Suspicion and Faith

Suspicion and Faith
Author: Merold Westphal
Publisher: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company
Total Pages: 320
Release: 1993
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN:

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"An illuminating and powerful reading of three of the most important contemporary professedly antireligious thinkers... stinging critiques of Freud, Marx, and Nietzsche."-C. Stephen Evans, Society of Christian Philosophers

Suspicion and Faith

Suspicion and Faith
Author: Merold Westphal
Publisher: Fordham Univ Press
Total Pages: 196
Release: 2024-10-22
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 1531510876

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Postmodern Apologetics?:Arguments for God in Contemporary Philosophy

Postmodern Apologetics?:Arguments for God in Contemporary Philosophy
Author: Christina M. Gschwandtner
Publisher: Fordham Univ Press
Total Pages: 385
Release: 2013
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 0823242749

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Postmodern Apologetics provides an introduction to contemporary French thinkers who argue for the coherence and viability of Christian faith and religious experience with phenomenological and hermeneutical tools. It treats both French philosophers and appropriations of their thought in the North American context.

Reframing the Masters of Suspicion

Reframing the Masters of Suspicion
Author: Andrew Dole
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 264
Release: 2018-12-13
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1350065188

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This book revisits Paul Ricoeur's classification of Karl Marx, Friedrich Nietzsche, and Sigmund Freud as the “masters of suspicion”, and provides a thought-provoking critique for critical religious studies scholars, as well as anyone working in critical theory more broadly. Whereas Ricoeur saw suspicion as a mode of interpretation, Andrew Dole argues that the method common to his “masters” is better understood as a mode of explanation. Dole replaces Ricoeur's hermeneutics of suspicion with suspicious explanation, which claims the existence of hidden phenomena that are bad in some recognizable way. Each of the masters, Dole argues, offered a distinct kind of suspicious explanation. Reconstructing Marx, Nietzsche, and Freud in this way brings their work into conversation with conspiracy theories, which are themselves a type of suspicious explanation. Dole argues that conspiracy theories and other types of suspicious explanation are “cognitively ensnaring”, to borrow a term from Pascal Boyer. If they are true they are importantly true, but their truth or falsity can be very difficult to ascertain.

A Sneaking Suspicion (Sixth Edition)

A Sneaking Suspicion (Sixth Edition)
Author: John Dickson
Publisher:
Total Pages: 149
Release: 2019-05
Genre: Christian life
ISBN: 9781925424478

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"This is a book about things that matter. Things like life, death, relationships, sex, suffering, meaning. A book about how the whole picture of your life looks from the perspective of the God who created it." --Back cover.

Past Suspicion

Past Suspicion
Author: Therese Heckenkamp
Publisher:
Total Pages: 322
Release: 2012-10-28
Genre: Christian fiction
ISBN: 9780615719320

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"Don't trust anyone . . ." So whispers Robin's mother just moments before she dies. Uprooted from all she's ever known, seventeen-year-old Robin Finley is sent to her mother's old hometown to live with an uncle she's never met. The town is small, but it shelters big secrets. Robin encounters two mysterious young men, a tragic mansion, and disturbing questions about the past. While unraveling the threads of her mother's shrouded life, Robin meets more confusion. Her soul longs for peace and her heart yearns for love--yet she's consumed by suspicion and fear. Why did her mother flee this town so many years ago and never return? Robin's determination to discover the truth ensnares her in a tangled web that spans the years and threatens to destroy her future. "Past Suspicion is a page-turner, and Heckenkamp is an author to be reckoned with." -- Nancy Mehl, best-selling Christian author

Living Truth, Truthful Living

Living Truth, Truthful Living
Author: Winifred Wing Han Lamb
Publisher: ATF Press
Total Pages: 292
Release: 2004
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9781920691219

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The author maintains that suspciion can open up sapces for dialogue in apologetical encounter since both suspicion and biblical faith are concerned (in principle at least) with ruthfulness. She argues that suspicion is a 'scalpel' to faith because it can carry challenge and discomfort as well as insight and healing.

A Cloud of Suspicion

A Cloud of Suspicion
Author: Patricia Davids
Publisher: Harlequin Treasury-Love Inspired 90s
Total Pages: 228
Release: 2009
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780373443345

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Will a young mother's disappearance bring a bayou town together, or tear it apart?

Sword of the Spirit, Shield of Faith

Sword of the Spirit, Shield of Faith
Author: Andrew Preston
Publisher: Anchor
Total Pages: 779
Release: 2012-02-28
Genre: History
ISBN: 0307957608

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A richly detailed, profoundly engrossing story of how religion has influenced American foreign relations, told through the stories of the men and women—from presidents to preachers—who have plotted the country’s course in the world. Ever since John Winthrop argued that the Puritans’ new home would be “a city upon a hill,” Americans’ role in the world has been shaped by their belief that God has something special in mind for them. But this is a story that historians have mostly ignored. Now, in the first authoritative work on the subject, Andrew Preston explores the major strains of religious fervor—liberal and conservative, pacifist and militant, internationalist and isolationist—that framed American thinking on international issues from the earliest colonial wars to the twenty-first century. He arrives at some startling conclusions, among them: Abraham Lincoln’s use of religion in the Civil War became the model for subsequent wars of humanitarian intervention; nineteenth-century Protestant missionaries made up the first NGO to advance a global human rights agenda; religious liberty was the centerpiece of Franklin Roosevelt’s strategy to bring the United States into World War II. From George Washington to George W. Bush, from the Puritans to the present, from the colonial wars to the Cold War, religion has been one of America’s most powerful sources of ideas about the wider world. When, just days after 9/11, George W. Bush described America as “a prayerful nation, a nation that prays to an almighty God for protection and for peace,” or when Barack Obama spoke of balancing the “just war and the imperatives of a just peace” in his Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech, they were echoing four hundred years of religious rhetoric. Preston traces this echo back to its source. Sword of the Spirit, Shield of Faith is an unprecedented achievement: no one has yet attempted such a bold synthesis of American history. It is also a remarkable work of balance and fair-mindedness about one of the most fraught subjects in America.

The Betrayal of Faith

The Betrayal of Faith
Author: Emma Anderson
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 319
Release: 2007-10-31
Genre: History
ISBN: 0674296494

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Emma Anderson uses one man's compelling story to explore the collision of Christianity with traditional Native religion in colonial North America. Pierre-Anthoine Pastedechouan was born into a nomadic indigenous community of Innu living along the St. Lawrence River in present-day Quebec. At age eleven, he was sent to France by Catholic missionaries to be educated for five years, and then brought back to help Christianize his people. Pastedechouan's youthful encounter with French Catholicism engendered in him a fatal religious ambivalence. Robbed of both his traditional religious identity and critical survival skills, he had difficulty winning the acceptance of his community upon his return. At the same time, his attempts to prove himself to his people led the Jesuits to regard him with increasing suspicion. Suspended between two worlds, Pastedechouan ultimately became estranged--with tragic results--from both his native community and his missionary mentors. An engaging narrative of cultural negotiation and religious coercion, Betrayal of Faith documents the multiple betrayals of identity and culture caused by one young man's experiences with an inflexible French Catholicism. Pastedechouan's story illuminates key struggles to retain and impose religious identity on both sides of the seventeenth-century Atlantic, even as it has a startling relevance to the contemporary encounter between native and non-native peoples.