Post-Christendom Faith

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A01=Philip A. Rolnick
Anthropology
Atheism
Author_Philip A. Rolnick
Category=QDHR
Category=QRA
Category=QRAB
Christendom
Communism
Comte
Descartes
Enlightenment
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Feuerbach
French Revolution
Humanism
Marx
Metaphysics
Modernism
Naturalism
Nietzsche
Nihilism
Philosophy of History
Philosophy of Religion
Post-Christendom
Protestant Reformation
Secularism
Spinoza

Product details

  • ISBN 9781481308922
  • Weight: 333g
  • Dimensions: 195 x 220mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jul 2021
  • Publisher: Baylor University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Confronted by multiple religious possibilities, the rise of atheistic naturalism, and moral relativism, one can easily become perplexed about what matters most—or be tempted to conclude that nothing could matter most. As the first volume of A Post-Christendom Faith, a set of three interrelated theological works, The Long Battle for the Human Soul examines major historical developments that have led to our contemporary confusion—so that we might chart a way forward.

Philip Rolnick begins with a theological assessment of the Reformation, Enlightenment, and French Revolution, three movements that attempted, and to some degree accomplished, basic reformulations of humanity. After the shock of the Reformation, with its faith-based criticism, the Enlightenment's reason-based criticism more or less set faith aside. The radical nature of Enlightenment criticism in turn led to the radical anthropological reformulations of the French Revolution—and then devolved into the Terror. Separated from Christian faith, and oftentimes fiercely opposing it, early forms of secular humanism poured their energies into reshaping social and political structures, while the crescendo of critique profoundly altered the spiritual landscape of the West. With foundational certainties shattered, new movements arose that pulled in different directions, some of them dangerous and deadly. Rolnick maps this fracturing through Feuerbach's atheism, the excesses of Romantic literature, the rise of nihilism, the "moral inversion" of Marxism, Comte's positivism, and Nietzsche's all-out war against Christianity.

In this story of broken foundations, Rolnick is careful to show that the church and the gospel have never ceased to offer a very different foundation—trustworthy and eternally enduring. This first volume ends on a hopeful note, turning from the problematic humanism of recent centuries to a humanism grounded in incarnational faith. Its christological reflection looks beyond brokenness and toward the one who has never ceased restoring human wholeness.

Philip A. Rolnick is Professor of Theology and Chair of the Science and Theology Network at the University of St. Thomas in Minnesota. He is also the author of Origins: God, Evolution, and the Question of the Cosmos; Person, Grace, and God; and Analogical Possibilities: How Words Refer to God.

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