News, Theology

Ten Theology Books to Watch For – October 2024

Here are some excellent new theology books * that will be released in October 2024 :

* broadly interpreted, including ethics, church history, biblical studies, and other areas that intersect with theology

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Theology Books October 2024

Religion for Realists: Why We All Need the Scientific Study of Religion
Samuel L. Perry

( Oxford UP )

More than half a century ago, sociologist J. Milton Yinger remarked about religion, “There are few major subjects about which men know so little, yet feel so certain.” Samuel L. Perry says that Yinger had it right. Americans–and Westerners more generally–neglect the scientific study of religion, and we do so at our peril.

In Religion for Realists, Perry argues that we need the scientific study of religion–the rational, data-driven analysis of religious life-now more than ever. Contrary to the fears of many religious Americans, the scientific study of religion only threatens empirical falsehoods, promulgated often to the benefit of charlatans and demagogues. And contrary to the silent hopes of many secular academics, religion doesn’t go away when you ignore it. Instead, interest groups fill the void to shape the public’s understanding of religious reality: sometimes well, usually poorly.

Perry makes the case that, as people in the West self-sort into partisan tribes, all of us–religious and irreligious alike–need the scientific study of religion. This book presents a practical roadmap for ensuring that its insights are widely available, accessible, and impactful.

  

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Theology Books October 2024

Love’s Braided Dance: Hope in a Time of Crisis

Norman Wirzba

(Yale UP)

A moving exploration of the place of hope in the world today, drawing on agrarian principles

In this series of meditations, Norman Wirzba recasts hope not as something people have, like a vaccine to prevent pain and trouble, but as something people do. Hope evaporates in conditions of abandonment and abuse. It grows in contexts of nurture and belonging. Hope ignites when people join in what Wendell Berry calls “love’s braided dance”—a commitment to care for one another and our world.

Through personal narratives and historical examples, Wirzba explores what sustains hope and why it so often seems absent from our vision of the future. The vitality of hope, he maintains, depends on a collective commitment to care for the physical world (its soils and waters, plants and animals, homes and neighborhoods) and to promote the moral, aesthetic, and spiritual ideals that affirm life as good, beautiful, and sacred.

Engaging with such contemporary topics as climate change, AI and social media, and the intensifying refugee crises and drawing on the wisdom of James Baldwin, Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Robin Wall Kimmerer, Martha Graham, and others, Wirzba offers a powerful argument for hope as a way of life in which people are intimately and practically joined with all the living.

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