Review:
This is a collection of essays with resonating insights about today's public dialogues. From Jefferson through Lincoln to today's evangelicals, America's historic struggle to achieve Godliness acquires depth and complexity in the hands of these fine scholars. (Joyce Appleby, Professor Emeritus, Department of History, UCLA)
This outstanding book offers discerning essays on a perennial phenomenon: Americans think the nation is becoming more secular, which leaves some rejoicing and some in despair. The authors reveal much about secularization, but much more about why predictions about the effacement of religion have been so central in American national life. (Mark A. Noll, Francis A. McAnaney Professor, History Department, University of Notre Dame)
Prophesies of Godlessness is a new angle of vision on the history of religion in America. People often worry that society is turning away from religion, but these essays show that this worry is itself one of the oldest and most durable parts of our religious story. The authors help us look at our traditions with more awareness of how they have changed, more confidence in their future, and more realism about our own predictions. (Robin W. Lovin, Cary M. Maguire University Professor of Ethics, Perkins School of Theology, Southern Methodist University)
Under the brilliant editorship of Mathewes and Nichols, this chronologically arranged and thematically linked collection of essays looks at a tradition that extends from Puritan Jeremiads to modern-day prophecies of doom. The result is an illuminating tour of American intellectual history that startles, provokes, and engages. (Foreign Affairs)
There are many things to recommend about this book, but perhaps the most valuable aspect is the way it makes coherent and usable the debate over religion in American life. ...The editors have done an admirable job sustaining that easy intellectual flow in their relevant and scholarly book. (Journal of American Studies)
About the Author:
Charles Mathewes is Associate Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Virginia, where he specializes in Christian theology and ethics, comparative religious ethics, and religion, politics, and society. Christopher McKnight Nichols is a Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture at the University of Virginia. He specializes in United States intellectual, cultural, and political history from the late nineteenth century through the twentieth century.
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