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Man's upward reach: secularists consider religion a barbaric habit of the unenlightened. Religious faith, however, has been the mainspring of human growth and progress.


Religion, said Bertrand Russell (person) Bertrand Russell - (1872-1970) A British mathematician, the discoverer of Russell's paradox. , is "a disease born of fear and a source of untold misery to the human race." Russell's opinion has gained wide currency as the perception that Western Civilization Noun 1. Western civilization - the modern culture of western Europe and North America; "when Ghandi was asked what he thought of Western civilization he said he thought it would be a good idea"
Western culture
 is passing into a post-Christian phase gains hold. For the secular mind, this change to a post-Christian world can't happen (programming) can't happen - The traditional program comment for code executed under a condition that should never be true, for example a file size computed as negative. Often, such a condition being true indicates data corruption or a faulty algorithm; it is almost always handled  too soon. Religion to the secularist is a barbaric superstition, and a dangerous one, that tends to drive its most fervent adherents to violent acts. Proof of this, for those who hold this view, is found in the terrorist attacks perpetrated by zealots Zealots (zĕl`əts), Jewish faction traced back to the revolt of the Maccabees (2d cent. B.C.). The name was first recorded by the Jewish historian Josephus as a designation for the Jewish resistance fighters of the war of A.D. 66–73. , like Osama bin Laden Osama bin Laden: see bin Laden, Osama.  and others, who use religion to justify their murderous acts.

This is a powerful indictment, especially in the wake of the destruction of the World Trade Center. It may be tempting, therefore, to agree with the secular thesis that it is time to abandon religion for the good of civilization. To the contrary, however, religion is a fundamental building block of Western Civilization. Without it, science as we know it would not have developed, philosophy would be emaciated e·ma·ci·ate  
tr. & intr.v. e·ma·ci·at·ed, e·ma·ci·at·ing, e·ma·ci·ates
To make or become extremely thin, especially as a result of starvation.
, the arts would be left without key elements in both subject and execution, and the freedoms we cherish, divorced from their conceptual foundations, would evaporate.

Simply put, religion is the most basic manifestation of mankind's innate upward reach. That upward reach, implanted in man by God, can never be totally extinguished, no matter how far man may stray from immutable IMMUTABLE. What cannot be removed, what is unchangeable. The laws of God being perfect, are immutable, but no human law can be so considered.  truths or how oppressive the state may become. But the closer man the more he is able to given potential.

Freedom and the Law

Civilization, for its perpetuation, requires the recognition of the dignity of each individual. This requires that the societies that comprise civilization formulate means by which the interaction of individuals is regulated in a fair and consistent manner. This has been a nearly intractable problem due to the natural tendency of man to seek dominion over other men. Some means of moderating and taming this impulse needed to be created. In the earliest reaches of Western Civilization, this was thought to have been accomplished by the gods, or, by God.

The most ancient laws of Rome, for instance, were said to have been given to the Roman king through divine interview. The historian Livy thought this tradition a deception, but recorded it anyway. He wrote that the Roman king Numa Pompilius Numa Pompilius (n`mə pŏmpĭl`ēəs), legendary king of Rome, successor to Romulus. His consort, the nymph Egeria, was said to have aided him in his rule.  strove "to inculcate in·cul·cate  
tr.v. in·cul·cat·ed, in·cul·cat·ing, in·cul·cates
1. To impress (something) upon the mind of another by frequent instruction or repetition; instill: inculcating sound principles.
 fear of the gods as the most powerful influence that could act upon ... a barbaric people.... [H]e pretended that he had nocturnal interviews with the divine nymph nymph, in Greek mythology
nymph (nĭmf), in Greek mythology, female divinity associated with various natural objects. It is uncertain whether they were immortal or merely long-lived. There was an infinite variety of nymphs.
 Egeria; and that it was on her advice that he was instituting the religious ritual most acceptable to Heaven, and was appointing special priests for each major deity." The laws of Numa Pompilius, it was thought, brought 40 years of peace to the Romans.

