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Loading... God Is Back: How the Global Revival of Faith Is Changing the Worldby John Micklethwait
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Written by the editor-in-chief (John Micklethwait) and the Washington bureau chief (Adrian Woolridge) of The Economist. The Western European view over the past several decades has been that religion is irrelevant and an embarrassment, and far more trouble than it is worth. Both the theocracies of Saudi Arabia and Iran, matched by the theocracies of the Bush administration and Israel, have brought more conflict on this planet than anything since Europe's Thirty Years War. This has been echoed by Sam Harris in The End of Faith and Christopher Hitchens in God is Not Great. Well, God is Back. And yes, religion is a crucial element in understanding the politics of the Middle East, Africa, India, and the U.S. But this is perhaps not a terrible thing. Maybe there is a way out of this Clash of Civilizations, and it requires an understanding of the role of religion in the world today. And that is the point of God is Back. no reviews | add a review
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This book, however, is less concerned with questions of the merit of faith as to describing what is actually happening on the ground. As such it was an extremely interesting read, from authors who are not particularly wedded to any of the world views they are describing.
The fundamental thesis is that the assumption that modernity leads to secularism is in fact incorrect - that as countries are developing, they are becoming more religious, and that Europe here is an exception. What is more there is a thesis as to why this should be the case. The argument is made that US style separation of church and state, and the resulting pluralism this produces creates a need for religions to compete in a religious marketplace. This commoditisation of religion is well described, with historical examples of how churches have become more outward focussed and keyed into the winning of converts as they have found themselves unable to rest on the laurels of state establishment.
The result is a kind of tailored religion that people such as Bruce Bawer have clearly reacted against, and yet has proved incredibly durable. The result is that religion has prospered.
The book looks at issues for the future. It also discusses how some policy makers have radically misunderstood the place of faith in foreign policy, and also deals with issues of tension in the major religions themselves.
All in all this is an excellent work - not least because it avoids any triumphalism in the information it presents. This book is about numbers, but it is fundamentally an analysis of the current situation. It nowhere propounds a view that a numbers game is actually what the issue should be all about, and this then lends credence to the findings.
The analysis is so wide ranging it is going to be wrong in places. I detected a few places where I felt the authors had simplified issues (for instance in the summary of Robert Pape's work in "[Dying to Win: The Strategic Logic of Suicide Terrorism]". But read with an open mind, I think this book provides a convincing thesis. (