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In this insightful book, Marty covers a wealth of vital issues about the state of the politics and religion, including: the case often made against public religion; how public religion affects the common good; the ways in which the individual citizen is formed by faith; the declining political power of traditional institutions; the flourishing of religious special interest groups; and how to move questions of public religion from argument to conversation.
List of contents
Acknowledgments.
Introduction: Tools for Moving from Argument to Conversation.
1. Handle with Care: The Case Against Public Religion.
2. Worth the Risk: Public Religion and the Common Good.
3. The Individual Citizen, Formed and Mobilized by Faith.
4. The Declining Political Power of Traditional Institutions.
5. The Flourishing of Religious Special Interest Groups.
6. An Invitation to All Religious People: Join the Political Conversation.
Notes.
References.
The Author.
About the Public Religion Project.
Index.
About the author
MARTIN E. MARTY is the author of more than fifty books, including the five-volume The Fundamentalisms Project and the three-volume Modern American Religion. He is professor emeritus at the University of Chicago Divinity School, where he received his Ph.D. and taught for thirty-five years. An ordained minister, he is senior editor of the weekly
Christian Century, a frequent media commentator on American religion, and the recipient of sixty-four honorary degrees.
Summary
In this first volume of a two-volume set on the public expression of faith, the preeminent authority on religion in American shatters myths and stereotypes to advance the important public discussion about the public religion in political life.