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The book combines intellectual, cultural and social history to
address a major area of encounter between Christianity and British
culture: the world of leisure. This book traces the rise and fall
of the evangelical movement, the powerhouse of Victorian religion,
via its preoccupation with pleasure. Victorian evangelicalism
demonstrated an ability to excite the affections but also a
corresponding suspicion of worldly pleasures. Suspicion developed
into hostility, and a movement premised on freedom became coercive
and alienating. The crisis of Victorian religion began. It is
generally held that the mid-Victorian turn to recreation and sport
solved the problem, 'justifying God to the people' through cricket,
cycling and football. This book argues otherwise - that the problem
of pleasure was inflamed by the ecclesiastical remedy. The problem
of overdrawn boundaries between church and world gave way to a new
and subtle confusion of gospel and culture. Historians have praised
the mood of engagement but the costs were profound. In fact, sport
became the perfect vehicle for that humanistic, 'unmystical'
morality that defines the secularity of the twentieth century.
Secularisation did not wait for the Dionysian rebellions of the
1960s: it emerged - almost a hundred years earlier - in the
Victorian transformation of religion into ethics. Central to the
process was the problem of pleasure. DOMINIC ERDOZAIN is Lecturer
in the History of Christianity, King's College London
It is widely assumed that science is the enemy of religious faith.
The idea is so pervasive that entire industries of religious
apologetics converge around the challenge of Darwin, evolution, and
the "secular worldview." This book challenges such assumptions by
proposing a different cause of unbelief in the West: the Christian
conscience. Tracing a history of doubt and unbelief from the
Reformation to the age of Darwin and Karl Marx, Dominic Erdozain
argues that the most powerful solvents of religious orthodoxy have
been concepts of moral equity and personal freedom generated by
Christianity itself. Revealing links between the radical
Reformation and early modern philosophers such as Baruch Spinoza
and Pierre Bayle, Erdozain demonstrates that the dynamism of the
Enlightenment, including the very concept of "natural reason"
espoused by philosophers such as Voltaire, was rooted in Christian
ethics and spirituality. The final chapters explore similar themes
in the era of Darwin and Marx, showing how moral revolt preceded
and transcended the challenges of evolution and "scientific
materialism" in the unseating of religious belief. The picture that
emerges is not of a secular challenge to religious faith, but a
series of theological insurrections against divisive accounts of
Christian orthodoxy.
At the heart of the Soviet experiment was a belief in the
impermanence of the human spirit: souls could be engineered;
conscience could be destroyed. The project was, in many ways,
chillingly successful. But the ultimate failure of a totalitarian
regime to fulfill its ambitions for social and spiritual mastery
had roots deeper than the deficiencies of the Soviet leadership or
the chaos of a "command" economy. Beneath the rhetoric of
scientific communism was a culture of intellectual and cultural
dissidence, which may be regarded as the "prehistory of
perestroika." This volume explores the contribution of Christian
thought and belief to this culture of dissent and survival, showing
how religious and secular streams of resistance joined in an
unexpected and powerful partnership. The essays in The Dangerous
God seek to shed light on the dynamic and subversive capacities of
religious faith in a context of brutal oppression, while
acknowledging the often-collusive relationship between clerical
elites and the Soviet authorities. Against the Marxist notion of
the "ideological" function of religion, the authors set the example
of people for whom faith was more than an opiate; against an
enduring mythology of secularization, they propose the centrality
of religious faith in the intellectual, political, and cultural
life of the late modern era. This volume will appeal to specialists
on religion in Soviet history as well as those interested in the
history of religion under totalitarian regimes.
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