Description
One of the UK's most respected cultural commentators offers a timely analysis of this burning question, exposing the shallow assumptions on either side of current debate
About the Author
Rupert Shortt was Religion Editor of The Times Literary Supplement from 2000 to 2020, and is now a Research Associate at the University of Cambridge. His recent books include Christianophobia: A Faith under Attack (2012), Rowan's Rule: The Biography of the Archbishop (2014), God is No Thing: Coherent Christianity (2015) and Outgrowing Dawkins (2019).
Reviews
Argued with elegance and authority . . . refreshing and highly enjoyable * Melvyn Bragg *
An admirably concise, thoughtful and fair discussion of the virtues and vices of a religious society. * Professor Iain McGilchrist, consultant psychiatrist and author of The Master and His Emissary *
I love this book. It demolishes fashionable atheists who claim religion only does harm. It criticises extremists of all faiths who promote hatred and violence in the name of religion, and it praises, with caveats, those who seek meaning in their lives within a community, find something in the transcendent, and want to make the world a better place. * Rabbi Baroness Julia Neuberger DBE *
Shortt is one of the UK's most thoughtful and self-effacing religious commentators * Michael Barnes, Professor of Interreligious Relations at Heythrop College, University of London. *
Are the world's major religions forces for good or harm? Rupert Shortt provides a fascinating and enlightening discussion, summarising key arguments on both sides, with a much-needed appeal for a deeper conversation about religion and secularism. * Imam Dr Usama Hasan, Head of Islamic Studies, Quilliam International *
A triumph of ambition and concision. * Lucy Beckett, author of In the Light of Christ: Writings in the Western Tradition *
Book Information
ISBN 9780281078714
Author Rupert Shortt
Format Paperback
Page Count 80
Imprint SPCK Publishing
Publisher SPCK Publishing
Weight(grams) 124g