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The election of Donald Trump as President of the United States in
November 2016 was a political earthquake, one supporters and
detractors alike agree has changed the course of history. The
policy implications have been stark and will continue well beyond
his presidency. The political implications have been perhaps even
more drastic—for both political parties. Trump has shaken the
40-year-old coalition of traditional conservatives, orthodox
religious voters, and free-market libertarians that has
long-composed the Republican Party. The Republican Resistance:
#NeverTrump Conservatives and the Future of the GOP explores the
members of that coalition, especially traditional,
establishment-oriented Republicans and conservative intellectuals
who opposed his candidacy, who generally still oppose his
presidency, and who represent the elite-in-waiting that believes it
will have to rebuild the GOP when the Trump coalition implodes. In
the end, The Republican Resistance argues that the Trump presidency
and the #NeverTrump countermovement reflect key features of modern
American politics which both major political parties must contend:
the rise of a populist insurgency intent on overtaking the parties
from within and challenges of embracing demographic and structural
realities on the one hand while catering to a political base often
built to oppose those trends on the other.
In Spiritual Integrity, Martin S. Cohen argues that it is possible
for a serious commitment to religion-including to ritual, dogma,
and prayer-to co-exist with a parallel commitment to the absolute
integrity of the intellect. Writing as a working rabbi with almost
four decades of experience in the pulpit, but also bringing to bear
a lifetime of scholarly research into the history of Judaism, Cohen
uses his own faith as the framework for his proposals and shows
convincingly that although the concept of faith is regularly
invoked precisely to justify avoiding honesty in religion, there
also exists the possibility of using the traditional language of
religious commitment to live wholly honestly in the world as a
person of faith. Cohen uses all sorts of examples drawn from
Judaism to make his point, but his book is not about Judaism, per
se, however, but rather is a call to arms for people of all
faiths-or no specific faith-to recognize that religion that, if
embraced openly and honestly, can also lead to the embrace of a
serious kind of spirituality anchored in frankness, honesty, and
the renunciation of gullibility. Teaching would-be persons of faith
how to move forward from a starting-gate fashioned of those
specific values as pilgrims seeking redemption honestly and
honorably-and fully imbued with what the author calls spiritual
integrity-that should be the task of the world's spiritual leaders.
Could it actually be possible to be a person of deep, abiding faith
without feeling a concomitant need to profess belief in principles
that there simply is no specific way to prove-and which could
therefore just as easily be false as true? Cohen argues that it is
more than possible to aspire to that level of honesty in religion
and Spiritual Integrity is his attempt to prove that specific
point!
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