As the baby boomers headed off from their elementary schools to religious- instruction classes, magazine covers asked: "Is God Dead?" Yet today, most ...
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											people describe themselves as religious, and many focus deeply on a wide array  of spiritual practices and traditions. The debates continue, however, as  influential voices warn of an emerging theocracy in our country and some call  for "the end of faith." In Speaking of Faith, Krista Tippett addresses  these many voices and concerns, these huge cultural shifts and reversals,  drawing from her own experience and her conversations across the world’s  traditions with theologians, scientists, ethicists, and activists as creator and  host of public radio’s enormously popular show of the same name. A former diplomat and graduate of Yale Divinity School, Tippett grew  up in an evangelical culture and spent a decade as a non-religious person. Now,  as someone who for many years has reflected on and talked with others about  faith, she brings deep insight and a unique vantage point as she explores  religious traditions—viewing them as rich resources for our spirits, as guides  to our most important modern confusions, and as correctives for the excesses of  religion itself. In the story of her life and her conversations, she describes a  new imagination for a new century—spiritual, political, and personal. She  illustrates a way to speak about faith that defuses the usual minefields. She  traces a powerful, creative, and humbling line between religious ideas and real  life. This is religion as it works in the lives of the many, not in the debates  and headlines of a few. Her book is an antidote to the stridencies and doomsday  theories that have characterized our public discourse about religion since  September 11, 2001. And it suggests models, vocabulary, and practical virtues  for what Tippett calls "the vast middle" – left, right, and center between poles  of competing answers that have hardened our cultural discourse. As Tippett observes, faith is as much about questioning as it is  about certainties, and faith has a tremendous capacity to nourish our lives and  communities, if we can learn how to speak of it meaningfully. Doing so is vital  to our lives and our society, when matters of faith and ethics are often steeped  in anger, fear, and suspicion. At such a time, the story of one woman’s attempt  to speak about the mysteries of life, and to listen with care to those who  endeavor to understand those mysteries, is nothing short of revolutionary.
											
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