
Straight White American Jesus The Myth of Religious Freedom w/ Reza Aslan and Peter Manseau
May 12, 2026
Peter Manseau, historian and Smithsonian curator who wrote One Nation, Under Gods, reexamines America’s founding myths. He traces contested religious freedom from Puritan theocracy to the struggles of Jews, Muslims, Native peoples, and enslaved Africans. Short, sharp conversations on how pluralism was forged through conflict, the danger of Christian nationalism, and signs of religious creativity and resilience.
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Religious Freedom Was Contested Not Given
- The popular story that America was founded as a unified champion of religious freedom is a myth shaped by later myth-making.
- Peter Manseau traces a 500-year history showing pluralism emerged through conflict, exclusion, and resistance, not consensus.
Mary Dwyer Shows The City On A Hill's Intolerance
- Mary Dwyer's hanging exposes the dark side of the City on a Hill rhetoric.
- Manseau asks what Winthrop's ideal looked like to a Quaker being executed in Boston, highlighting Puritan intolerance enforced by banishment and death.
Sectarian Fights Shaped The Early Republic
- Early American religious life was fractious with many Protestant sects treating theological differences as matters of life and death.
- Manseau links local sect conflicts and taxes to the revolution's drive to separate church authority from state power.


