Mark A. Noll is Professor of History Emeritus at the University of Notre Dame. His recent publications include In the Beginning Was the Word: The Bible in American Public Life, 1492-1783 (2016); America's God: From Jonathan Edwards to Abraham Lincoln (2002) and, as co-editor, Protestantism after 500 Years (2016).
Noll covers the contentious place the Bible had in shaping "a Bible
civilization"...(i)f there was an issue of religious and public
debate during the nineteenth century, the Bible was part of it, and
Noll covers it.
*John M. Mulder, a former president of Louisville Presbyterian
Theological Seminary and a historian of American Christianity, The
Presbyterian Outlook*
America's Book stands as a monumental scholarly achievement, but it
is also valuable for lay readers. All future scholars who study
this subject will cite and rely upon America's Book, and they will
come to depend on its survey and synthesis of the primary sources,
and for filling in and identifying important gaps in the existing
scholarly literature.
*Yisroel Ben-Porat, Ph.D. candidate in early American history at
CUNY Graduate Center, Tradition Online*
America's Book documents the extent of the Bible's reach -- from
the printing and distribution of Bibles and the creation of Sunday
schools to the intellectual dead ends into which unwise handlers of
the Bible were led. The book's breadth is a tribute to Mr. Noll's
career as an interpreter of Protestantism in North America
*D.G. Hart, The Wall Street Journal*
No one knows more about the Bible in American public life than Mark
Noll. In this landmark volume, he shows how the Protestant dream of
a Bible civilization collapsed in the exegetical impasse over
slavery. He also brings his subtle insight and unflinching honesty
to bear on other plot lines, producing an epic history worthy of
Scripture itself. Everyone interested in American religion must
reckon with this book.
*Peter J. Thuesen, author of Tornado God: American Religion and
Violent Weather*
Mark Noll's America's Book recounts the public role of the Bible in
the United States from the beginning of the republic through the
early twentieth century. Noll tells a complex and fascinating story
with measured judgments and penetrating insights. Filled with
fascinating details, this book is a work of both original research
and impressive synthesis. Noll is attuned to ironies and silences
but is also deeply respectful of the human struggle with both the
scriptures and the culture. Reviewers may run out of
superlatives.
*George C. Rable, author of God's Almost Chosen Peoples: A
Religious History of the American Civil War*
Noll tells a story of extraordinary breadth and complexity both
briskly and clearly. He consistently embeds the Bible's role in
American life in the cultural conditions that made it possible.
Noll's erudition is like old money: always present but tastefully
held in the background. The book will provoke a host of responses,
both popular and academic, but it is hard to imagine that any will
rival, let alone surpass, the sheer brilliance of his
achievement.
*Grant Wacker, Gilbert T. Rowe Distinguished Professor Emeritus of
Christian History, Duke Divinity School*
America's Book shines as the magnum opus of arguably the most
eminent historian of American Christianity during the past century.
This magisterial volume is the authoritative study of how the Bible
and American national history shaped each other. Meticulously
researched, compellingly argued, and masterfully written, it
belongs on every serious reader's bookshelf.
*Candy Gunther Brown, author of The Word in the World: Evangelical
Writing, Publishing, and Reading in America, 1789-1880*
In a breathtaking scholarly work, Mark Noll explores the doomed
experiment of a republic built on an unwritten law of sola
scriptura.
*Brad East, The Christian Century*
It is well worth the time investment; it is an important
contribution to the study of both the history of Christianity and
American history.
*Jennifer Wojciechowski, Lutheran Quarterly*
The readability and very reasonable price of this lengthy tome open
it to a wide audience, and the 150 pages of endnotes will make the
book useful to scholars of American history as well as American
religion.
*Choice*
In my institution, I am told, homiletics professors urge their
students to remember one guideline: the Bible is more interesting
than you are... America's Book comes as close to that benchmark as
any work published in recent memory. The journey ahead promises
both enlightenment and no small measure of pleasure.
*Grant Wacker, Church History*
America's Book drives to a concluding chapter titled "Still Under a
Bushel" that gathers Black Church counter-examples to the book's
central story of biblical conflict,... This is a perfect ending to
a massive book of prodigious learning.
*Gary Dorrien, Church History*
Mark Noll's new book is a masterpiece. A monumental work of
scholarship and erudition, America's Book merits respect for its
artistry as well. The writing is lucid and well crafted.
*Amanda Porterfield, Church History*
Mark Noll's history of what he labels America's Protestant Bible
civilization certainly has the feel of encyclopedic
comprehensiveness.
*Leigh E. Schmidt, Church History*
Noll's erudition on the role of the Bible in American public life
is absolutely stunning, and America's Book: The Rise and Decline of
a Bible Civilization, 1794-1911 will reward the reading of experts
and nonexperts alike... [A]nyone who wishes to understand a
multitude of American intellectual vectors in relation to the
Bible, including those touching on politics, religion, science,
race relations, law, and literature, will not find a better book
than Noll's magisterial tome on America's book.
*Journal of Religion*
America's Book: The Rise and Decline of a Bible Civilization,
1794-1911 will reward the reading of experts and nonexperts
alike.
*Paul C. Gutjahr, The Journal of Religion*
America's Book is a monumental, career-crowning work by one of the
very best historians of religion in America...an essential work for
all students of religion in American and the Bible in modern
societies.
*David R. Bains, Journal of Religious History*
Provides an invaluable roadmap and interpretive framework for
understanding its importance to American history, both past and
present.
*Robert E. Brown, Journal of Church and State*
It is a triumph.
*Jonathan D. Sassi, The Journal of American History*
The book is as fascinating as it is definitive. Noll gives us
in-depth case studies, deals comprehensively and generously with
the scholarly literature, and offers insightful interpretations,
both historical and theological.
*Paul J. Gutacker, Fides et Historia*
America's Book requires a commitment on the part of the reader, but
the time and effort is worthwhile. The best attributes of America's
Book are its depth and breadth, covering many more people, groups,
and ideas than can be mentioned in this review.
*David Torbett, Interpretation: A Journal of Bible and
Theology*
From the gently deistic assumptions of Washington, Jefferson, and
others in the Revolutionary era to the sharp-edged readings of
Black and female voices emerging in the nineteenth century, Noll
provides us with a massive and discouraging record of howAmericans
have used and misused Scripture in the past. Its misuse is embedded
so deeply in our society that it is hard to imagine finding a
better way forward.
*Christopher L. Webber, Anglican and Episcopal History *
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