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American Religion: From Pluralism to Consensus


Article # : 13558 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 4 / 1988  3,356 Words
Author : Kenneth A. Myers
Kenneth A. Myers is editor of This World: A Journal of Religion and Public Life and author of a forthcoming book titled Common Grace, Common Ground: Notes for a Christian Public Philosophy.

       SPIRITUAL POLITICS
       Religion and America Since World War II
       Mark Silk
       New York: Simon and Schuster, 1988
       288 pp., $19.95
       
        "The religion of America," Paul Johnson has observed, "is religion." There is nothing new about the observation that America is an incurably religious nation. But in his brief and lively study of the American penchant for religion, Mark Silk goes beyond this commonplace observation to document the extent to which this endemic religiosity has combined with a number of theological, historical, and cultural factors to produce what is functionally a new religion: the anomalous and novel hybrid faith called "Judeo-Christianity."
       
        At the outset, Silk tells his readers that he is not going to delve into the questions of how modern American religious commitment measures up qualitatively to that of, for example, Puritan New England. Nor is his intension to offer yet another sermon on church and state questions. Rather, his attention is dedicated to "spiritual politics." By this Silk does not mean what some have labeled "political theology," which is essentially political and ideological dogma disingenuously donning the gowns of the divine. Spiritual politics describes "one of the principal means by which Americans conduct their cultural business." Whether one understands it as the product of a sincere conviction that all of life is essentially religious, an idolatrous urge to sanctify the profane, or sheer habit, Americans seems to prefer a spiritual flavor to their public life. As Silk puts it, American society has a powerful "desire ... (1997 of 21070 Characters)
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