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An Honest Faith tackles the thorny question of whether Christian faith is compatible with the questing and questioning spirit of philosophy. The author argues that a mutually productive friendship between Athens (philosophy/science) and Jerusalem (theology/faith) is possible and, in fact, necessary, given that various forms of the faith resist questioning and therefore end up holding onto outdated, unsupported, and damaging beliefs, for example, on matters of gender and sexuality. The author draws upon his own experiences in the conservative Anglican Diocese of Sydney and his teaching career…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
An Honest Faith tackles the thorny question of whether Christian faith is compatible with the questing and questioning spirit of philosophy. The author argues that a mutually productive friendship between Athens (philosophy/science) and Jerusalem (theology/faith) is possible and, in fact, necessary, given that various forms of the faith resist questioning and therefore end up holding onto outdated, unsupported, and damaging beliefs, for example, on matters of gender and sexuality. The author draws upon his own experiences in the conservative Anglican Diocese of Sydney and his teaching career in philosophy to issue a challenge to Christians to have an honest faith and not hold back from the quest for answers, which lies at the heart of religion, philosophy, and science. The book’s first half, which can be characterized as an exercise in faith deconstruction, lays out a number of the more serious challenges to historic or traditional Christian faith while noting its rapid demise in Australia, the US, the UK, and throughout the Western world. The book’s second half recommends a careful reconstruction or reformation of the faith.
Autorenporträt
Keith Mascord is a Canadian-born Australian. He has been a teacher, a priest, an academic, a chaplain and is currently a parole officer. In the 1990s and early 2000s, he taught philosophy and pastoral theology at the Anglican seminary in Sydney, Moore Theological College, where he continued a journey out of fundamentalism described in his autobiographical A Restless Faith: leaving fundamentalism in a quest for God (2012). Keith is married to Judy. They have five sons and four grandchildren. He is interested in philosophy, hermeneutics and sport, and loves to meet over coffee with family and friends.