Rethinking the Enlightenment: Faith in the Age of Reason

Rethinking the Enlightenment: Faith in the Age of Reason

by Joseph Stuart
Rethinking the Enlightenment: Faith in the Age of Reason

Rethinking the Enlightenment: Faith in the Age of Reason

by Joseph Stuart

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Overview

The Enlightenment was a complex cultural movement that radically transformed both religion and society — a movement Christians fended off when, in the name of “reason,” the Church in France was dethroned in a most bloody and utterly unreasonable way. The Enlightenment also ushered in a wave of genuine Christian inspiration and reform, however, and it opened vast new avenues for the faith to flourish.

In this compelling and edifying book, scholar Joseph Stuart investigates this paradox, masterfully exploring the tense interaction of the Enlightenment and Christianity as two cultures, two lived realities, and two overlapping ways of life.

On page after page, you'll see that the “Age of Reason” was more than just merciless confrontation between reason and religion. Indeed, it brought forth many Christians — including “the Enlightenment Pope,” Benedict XIV, and groups of coffee-drinking monks — who embraced both faith and reason as powerful tools for strengthening Church and society.

In other cases, culture-changing Christians such as John Wesley and St. Louis de Montfort opted simply to sidestep the Enlightenment by building up Christian culture from within — a strategy that led to the explosion of powerful evangelical movements across the world.

In Rethinking the Enlightenment, Dr. Stuart demonstrates that the three primary strategies Christians employed during the Enlightenment — conflict, engagement, and retreat — are time-tested methods that should be employed in our own anti-Christian age. Conflict without engagement is senseless; engagement without conflict is weak; and without retreat, both strategies lack wisdom. If we pursue all three today with the help of the Holy Spirit, then a tough, intellectually sophisticated, and evangelically oriented Christianity can emerge — just as it did in the tumultuous Age of the Enlightenment


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781622828227
Publisher: Sophia Institute Press
Publication date: 10/15/2020
Pages: 400
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Joseph T. Stuart, Ph.D., is Associate Professor of History and Fellow of Catholic Studies at the University of Mary in Bismarck, North Dakota. His research and publications concern the life and work of cultural historian Christopher Dawson, the cultural history of the Great War, and the Enlightenment of the eighteenth century.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix

Introduction 1

Part 1 Conflict and the Conflictual Enlightenment

1 Obedience unto Death 7

2 The Road to Vincennes 21

3 Dining at Ferney 47

4 Fleeing Catholic Dragons 69

5 Brothers in Sin 107

Part 2 Engagement and the Catholic Enlightenment

6 Not an Ordinary Salon Girl 135

7 Benedict Brain 175

8 The End of an Age 215

Part 3 Retreat and the Practical Enlightenment

9 Householding 249

10 The Heart of the Matter 289

11 Revolutions of the Soul 321

Conclusion: A Strategic Vision of Enlightenment and Christian Cultures 345

Works Cited 353

Image Credits 371

Index 373

About the Author 387

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