| Author/Contributor(s): | Sutton, Matthew Avery ; Dochuk, Darren |
| Publisher: | Oxford University Press, USA |
| Date: | 12/24/2015 |
| Binding: | Paperback |
| Condition: | NEW |
man who spoke them, the nation's president, Barack Obama. He had made the original statement--Whatever we once were, we are no longer a Christian nation, at least not just--four years earlier. Since then those words had appeared, in one form or another, not just on billboards but in a host of
other venues, a visible symbol of America's divide over religion and politics. In Faith in the New Millennium, a group of leading historians explores the shifting role of religion in American politics in the age of Obama, shedding new and fascinating light on the interplay of faith and politics. Each of the sixteen contributors examines a contemporary issue, controversy, or
policy through a historical lens. In an age of the 24-hour-news-cycle, where complexity is often buried under bluster, these essays make a powerful case for understanding the stories behind the news. They tackle such topics as immigration reform, racial turmoil, drone wars, foreign policy, and the
unstoppable rise of social media. Taken together, they reveal how faith is shaping modern America, and how modern America is shaping faith.