Unto God and Caesar: Religious Issues in the Emerging Commonwealth, 1891-1906Melbourne University Press, 1976 - 162 strani Publisher description: Should the Australian Constitution be given a religious clause or should it not? The question gave scope for almost endless wrangles to the founding fathers of Australian federation. Whether their interests were chiefly political or religious, they argued vociferously whether God should be recognized in the Preamble and whether He should appear in Section 116; and if so in what form He should be acknowledged. The issue, confused, complex and partisan enough already, was further complicated by the wider questions, first raised by Tasmanian Andrew Inglis Clark, concerning relations in general between the churches and the coming Commonwealth. This book is about the clashes between church and state groups and personalities, often mainly interested in making personal gains, what decisions they made, and how the decisions came about. |
Iz vsebine knjige
Zadetki 1–3 od 21
Stran
... once , to stand for election to the Federal Convention ; once , to support the Federation Bill in the 1899 referendum ; and once , to secure what he deemed his right of precedence at the 1 January ceremony at Cen- tennial Park at which ...
... once , to stand for election to the Federal Convention ; once , to support the Federation Bill in the 1899 referendum ; and once , to secure what he deemed his right of precedence at the 1 January ceremony at Cen- tennial Park at which ...
Stran 69
... once more came up for consideration , and Glynn once more moved a ' recognition ' amend- ment . His proposal , now more moderate than at Adelaide , was to amend the preamble to declare that the people of the various colonies ' humbly ...
... once more came up for consideration , and Glynn once more moved a ' recognition ' amend- ment . His proposal , now more moderate than at Adelaide , was to amend the preamble to declare that the people of the various colonies ' humbly ...
Stran 115
... once more to Lyne ; 20 but Lyne still refused to act . The Presbyterians did not rest content after this rebuff , but chang- ed their tack . They now became determined , in the name of religious equality , that in the procession there ...
... once more to Lyne ; 20 but Lyne still refused to act . The Presbyterians did not rest content after this rebuff , but chang- ed their tack . They now became determined , in the name of religious equality , that in the procession there ...
Vsebina
Introduction | 1 |
Churchmen at the Bathurst Convention | 4 |
The Cardinal Steps | 13 |
Avtorske pravice | |
19 preostalih delov ni prikazanih
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
Adelaide Adye Douglas Anglican Australian Christian World Barton Bathurst cabinet campaign Cardinal ceremony churchmen clerical colonies Constitution Council of Churches CRS A6 debate declared delegates denominations draft ecclesiastical electors establishment Federal Convention federal parliament Federation Bill federation movement free exercise Geelong Glynn Gosman Higgins Higgins's clause Hopetoun Ibid imposing any religious inserted interjected interpretation issue large number leaders legislate legislatures Lord Hopetoun Lyne Melbourne ment Moran O'Connor Parliamentary perhaps petitions political prayer preamble precedence Presbyterian Presbyterian Monthly prevent primate prohibiting the free proposal Protestant Protestantism provision question Quick and Garran recognition recognitionists regard religion religious liberty religious observances religious test respect Roman Catholic Roman Catholic Church sectarian Section 116 secular secularist separationist simply South Australia South Wales South Wales Council Southern Cross Sunday observance Supreme Court Sydney Morning Herald Symon Tasmania tion United United States Constitution University of Tasmania Victorian vote Western Australia