Mar

22

2010

Justin Taylor|12:00 am CT

Hunter’s To Change the World: What Are the Questions?
Hunter’s <i>To Change the World</i>: What Are the Questions? avatar

I’ve begun reading James Davison Hunter’s new book, To Change the World: The Irony, Tragedy, and Possibility of Christianity in the Late Modern World (Oxford University Press, 2010). This is a highly significant book; I’m already benefiting from and being corrected and challenged by it. A website has been set up to further the conversation.

I’ll try to blog my way through the book, chapter by chapter (something I’ve never done with a book before).

In the preface Hunter explains that his concerns can be grouped into two broad categories, the academic and the personal.

The basic academic question is:

How is religious faith possible in the late modern world?

Related to this are questions like:

  • Is it possible?
  • How does the encounter of religious faith with modernity change the nature and experience of faith?
  • How does it change modernity itself?

The personal question is related to the academic:

How do believers live out their faith under the conditions of the late modern world?

Categories: To Change the World

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