Protestant, Catholic, Jew is a study of religion and acculturation in the United States after the mass migration of the nineteenth century. Will Herberg attempts to examine the triple melting pot theory proposed by RJR Kennedy in 1944 with a complex question: Why is America both secular and the most religion modern nation? He examines the nature of religion in America, as well as the arrival and subsequent acculturation of each religious group.
It is in the three devoted chapters to each religion that Herberg practices more traditional history, he approached the rest sociologically, primarily making assumption based on some data and a fair amount of subjective analysis. The real contribution of the work is what it highlights, even if it does not provide enough evidence to support all of his explanations and projections. Protestant, Catholic, Jew highlights a very important fact of American immigration in the century preceding its publication. America prescribes religion to its new arrivals and residents-it just doesn’t care which one is chosen. The shared religion which unifies these groups is what Herberg term, The American Way of Life. He defines this as the American religion (public), as opposed to the individually chosen or self-subscribed religions in America (private).
The later chapters are interesting but outdated, as are the revelations they might have contained. Comparing and contrasting these groups gave no real answers to the question of why America was steadfastly in favor of religion for religion’s sake. He discussed the need for acculturated third generation immigrants to find meaning and belonging in their new home, but his explanation that America was founded on principals of religious freedom does not a smoking gun make.