Law as Religion, Religion as Law
The conventional approach to law and religion assumes that these are competing domains, which raises questions about the freedom of, and from, religion; alternate commitments of religion and human rights; and respective jurisdictions of civil and religious courts. This volume moves beyond this competitive paradigm to consider law and religion as overlapping and interrelated frameworks that structure the social order, arguing that law and religion share similar properties and have a symbiotic relationship. Moreover, many legal systems exhibit religious characteristics, informing their notions of authority, precedent, rituals and canonical texts, and most religions invoke legal concepts or terminology. The contributors address this blurring of law and religion in the contexts of political theology, secularism, church-state conflicts, and the foundational idea of divine law. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
- Includes essays from a range of disciplines and perspectives
- Breaks new ground in exploring the overlap and interplay of law and religion
- Available as Open Access on Cambridge Core
Reviews & endorsements
'Too often, debates and doctrines about 'law' and 'religion' presume that these are sharply distinct, entirely separate practices or ideas. This volume enriches and deepens our understandings and conversations by reminding us that legal and theological reasoning are often analogous and complementary, that religious and political institutions regularly and appropriately cooperate, and that legal and religious beliefs and practices are profoundly shaped by each other.' Richard W. Garnett, Professor of Law, Director, Notre Dame Program on Church, State & Society, Concurrent Professor of Political Science, Notre Dame Law School
Product details
August 2022Adobe eBook Reader
9781108788700
0 pages
This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
- Part I. Sanctification and Secularization:
- 1. Desanctification of law and the problem of absolutes Jeremy Waldron
- 2. The paradox of human rights discourse and the Jewish legal tradition Suzanne Last Stone
- 3. Sovereign imaginaries: visualizing the sacred foundation of law's authority Richard K. Sherwin
- Part II. Legal-Religious Language:
- 4. Dat: from law to religion: the transformation of formative term in modern times Abraham Melamed
- 5. Law as religion, religion as law: Halakhah from a semiotic point of view Bernard S. Jackson
- 6. Canonicity as a defining feature of legal and religious discourse: a programmatic essay Daniel Reifman
- Part III. Legal-Theological Roots:
- 7. Exceptional grace: religion as the sovereign suspension of law Robert Yelle
- 8. A bad man theory of religious law (numbers 15:30-31 and its afterlife) David C. Flatto
- 9. Soviet law and political religion Dmytro Vovk
- 10. International law as evangelism Kevin Crow
- Part IV. Religious Conceptions of Law:
- 11. 'Enjoin them upon your children to keep' (Deuteronomy 32:46): law as commandment and legacy, or, Robert Cover meets Midrash Steven D. Fraade
- 12. 'Between man and god' and 'Between man and his fellow': categories in Polemical context Itzhak Brand
- 13. Christian feasts and administration of Roman justice in late antiquity Silvia Schiavo
- Part V. Law in Formation: Religious Perspectives:
- 14. Law as a problematic aspect of religion: Paul's skepticism in a broader Jewish context Serge Ruzer
- 15. When law meets theology: legality and revelation in the Jewish, Islamic, and Zoroastrian traditions in the Abbasid period Yishai Kiel.