There is a similar religious backing to another set of famous laws, those of the code of Hammurabi The Code of Hammurabi was a comprehensive set of laws, considered by many scholars to be the oldest laws established; they were handed down four thousand years ago by King Hammurabi of Babylon. . As in ancient Rome Ancient Rome was a civilization that grew from a small agricultural community founded on the Italian Peninsula circa the 9th century BC to a massive empire straddling the Mediterranean Sea. , the ancient Mesopotamians saw law as derived from the gods. "The people of ancient Mesopotamia attributed the origin of law to the gods, in particular to the sun-god, who dispersed all darkness and in his course across the heavens looked down upon all the deeds of man," observed English historian H.W.F. Saggs in The Babylonians. This was true of Hammurabi. His code, inscribed in·scribe  
tr.v. in·scribed, in·scrib·ing, in·scribes
1.
a. To write, print, carve, or engrave (words or letters) on or in a surface.

b. To mark or engrave (a surface) with words or letters.
 on a stone monument found at Susa in 1902, depicts the king receiving the laws from Shamash, the sun-god. The prologue, inscribed on the monument reads:
   When the lofty Anu, King of the
   Anunaki, and Bel, Lord of Heaven
   and Earth, he who determines the destiny
   of the land, committed the rule
   of all mankind to Marduk ... when
   they pronounced the lofty name of
   Babylon; when they made it famous
   among the quarters of the world and
   in its midst established an everlasting
   kingdom whose foundations were
   firm as heaven and earth--at that
   time Anu and Bel called me, Hammurabi,
   the exalted prince, the worshipper
   of the gods, to cause justice
   to prevail in the land, to destroy the
   wicked and the evil, to prevent the
   strong from oppressing the weak, ... to
   enlighten the land and to further
   the welfare of the people.


Similarly, and more importantly, the laws of Moses, the Ten Commandments Ten Commandments or Decalogue [Gr.,=ten words], in the Bible, the summary of divine law given by God to Moses on Mt. Sinai. They have a paramount place in the ethical system in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. , were handed to Moses by Yahweh. In many respects, the important ideas that form the American legal philosophy of limited government stem from this source. The power of the Mosaic law Mosaic Law
n.
The ancient law of the Hebrews, attributed to Moses and contained in the Pentateuch. Also called Law of Moses.

Noun 1.
 lies not alone in its impact on ethics and fight relations between individuals and between those individuals and God, but in the symbolic notion that the law itself stems from a power higher than that of man. This puts a divine limitation on the potentialities of human political power.

In addition, the Judeo-Christian tradition in particular teaches that man is created in the image of God. Consequently, each person is endowed with a certain divine dignity and with specific rights that flow from that divine well of dignity. The Judeo-Christian recognition of the importance of the individual raised the status of all individuals in society, laying the foundation for the notion that the state is not omnipotent, that laws of God transcend those of the state, and that the state must not violate the God-given rights of each individual. This Judeo-Christian concept contrasts sharply with earlier despotisms that had envisioned the monarch as the supreme, and unaccountable, ruler of his domain.

In his eventually unsuccessful defense of placing the Ten Commandments within a public space, former Alabama Supreme Court The Supreme Court of Alabama is the highest court in the state of Alabama. The court consists of a Chief Justice and eight Associate Justices, elected in partisan elections for staggered six year terms.  Chief Justice Roy Moore For the baseball player, see .
Roy Moore is a controversial American jurist and politician noted for his refusal, as the elected Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Alabama, to remove a monument of the Ten Commandments from the courthouse despite orders from a federal court
 discussed this essential Judeo-Christian aspect of the U.S. legal tradition. "The institutions of our society are founded on the belief that there is an authority higher than the authority of the State," Moore said, "that there is a moral law which the State is powerless to alter; that the individual possesses rights, conferred by the Creator, which government must respect. The Declaration of Independence stated the now familiar theme: 'We hold these Truths to be self-evident, that all Men are created equal The quotation "All men are created equal" is arguably the best-known phrase in any of America's political documents, as the idea it expresses is generally considered the foundation of American democracy. , that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable UNALIENABLE. The state of a thing or right which cannot be sold.
     2. Things which are not in commerce, as public roads, are in their nature unalienable.
 Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness.'"

Freedom itself is an extension of sound religious principles recognizing the proper relationship among God, man, and the state; and free societies--as our own American experiment in liberty aptly demonstrates--unleash man to achieve much greater heights than he otherwise would.

