The Trouble with God: Religious Humanism and the Republic of Heaven

The Trouble with God: Religious Humanism and the Republic of Heaven

by David Boulton (Author)

Synopsis

Millions of people living in the so-called "Christian West" want to be true to the teachings and values of the tradition they have inherited, but find it impossible to believe in the old ideas of God in His choir-filled Heaven and Satan in Hell-fire. They long for a thoroughly modern, intellectually defensible, emotionally satisfying faith which will be unashamedly religious and piritual in its commitment, but frankly secular in its relevance to this world and this age. David Boulton is both a humanist and a Quaker attender, and he argues in The Trouble with God that humanism and a reasonable faith are not the enemies and opposites they are often imagined to be. Modern humanism, the wider humanitarian movement and western concepts of human rights are all rooted in Christian and religious values. We need both a humanism which cherishes the religious values of "mercy, pity, peace and love", and religion which has freed itself from supernaturalism to acknowledge that every faith-system is a wholly human creation. Drawing on his own varied experiences as boy-evangelist, failed politician, peace campaigner, television producer and broadcasting watchdog, David Boulton puts a case for "radical religious humanism" and urges a fresh commitment by both believers and "devout skeptics" to the making of what he calls "the republic of heaven on earth".

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 160
Publisher: O Books
Published: 01 Sep 2002

ISBN 10: 190381619X
ISBN 13: 9781903816196

Author Bio
David Boulton is a former Editor of the award-winning British television investigative series World in Action , and a former Head of Current Affairs, Arts and Religion at Britain's largest independent television company, Granada. He edited the Sea of Faith magazine SOF from 1992 to 2001 and has written a dozen books on subjects ranging from jazz to business ethics, and protestant private armies in Ulster to Quaker history and theology. He writes and reviews for both religious and humanist publications. In 1996 he was appointed a member of the British Governmen'ts Broadcasting Standards Commission.