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Traditional understandings of the genesis of the separation of
church and state rest on assumptions about "Enlightenment" and the
republican ethos of citizenship. In The Religious Roots of the
First Amendment, Nicholas P. Miller does not seek to dislodge that
interpretation but to augment and enrich it by recovering its
cultural and discursive religious contexts--specifically the
discourse of Protestant dissent. He argues that commitments by
certain dissenting Protestants to the right of private judgment in
matters of Biblical interpretation, an outgrowth of the doctrine of
the priesthood of all believers, helped promote religious
disestablishment in the early modern West.
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