Fides Christi Scientia

The Latin phrase Fides Christi Scientia, translated, means "faith in Christ is knowledge." For the Christian faithful, this means that there is a certain knowledge inherent in faith in Christ. The believer knows that salvation lies in that belief. The phrase, however, may be taken to have a second, broader meaning as well--specifically, that religious faith leads to rational inquiry which itself leads to knowledge. The concept was put most succinctly by theoretical physicist, mathematician, and Anglican priest John Polkinghorne. In his book Belief in God in an Age of Science, Polkinghorne argued that "if reality is generously and adequately construed, then knowledge will be seen to be one; if rationality is generously and adequately construed, then science and theology will be seen as partners in a common quest for Verb 1. quest for - go in search of or hunt for; "pursue a hobby"
quest after, go after, pursue

look for, search, seek - try to locate or discover, or try to establish the existence of; "The police are searching for clues"; "They are searching for the
 understanding."

Our current advanced, scientific, and technological age stands on the shoulders of those, beginning with the ancients and especially with those of the Renaissance and later, who sought to investigate the natural world precisely because doing so was a means of coming to a faith informed by reason. These early pioneers were able to accomplish great feats of investigation because of the motivation of faith. The natural world, the temporal creation, was, they thought, an expression of God's will Noun 1. God's Will - the omnipotence of a divine being
omnipotence - the state of being omnipotent; having unlimited power
 and goodness, and gaining understanding of it a means of gaining religious insight. This was the view of Cardinal Pierre d'Ailly Pierre d'Ailly (in Latin, Petrus Aliacensis, Petrus de Alliaco) (1351 – August 9 1420), was a French theologian, astrologer, and cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church.

He was born in Compiègne.
, a learned scholar of the 15th century whose treatise on geography, the Imago imago /ima·go/ (i-ma´go) pl. ima´goes, ima´gines   [L.]
1. the adult or definitive form of an insect.

2. a usually idealized, unconscious mental image of a key person in one's early life.
 Mundi of 1410, bolstered Columbus' view that the Atlantic could be crossed. This book, says historian Will Durant Noun 1. Will Durant - United States historian (1885-1981)
Durant, William James Durant
, "was but one of half a dozen works that this alert ecclesiastic ECCLESIASTIC. A clergyman; one destined to the divine ministry, as, a bishop, a priest, a deacon. Dom. Lois Civ. liv. prel. t. 2, s. 2, n. 14.  wrote on astronomy, geography, meteorology meteorology, branch of science that deals with the atmosphere of a planet, particularly that of the earth, the most important application of which is the analysis and prediction of weather. , mathematics, logic, metaphysics, psychology, and the reform of the calendar and the Church." The cardinal was accused of spending too much time on secular studies. To this he replied, says Durant, "that a theologian should keep abreast Verb 1. keep abreast - keep informed; "He kept up on his country's foreign policies"
keep up, follow

trace, follow - follow, discover, or ascertain the course of development of something; "We must follow closely the economic development is Cuba" ; "trace the
 of science."

The relationship between scientific advancement and religion has roots far more ancient than the Renaissance. Many ancient civilizations, for instance, looked to the skies to find portents of things to come and to harmonize cycles of sacred time. "Mesoamerican astronomical interests," writes Dick Teresi, author of the book Lost Discoveries, "were inseparable from religious and sociopolitical so·ci·o·po·li·ti·cal  
adj.
Involving both social and political factors.


sociopolitical
Adjective

of or involving political and social factors
 ones.... As in ancient Mesopotamia, China, India, Greece, and Italy, astronomical gods form the core of the pre-Columbian pantheon." From the ancient cultures of the Old World in particular, the astronomical knowledge gained in the pursuit of religious ends was passed down to later cultures to become part of civilization's growing store of scientific understanding. "Ptolemy remarked," Teresi notes, "that the earliest observations available to him came from the reign of [Babylonian] King Nabonassar (747-734 B.C.), and he used eclipse records from that reign in his own computations."

This ancient relationship between religion and science The relationship between religion and science takes many forms as the two fields are both broad. They employ different methods and address different questions. The scientific method relies on an objective approach to measure, calculate, and describe the natural/physical/material  was continued into the so-called Age of Reason following the Renaissance and the Reformation in Europe. This was an age of rapid advancement and discovery, especially in the fields of geography and cosmology. In the former, the revolution was led by the Admiral of the Ocean Sea, Christopher Columbus. In cosmology, Johannes Kepler and Galileo Galilei led the way.

