"As the Christian movement nears the end of
its second millennium, it faces a crisis
that could not have been anticipated at the
close of the first thousand years—or,
indeed, by most of our own great-grandparents. …
"Since the most conspicuous
dimensions of the waning of Christendom have
to do with material decline (the decline in
church membership and active attendance of
Sunday services, the decline in financial
and physical prosperity, the decline of
influence in high places), such analyses as
there are usually belabor the obvious:
something drastic is happening to the
churches! …
"Throughout most of its long history, Christianity has not required
of its adherents that they should think the
faith. The historical accident of its
political and cultural establishment 15
centuries ago… ensured that a thinking faith
would be purely optional for members of the
church. …
"But thought-less faith, which has
always been a contradiction in terms, is
today a stage on the road to the extinction,
not only of Christianity itself, but of
whatever the architects of our civilization
meant by 'Humanity.' Only a thinking faith
can survive. Only a thinking faith can help
the world survive! "
from the Preface |