
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Enshrined in our Constitution and etched into our currency, religion is inextricable from the fabric of American political and social life. The ubiquity of religion in our national history has also made it an elusive, at times contradictory, force in this country’s growth—one that is associated with freedom and tolerance as often as it is with censure and control. Catherine Brekus, professor of American religious history at Harvard Divinity School, joins David Rubenstein to discuss the complex and fascinating role religious practice and expression has played in shaping the United States.
Recorded on November 20, 2020
By The New York Historical4.6
357357 ratings
Enshrined in our Constitution and etched into our currency, religion is inextricable from the fabric of American political and social life. The ubiquity of religion in our national history has also made it an elusive, at times contradictory, force in this country’s growth—one that is associated with freedom and tolerance as often as it is with censure and control. Catherine Brekus, professor of American religious history at Harvard Divinity School, joins David Rubenstein to discuss the complex and fascinating role religious practice and expression has played in shaping the United States.
Recorded on November 20, 2020

1,135 Listeners

1,562 Listeners

3,794 Listeners

1,113 Listeners

748 Listeners

764 Listeners

4,026 Listeners

32,380 Listeners

6,084 Listeners

175 Listeners

4,182 Listeners

16,098 Listeners

197 Listeners

799 Listeners

1,531 Listeners