This book, written by Luke Goodrich, a lawyer who specializes in religious liberty cases, offers readers an excellent primer on religious liberty issues, especially within the American context. I appreciate how Goodrich avoids an alarmist tone -- he readily admits that the religious liberties of Christians and others in America is facing increased hostility, but also illustrates how Christians and those of other faiths can take common-sense measures to reduce their risks of religious liberty lawsuits.The only drawback to his book is that it is almost solely focused on religious liberty issues in the American context, for there are many Christians and other people of faith who struggle with religious freedom issues all over the world. Still, despite the book's focus on religious liberty in the United States, the first couple of chapters, which lay out the various cases for religious freedom, are very good, as is Chapter 12, which examines various religious liberty conflicts in the Bible and offers principles that believers of any religion in any part of the world will find useful in defending their own religious liberty rights.