For Columbus, exploration was a divinely appointed task. "He took his first name seriously," says Professor Timothy Ferris in Coming of Age in the Milky Way Milky Way, the galaxy of which the sun and solar system are a part, seen as a broad band of light arching across the night sky from horizon to horizon; if not blocked by the horizon, it would be seen as a circle around the entire sky. . "[He] thought of himself as Christophoros, the 'Christ carrier,' whose mission it was to discover 'a new heaven and a new earth.'" Columbus spared no effort in convincing the Spanish monarchy “King of Spain” redirects here. For other uses, see King of Spain (disambiguation).
The Spanish Monarchy (Spanish: Monarquía española) is the parliamentary monarchy of Spain.
 to finance his expedition. To that end he devoted himself to study. "I have made it my business to read all that has been written on geography, history, philosophy, and other sciences," Columbus said. He concluded, as the result of his study, that the distance to be crossed from the Canary Islands Canary Islands, Span. Islas Canarias, group of seven islands (1990 pop. 1,589,403), 2,808 sq mi (7,273 sq km), autonomous region of Spain, in the Atlantic Ocean off Western Sahara. They constitute two provinces of Spain. Santa Cruz de Tenerife (1990 pop.  to the Indies totaled 3,550 nautical miles. This was far less than the actual distance. Nevertheless, Columbus was convinced of the expedition's feasibility: "Thus Our Lord revealed to me that it was feasible to sail from here to the Indies, and placed in me a burning desire to carry out this plan." At length the Spanish monarchy was convinced, and the expedition set sail, finally sighting land on October 12, 1492. Columbus' religious faith led him to America and opened up for Europeans the possibility of vast new acquisitions of knowledge of the world.

In a similar fashion, the revolution in cosmology--begun with Nicholas Copernicus and continued by Johannes Kepler and Galileo--was motivated as much by an interest in understanding the created order as by the flaws of the Ptolemaic model of the universe. Until Copernicus, the Ptolemaic system Ptolemaic system (tŏl'əmā`ĭk), historically the most influential of the geocentric cosmological theories, i.e., theories that placed the earth motionless at the center of the universe with all celestial bodies revolving around it  with its Earth-centered universe was the standard cosmology in Europe. Copernicus sought to simplify things by placing the sun, rather than Earth, at the center of the system. Though he succeeded, flaws remained. Johannes Kepler, working in the laboratory of another great astronomer, Tycho Brahe Tycho Brahe: see Brahe, Tycho. , improved upon the Copernican system Copernican system, first modern European theory of planetary motion that was heliocentric, i.e., that placed the sun motionless at the center of the solar system with all the planets, including the earth, revolving around it.  by introducing the notion that planetary orbits were elliptical el·lip·tic   or el·lip·ti·cal
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or having the shape of an ellipse.

2. Containing or characterized by ellipsis.

3.
a.
 rather than circular. In the preface to his book, The Harmony of the World, a prideful and defiant Kepler admitted that his work had uncovered truths about God's creation:
   What I promised my friends in the
   title of this book ... what, sixteen
   years ago, I urged as a thing to be
   sought--that for which I joined
   Tycho Brahe, ... to which I have devoted
   the best part of my life--I have
   at length brought to life.... It is not
   eighteen months since the unveiled
   sun ... burst upon me. Nothing holds
   me; I will indulge my sacred fury.... If
   you forgive me, I rejoice; if you are
   angry I can bear it. The die is cast, the
   book is written, to be read either now
   or by posterity, I care not which; it
   may well wait a century for a reader,
   as God has waited six thousand years
   for a discoverer!


What Copernicus created and Kepler improved, Galileo proved by direct observation. Galileo also defended his studies as being part of God's will. His subsequent pugnacious pug·na·cious  
adj.
Combative in nature; belligerent. See Synonyms at belligerent.



