A Public Faith : How followers of Christ should serve the Common Good
Date
2011-11-21
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Publisher
Brazos Press
Abstract
D
ebates are raging today about the role of religions in public life, and
it is not difficult to see why. First, religions—Buddhism, Judaism,
Christianity, Islam, and so on—are growing numerically, and their members
worldwide are increasingly unwilling to keep their convictions and
practices limited to the private sphere of family or religious community.
Instead, they want these convictions and practices to shape public life. They
may engage in electoral politics and seek to influence legislative processes
(as the Religious Right has done in the United States since the Reagan
presidency), or they may concentrate on transforming the moral fabric of
society through religious awakening (as the Religious Right seems to be
doing during the Obama presidency). Either way, many religious people
aim to shape public life according to their own vision of the good life.
Second, in today’s globalized world, religions cannot be neatly
sequestered into separate geographic areas. As the world shrinks and the
interdependence of people increases, ardent proponents of different
religions come to inhabit the same space.
