Winner of the 1989 Scribes Book Award, American Society of Writers on Legal Subjects "The signal virtue of these fascinating travels through the metaphoric and historical life of the secular worship of the Constitution is the challenge ... to work out the terms of one's own constitutional faith."--Michael Meltsner, The Nation "Sanford Levinson is a man of the left who takes patriotism seriously. In Constitutional Faith, he offers a timely meditation on exactly what, if anything, America can stand for."--Stephen Macedo, The New Republic "[R]ich and pleasingly controversial."--Thomas Morawetz, Philadelphia Inquirer "[Levinson] brilliantly transposes his concern from the overfamiliar problem of how judges should decide cases and how they can be restrained from becoming tyrants to the question of what it means to adhere to a constitution... [The book] is rich and pleasingly conversational."--Thomas Morawetz, The Philadelphia Inquirer