[From Latin pugn
 promotion of his work, not his work itself as many have asserted, brought him into conflict with ecclesiastical authorities who wanted to proceed more cautiously. These asked for dialogue and debate before accepting the Copernican universe as proven. Galileo would not compromise, and the result was a famous head-on collision A head-on collision is one where the front ends of two ships, trains, planes or vehicles hit each other, as opposed to a side-collision or rear-end collision. Rail transport
With rail, a head-on collision often implies a collision on a single line railway.
 with the Inquisition. Despite the current perception that Galileo was the secular standard bearer an officer of an army, company, or troop, who bears a standard; - commonly called color sergeantor color bearer; hence, the leader of any organization; as, the standard bearer of a political party s>.

See also: Standard
 fighting against prevailing superstition, the fact remains that the scientist himself thought it natural to investigate creation with the God-given human faculty of reason. "I do not feel obliged to believe that the same God who has endowed us with sense, reason, and intellect has intended us to forego their use," Galileo wrote.

The Arts

Gains in natural philosophy, as once science was called, are not the only hallmarks of civilization, nor is it the only arena in which the influence of religion has been felt. Western Civilization is the inheritor of a uniquely robust legacy in art, from painting and illustration to sculpture and architecture. For more than two millennia this culture of art has been driven by religion.

The architecture of Periclean Greece is a case in point. During this great age of progress in Hellenic civilization, cities strove to outdo each other in the erection of magnificent temples to glorify the gods. Perhaps the greatest achievement came in Athens with the Parthenon. Constructed at the cost of seven hundred talents, it housed the golden sculpture Athene Parthenos. Work on the edifice began in 447 B.C. using marble from Mt. Pentelicus. The construction was meticulous. Mortar was unnecessary as the marble blocks were so finely finished that each seemed to meld with the next. Beyond this was the marvelous attention to architectural detail, ably described by historian Will Durant in volume two of his monumental Story of Civilization:
   Each column swelled slightly (three
   quarters of an inch in diameter) from
   base to middle, tapered toward the
   top, and leaned toward the center of
   its colonnade; each corner column
   was a trifle thicker than the rest.
   Every horizontal line of stylobate
   and entablature was curved upward
   towards its center, so that the eye
   placed at one end of any
   supposedly level line could
   not see the farther half of
   the line. The metopes were
   not quite square, but were
   designed to appear square
   from below. All these curvatures
   were subtle corrections
   for optical illusions
   that would otherwise have
   made stylobate lines seem
   to sink in the center, columns
   to diminish upward
   from the base, and corner columns
   to be thinner and outwardly inclined.
   Such adjustments required considerable
   knowledge of mathematics and
   optics, and constituted but one of
   those mechanical features that made
   the temple a perfect union of science
   and art.


And this union of science and art came together under the motive power of religious belief and devotion.

This is true of art even more so during the Christian era Christian era
n.
The period beginning with the birth of Jesus.


Christian Era
Noun

the period beginning with the year of Christ's birth

Noun 1.
. At the end of the first millennium A.D. and well into the second, the piety and charity of Christendom brought about one of the signal achievements in history, namely, the building of multitudes of magnificent cathedrals. These supreme achievements of the Christian faith called the pious to worship, provided sanctuary to important religious relics, and served as landmarks and destinations for those on pilgrimage. Moreover, they were massive undertakings, often taking centuries to build. Notre Dame Notre Dame IPA: [nɔtʁ dam] is French for Our Lady, referring to the Virgin Mary. In the United States of America, Notre Dame  at Paris covered 63,000 square feet. Amiens covered 70,000 and Cologne 90,000. St. Peter's St. Peter's or similar terms may mean:

Places
  • St. Peter's, County Dublin, Republic of Ireland
  • St Peter's, Guernsey
  • St Peter's, Kent, United Kingdom
  • St Peters, Leicester, Leicestershire, a suburb of Leicester, England
 was even larger, covering 100,000 square feet.

As much as religion motivated architecture, it also motivated those involved in the other decorative arts decorative arts, term referring to a variety of applied visual arts, both two- and three-dimensional, including textiles, metalwork, ceramics, books, and woodwork, as well as to certain aspects of architecture (see ornament), public buildings, and private houses (see , particularly in painting. As the abstract Byzantine style gave way to innovators like the incomparable Giotto, subject matter remained largely religious in nature. His best work was done, perhaps, in the Arena Chapel in Padua. The small chapel was built for the private worship of the wealthy Scrovegni family. Its interior is covered with Giotto's frescoes. These, according to historian Helen Gardner, comprise "one of the most impressive and complete pictorial cycles of Christian redemption ever rendered."

