James Madison: A Commitment to Term Paper

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Without this strong early advocate for religious freedom divorced from civic interference, modern Americans would enjoy far less personal freedom and individual liberty.

From the early days of the development of the British colonies into an independent nation, Madison was involved. As a student of history, government, and law, he took part in framing the Virginia Constitution in 1776 and held membership in the Virginia Assembly ("James Madison"). Madison served in the Continental Congress and engaged in frequent debates at the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia ("James Madison"). Together with Alexander Hamilton and John Jay, Madison made a major contribution to ratifying the Constitution by writing the Federalist essays, which were in favor of the creation of a more powerful federal government to replace the ailing Confederation. The essays earned him the title of "Father of the Constitution," although he claimed the document was "the work of many heads and many hands" ("James Madison").
He also shared in framing the Bill of Rights and passing the first revenue legislation.

In fact, Madison was one of the first intellectuals in colonial America who understood in a practical sense why church and state must be separate. His advocacy for this idea, Boston notes, grew from his personal experiences in Virginia, where "Anglicanism was the officially established creed and any attempt to spread another religion in public could lead to a jail term" (Boston 60). When, in 1774,-word came that several Baptist preachers were in jail because of public preaching, Madison wrote to his friend William Bradford in Philadelphia about the situation:

That diabolical Hell conceived principle.....

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