Summary: "Just Law Wrought From Human Hands? The Separability of Law and Morality in German Protestant Political Theology" is a study of the impact of modernity upon Protestant political thought. It examines how Protestant political theology adapted to the secularism of modern legal and political systems. It argues that the modern imperative to distinguish and separate the legal sphere from the moral, religious, and cultural spheres was a central component of the political theology of Ernst Troeltsch and Paul Tillich. It demonstrates why these influential theologians believed democratic law necessary to the achievement of both religious and secular goals. By their account, which builds from the Reformation theology of Luther and the political philosophy of Kant, secular legal structures are necessary to insure the well-being, security, and freedom of humans in the present life. But by their account, if the political order is to accomplish ends that are morally and religiously good (i.e. achieving justice and respect for persons) then the inclusion of specific moral and explicitly religious language in public political and legal discourse must be carefully limited.