Books

Pluralist Impotence

Robert Wuthnow examines why religion fails to change American society.

Robert Wuthnow of Princeton University’s Center for the Study of Religion says that America too often fails to live up to its ideals in everything from race to corruption to affordable health care. Wuthnow, with an eye on the role of religion, asks, “How does a society renew itself?” Sadly, readers hoping for specific guidance will be disappointed by his irenic but largely ivory tower–level discussion. Wuthnow recognizes that part of the problem is Americans’ increasingly privatized understanding of faith. He praises America for creating an atmosphere of great spiritual diversity. But he also points out that this can lead people to be reticent about their beliefs. Religious faith has become something so deeply personal that to speak of it publicly—especially, say, at a dinner party—is akin to discussing your favored methods for maintaining a clean colon.

AMERICAN MYTHOS:Why Our Best Efforts to Be aBetter NationFall Shortby Robert WuthnowPrinceton298 pp.; $29.95

“A man who grew up in Cuba says he is deeply religious even though he no longer goes to [Mass] and disagrees with many of the teachings of the Catholic church,” Wuthnow writes in describing the eclectic nature of American faith. “He mostly ‘keeps quiet’ about what he believes or does not believe. Being in a more pluralistic environment has encouraged him to ‘look at other philosophies and religions and try to come up with my own.'”

Copyright © 2006 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere:

American Mythos is available from Christianbook.com and other book retailers.

An excerpt from Wuthnow’s America and the Challenges of Religious Diversity is available on our site.

More information, including an interview with Wuthnow and an excerpt, is available from Princeton University Press.

For book lovers, our 2006 CT book awards are available online, along with our book awards for 2005, 2004, 2003, 2002, 2001, 2000, 1999, 1998, and 1997, as well as our Books of the Twentieth Century. For other coverage or reviews, see our Books archive and the weekly Books & Culture Corner.

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

Cover Story

Young, Restless, Reformed

Collin Hansen

'Divine Conspirator' Dallas Willard Dies at 77

Christine A. Scheller

It's All About God

Inside C.S. Lewis's Toolbox

Reviewed by Louis A. Markos

Embrace Your Inner Pentecostal

Chris Armstrong

China's New Legal Eagles

Tony Carnes

Spiritual Classics

Compiled by Richard A. Kauffman

Class Warfare

J. Edward Mendez, RNS, with reporting by Jason Bailey

What Happened to Religion in Canada?

Reviewed by Mark Noll

Despair Not

The Call of Samuel

Tim Stafford

Logic Left Behind

Reviewed by Collin Hansen

The Whole Word for the Whole World

Jeffrey Dahmer's Story of Faith

Reviewed by Greg Taylor

For Shame?

Amy Laura Hall

Christ's Story

Reviewed by Gary M. Burge

Postcard from Africa

Editorial

God's Will in the Public Square

A Christianity Today Editorial

The Truth Is Somewhere

Deann Alford

Wrongful Love

Brad A. Greenberg

Theology for an Age of Terror

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Quotation Marks

The New Missions Generation

Jonathan Rice

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Go Figure

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<em>Christianity Today</em> News Briefs

CT staff

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A Call to an Ancient Evangelical Future

Together in the Jesus Story

Nicholas Kristof on Evangelicals, China, and Human Rights

Interview by Collin Hansen

'Volcanic' Response

Sarah Pulliam

We're Not Spectators

Bygone Protests

John W. Kennedy

Two Degrees of Separation

Rob Moll

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Scrubbing CleanFlicks

A Christianity Today Editorial

Thinking Straight

Madison Trammel

Echoes and Voices from Beyond

Reviewed by James W. Sire

How to Create Cynics

Sermons of Frederick Buechner

Reviewed by Wendy Murray

Estranged Bedfellows

Chris Hall reviews Jaroslav Pelikan's 'Whose Bible Is It?'

The Problem with Prophets

Paul Marshall

Sit Down, Sit Down for Jesus?

Dr. Willard's Diagnosis

Cornelius Plantinga Jr.

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