The Contested Public Square: The Crisis of Christianity and Politics, By Greg Forster

The Contested Public Square

The Crisis of Christianity and Politics

by Greg Forster

The Contested Public Square
Paperback
  • Length: 254 pages
  • Dimensions: 6 × 9 in
  • Published: September 30, 2008
  • Imprint: IVP Academic
  • ISBN: 9780830828807

Christian thinking about involvement in human government was not born (or born again!) with the latest elections or with the founding of the Moral Majority in 1979. The history of Christian political thinking goes back to the first decades of thechurch's existence under persecution. Building on biblical foundations, that thinking has developed over time.This book introduces the history of Christian political thought traced out in Western culture--a culture experiencing the dissolution of a long-fought-for consensus around natural law theory. Understanding our current crisis, where there is little agreement and often opposing views about how to maintain both religious freedom and liberal democracy, requires exploring how we got where weare. Greg Forster tells that backstory with deft discernment and clear insight. He offers this retrospective not only to inform but also to point the way beyond the current impasse in the contested public square.Illuminated by sidebars on key momentsin history, major figures and questions for further consideration, this book will significantly inform Christian scholars' and students' reading and interpretation of history.

CONTENTS

Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Welcome Back to Babylon
How Persecution Permanently Shaped Christian Political Ideas
2. The Wisdom of the Gods
Theology Encounters Philosophy
3. Cities of God and Man
Augustine Formalizes the Idea of Dual Citizenship
4. Natural Law
The Medieval Church Develops the Most Important Political Idea in History
5. Regio Versus Religio
The Reformation and the Nation-State
6. On the Road to Jerusalem
The Emergence of Religious Freedom
7. An Appeal to Heaven
Revolution and Liberal Democracy
8. The Fiery Trial
Christian Responses to Totalitarianism
Conclusion
Index

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Greg Forster (Ph.D., Yale University) is director of the Program in American History, Economics Religion in the Kern Family Foundation. He is the author of John Locke's Politics of Moral Consensus (Cambridge University Press) and has contributed to several scholarly journals. He is also a senior fellow at the Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice.