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The Biblical Roots of American Constitutionalism: From "I Am the Lord" to "We the People"

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Biblical Roots of American Constitutionalism: From "I Am the Lord" to "We the People"

Contributors:

By (Author) Joseph Livni

ISBN:

9781793637215

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Lexington Books

Publication Date:

14th April 2021

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Legal history
Religion and politics

Dewey:

342.73

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

170

Dimensions:

Width 163mm, Height 241mm, Spine 20mm

Weight:

445g

Description

According to the conventional wisdom American constitutional democracy stemmed from Athenian democracy, Roman Law, English legal practices, and the Magna Carta. This book agrees that democracy was born in Athens. However, as the title suggests, the thesis of this book claims that constitutionalism in the sense of an agreed text sanctioning procedures of legislation, government, and power flow germinated in pre-state Israel better known as Israel of the Judges. The thesis of the book consists of three concepts: (1) The roots of American constitutionalism are in biblical Israel; this concept has been debated by scholars of constitutional history. (2) Proto-Israel also known as Israel of the Judges had no king as the Book of Judges claims; however it had a covenant which it enforced. Naturally, this belief is as old as the Bible; however, its proof is new. (3) American constitutionalism did not stem from studying and applying biblical recipes. It rather evolved through a sequence of embodiments each passing on the torch of essential traditions to its heir. This concept is new. The book is not intended to shake your understanding of the constitution; however it will answer questions you might have asked or even questions you never asked.

Reviews

In an era in which academic specializations seem to be conceived ever narrower, Livni's book presents the reader with a stimulatingly broad perspective of the "genealogy" of the covenant idea in American constitutionalism. Livni's analysis encompasses history, theology, politics, and culture, but also introduces data from such scientific fields as biological evolution and statistical analysis. Livni's unique cross-fertilization of ideas yields numerous insights of great interest.


Joseph Livni's provocative work is a unique contribution to the study of the American Constitution - not because it is a new perspective drawn from political science, but because it isn't. Thinking about the Constitution as a covenant may not be entirely new, but postulating the impossibility of the Constitution absent a covenantal society, and opening a window into the origins, essential elements and continuity of covenantal society as distinguished from hierarchical society is new. I found interesting also the extensive discussion from sociological, scientific and mathematical perspectives of the tenacity of covenantal societies, especially their persistence even within broader hierarchical polities. The Biblical Roots of American Constitutionalism: From 'I am the Lord' to 'We the People' is not only new, it is timely. Contemporary America is in the midst of a constitutional debate over constitutional transformation to a more hierarchical model. This book and its thesis should be an important contributor because, without addressing the specific contemporary context, it can promote a better understanding of what is at stake in the dispute over the contending constitutional theories of "Living Constitution" and "Originalism".

Author Bio

Joseph Livni is independent scholar.

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