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How (Not) to Be Secular: Reading Charles Taylor
- Narrated by: Trevor Thompson
- Length: 5 hrs and 43 mins
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- How Worship Works
- By: James K. A. Smith
- Narrated by: Lyle Blaker
- Length: 8 hrs and 41 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
How does worship work? How exactly does liturgical formation shape us? What are the dynamics of such transformation? In the second of James K. A. Smith's three-volume theology of culture, the author expands and deepens his analysis of cultural liturgies and Christian worship he developed in his well-received Desiring the Kingdom. He helps us understand and appreciate the bodily basis of habit formation and how liturgical formation—both "secular" and Christian—affects our fundamental orientation to the world.
-
Desiring the Kingdom
- Worship, Worldview, and Cultural Formation
- By: James K.A. Smith
- Narrated by: John Pruden
- Length: 8 hrs and 47 mins
- Unabridged
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
Malls, stadiums, and universities are actually liturgical structures that influence and shape our thoughts and affections. Humans - as Augustine noted - are "desiring agents", full of longings and passions; in brief, we are what we love. James K. A. Smith focuses on the themes of liturgy and desire in Desiring the Kingdom, the first book in a three-volume set on the theology of culture. He redirects our yearnings to focus on the greatest good: God.
Publisher's Summary
How (Not) to Be Secular is what Jamie Smith calls "your hitchhiker's guide to the present" - it is both a reading guide to Charles Taylor's monumental work, A Secular Age, and philosophical guidance on how we might learn to live in our times.
Taylor's landmark book, A Secular Age (2007), provides a monumental, incisive analysis of what it means to live in the post-Christian present - a pluralist world of competing beliefs and growing unbelief. Jamie Smith's book is a compact field guide to Taylor's insightful study of the secular, making that very significant but daunting work accessible to a wide array of readers.
Even more, though, Smith's How (Not) to Be Secular is a practical philosophical guidebook, a kind of how-to manual on how to live in our secular age. It ultimately offers us an adventure in self-understanding and maps out a way to get our bearings in today's secular culture, no matter who "we" are - whether believers or skeptics, devout or doubting, self-assured or puzzled and confused. This is a book for any thinking person to chew on.
What listeners say about How (Not) to Be Secular: Reading Charles Taylor
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
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- Daniel
- 11-03-2019
Rich analysis
For what is essentially the spark notes version of another book, it's worth the time.
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