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Description: In this pertinent and engaging volume leading
Christian philosophers, theologians, and writers from all over the
denominational map explode the black-and-white binaries that
characterize both sides of the New Atheism debate. They transcend
the self-assured shouting matches of this latest expression of the
culture wars by engaging in rigorous, polychromatic Christian
reflection that considers the extent to which the atheistic
critique-both new and old-might help the church move toward a more
mature faith, authentic spirituality, charitable witness, and
peaceable practice. With generous openness and ferocious wit, this
collection of essays, interviews, memoir, poetry, and visual
art-including contributions from leading intellectuals, activists,
and artists such as Stanley Hauerwas, Charles Taylor, John Milbank,
Stanley Fish, Luci Shaw, Paul Roorda, Merold Westphal, and D.
Stephen Long-provides substantive analysis, incisive critique, and
a hopeful way forward for Christian dialog with atheist voices.
Endorsements: ""I was watching a TV documentary the other night
that featured several highly religious parents dealing with their
highly addictive adult childrens' drug and sexuality issues. 'Their
faith seems to make them worse parents and worse people, ' I said
to my wife after the last commercial. I feel the same way when
political leaders bring in religion to justify the unjusti able, as
they too often do. That's why I am so grateful for this brilliant
book: atheism isn't just something to oppose or refute--it also can
be a mirror, with much to teach us believers about ourselves and
our distorted and unworthy ideas about God and religion. The
atheist too is our neighbor, and God may want to speak to us all
through the incisive insight of an honest atheist. Highly, highly
recommended."" --BRIAN MCLAREN author of Everything Must Change:
Jesus, Global Crises, and a Revolution of Hope ""The very shape of
this book is a response to the New Atheism precisely because it
refuses their narrow imagination and rationalist fundamentalism.
Instead of playing by their rules, this book imagines faith
otherwise in a stunning collection of poetry, prose, interviews,
and images. It is an intellectual feast which seats us at the table
with some of the most signi cant voices of our day."" --JAMES K. A.
SMITH author of The Devil Reads Derrida: And Other Essays on the
University, the Church, Politics, and the Arts ""In this
exceptionally readable and engaging volume of essays--ranging from
the accessibly academic to the largely belletristic--the diverse
authors, along with their editors, pose one of the most effective
answers to the so-called 'new atheists' that has come down the pike
in recent years. Avoiding both the baroque scholasticism of so much
contemporary postmodernist philosophy and the kitschy
special-pleading of many popular theologians, God is Dead and I
Don't Feel So Good Myself is special soul food for today's thinking
Christian. . . . The book is a must read for all those frustrated
onlookers who feel the new atheists have received far more
attention than they deserve."" --CARL RASCHKE author of The Next
Reformation and GloboChrist ""A rich, diverse nuanced collection of
essays, interviews, musings, poetry, and art that together add up
to a generous, engaging response to the New Atheism. Readers will
either be shocked or unsurprised to learn that the 'god' declared
dead by the New Atheists turns out not to be the God of Abraham,
Sarah, Isaac, and Jacob that Christians affirm. God is not an
explanation. This volume makes a strong case that the appropriate
response to the resurgent atheism is not better arguments, but
patient humility, and the practice of gratitude with the fruit of
wonder, and the honey of love."" --James H. Olthuis, Institute for
Christian Studies, Toronto, Emeritus ""Through insightful essays,
penetrating conversations, and beautiful poetry, 'God is Dead' and
I Don't Feel So Good Myself brings t
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