Giotto is but one example of a trend too wide and deep to chart adequately within a small space. But those artists whose works were motivated by a religious age and feeling and whose subject matter stems nearly entirely from Christian tradition are among the giants of art history. They include greats such as Fra Angelico, Masaccio, Domenico Ghirlandaio, Perugio, Andrea Mantegna, and, in the 16th century, giants like Raphael, Michelangelo, Titian Titian (tĭsh`ən), c.1490–1576, Venetian painter, whose name was Tiziano Vecellio, b. Pieve di Cadore in the Dolomites. Of the very first rank among the artists of the Renaissance, Titian had an immense influence on succeeding generations , and Tintoretto. And this list hardly does justice.

Charity and Civilization

In all of these concrete ways, in science, in art, and in the law, religion has played an indispensable part. And yet, this but scratches the surface, and, indeed, does an injustice to the more subtle, and perhaps more important, personal aspects of religion. Belief in God and in the teachings of the great religions have led those who might otherwise tend toward selfishness to great acts of charity that have benefited mankind. There are, for instance, any number of religious charities operating to great effect today, just as there have been for centuries. In the Middle Ages, Christendom experienced a rapid growth in the number of hospitals. "The Greeks had had asklepieia, religious institutions for the treatment of the sick; the Romans had maintained hospitals for their soldiers; but it was Christian charity that gave the institution a wide development," notes historian Will Durant. This tradition continues to the present day, in every Christian institution that brings relief to those in need and in every one of the faithful who seeks to serve his fellow man, in ways large and small.

In every way, then, religion permeates and maintains civilization. It is the driving force of innovation while simultaneously being the common ether that permeates the whole. Those secularists who in recent days see religion as the implacable foe of progress and who work for a day when religion is relegated to the role of historical curiosity suffer from a dangerous myopia myopia: see nearsightedness. . Without religion, civilization itself would be impossible. Were it to disappear in the modern world, civilization itself would give way to a new age of barbarism bar·ba·rism  
n.
1. An act, trait, or custom characterized by ignorance or crudity.

2.
a. The use of words, forms, or expressions considered incorrect or unacceptable.

b.
.

EXTRA COPIES AVAILABLE Additional copies of this issue of THE NEW AMERICAN are available at quantity-discount prices. To order, visit www.thenewamerican.com/marketplace/ or see the card between pages 38-39.

Worth Repeating

Thou hast put an upward reach in the heart of man.

--Poet Harry Kemp

No man, however brilliant or well-informed, can come in one lifetime to such fullness of understanding as to safely judge and dismiss the customs or institutions of his society, for these are the wisdom of generations after centuries of experiment in the laboratory of history. A youth boiling with hormones will wonder why he should not give full freedom to his sexual desires; and if he is unchecked by custom, morals, or laws, he may ruin his life before he matures sufficiently to understand that sex is a fiver of fire that must be banked and cooled by a hundred restraints if it is not to consume in chaos both the individual and the group.

--Historians Will and Ariel Durant

Religion is the basis of civil society, and the source of all good and of all comfort.

--Edmund Burke

Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable supports.

In vain would that man claim the tribute of patriotism who should labor to subvert these great pillars of human happiness .... And let us with caution indulge the supposition that morality can be maintained without religion. Whatever may be conceded to the influence of refined education on minds of peculiar structure, reason and experience both forbid us to expect that national morality can prevail in exclusion of religious principle.

-- George Washington

I have lived, Sir, a long time, and the longer I live, the more convincing proofs I see of this truth--that God governs in the affairs of men. And if a sparrow cannot fall to the ground without his notice, is it probable that an empire can rise without his aid?

--Benjamin Franklin

(Franklin made this observation at a critical point during the Constitutional Convention.)

So nigh nigh  
adv. nigh·er, nigh·est
1. Near in time, place, or relationship: Evening draws nigh.

2. Nearly; almost: talked for nigh onto two hours.
 is grandeur to our dust, so near is God to man, when duty whispers low, "Thou must," the youth replies, "I can."

--Ralph Waldo Emerson
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Title Annotation:Religion
Author:Behreandt, Dennis
Publication:The New American
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 27, 2004
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