Books

Christianity Unique Among Religions

The faith’s distinctiveness told winsomely, yet with little impact.

It’s said of certain scholars that they wear their learning lightly. Huston Smith, the eminent scholar of world religions, wears his great erudition like a Polartec fleece, and that’s part of the secret of his charm. Here he writes the sort of book that sums up a lifetime of thinking about the biggest questions. He begins by sketching the human dilemma, both in its perennial aspect and in our historical moment (in Smith’s view, we are living among the ruins of modernity). But most of the book is devoted to the fulfillment of our restless longing, again both in its perennial form (the “ur-Truth” underlying all great revealed religions) and in the particular form given to our civilization, which is to be found in the Christian tradition.

THE SOUL OFCHRISTIANITY:Restoring theGreat Tradition Huston Smith, HarperSanFrancisco, 208 pp.; $22.95

So winsome is Smith, so appealing is much of his telling of the Christian story, that I found myself wondering why The Soul of Christianity is likely to have very little impact. The fatal weakness, I think, is insufficient attention to the resistance of the real. There’s hardly any genuine conflict in this book.

To recognize—as we must—that there is profound truth in Islam and Buddhism, for example, is not to say that these rival understandings of the universe are simply different ways of expressing the same truth found in Christianity, what Smith (with a nod to Noam Chomsky) calls “the universal grammar of religion.”

Copyright © 2006 Christianity Today. Click for reprint information.

Related Elsewhere:

The Soul of Christianity is available from Christianbook.com and other book retailers.

More about Houston Smith, including other books and videos, is available from his website.

For book lovers, our 2005 CT book awards are available online, along with our book awards for 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

Missions Incredible

Rob Moll

Spong, the Measure of All Things

Reviewed by John Makujina

Living with Tares

Edward S. Little II

Answering Life's Big Questions

Reviewed by W. Jay Wood

God by the Numbers

Charles Edward White

Evening Prayer

Compiled by Richard A. Kauffman

The Almost Formerly Important

Jason Byassee

A Costly Devotion

Reviewed by Cindy Crosby

A Corrupt Salvation

James Jewell in Atlanta

Winning the Oral Majority

Dawn Herzog Jewell

Orality at Home

Dawn Herzon Jewell

Fictionalizing Jesus

Cindy Crosby

All in the Family

Reviewed by Mark A. Kellner

Messianics for Evangelicals

Reviewed by Mark A. Kellner

Religion and Reconstruction

Reviewed by Mark Noll

A Wind that Swirls Everywhere

Roger E. Olson

Too Inclusive

Bill Sherman in Tulsa

More Money, Less Liberty

Boaz Herzog

Bondage Breaking

Sheryl Henderson Blunt in Washington, D.C.

Domain Game: Can Jews for Jesus Win Its Google Suit?

Mark A. Kellner

Editorial

Loose Cult Talk

A Christianity Today Editorial

News

Christianity Today News Briefs

CT staff

News

Passages

CT staff

Grace as a License for Sin

Lives of Quiet Turbulence

Loving the Storm-Drenched

Mission 'Plane of the Future'

Sarah Pulliam

The Art of Abortion Politics

Editorial

The Lessons of Jabez

A Christianity Today Editorial

Senator Sam Brownback

Collin Hansen

News

Go Figure

Prophecy and Politics

Rob Moll

Honoring Pioneers

Word and Deed, Again and Again

Deann Alford

Costly Complaints

Sarah Pulliam and Collin Hansen

Walking the Talk After Tsunami

Tony Carnes

For God's Sake

A Delicate Hospitality

Christine A. Scheller

The Truth About Deceit

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