EBOOK

Between One Faith and Another

Engaging Conversations on the World's Great Religions

Peter Kreeft
3
(2)
Pages
224
Year
2017
Language
English

About

How do we make sense of the world's different religions? In today's globalized society, religion is deeply intertwined with every issue we see on the news. But talking about multiple religions can be contentious. Are different faiths compatible somehow? And how can we know whether one religion is truer than another? In this creative thought experiment, Peter Kreeft invites us to encounter dialogues on the world's great faiths. His characters Thomas Keptic and Bea Lever are students in Professor Fesser's course on world religions, and the three explore the content and distinctive claims of each. Together they probe the plausibility of major religions, from Hinduism and Buddhism to Christianity and Islam. Along the way they explore how religions might relate to each other and to what extent exclusivism or inclusivism might make sense. Ultimately Kreeft gives us helpful tools for thinking fairly and critically about competing religious beliefs. If the religions are different kinds of music, do they together make harmony or cacophony? Decide for yourself.

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Reviews

"Scholars, seekers, and ordinary saints will be challenged by this book, and that is a good thing. It probes and questions-always accessibly and playfully-and the result is that every reader will learn."
Gerald R. McDermott, Beeson Divinity School, coauthor of A Trinitarian Theology of Religio
"With the wisdom and wit we expect from Professor Kreeft, this delightful 'imaginative exploration' guides us in thinking about differences and similarities in the major religious traditions today. Thoughtful, informative, and provocative, this 'trialogue' takes us to the heart of some central issues in comparative religion."
Harold Netland, Trinity Evangelical Divinity School
"No one else could have written this remarkable book. Peter Kreeft has employed his personal gift for lively and erudite dialogue to present some of the most difficult issues in the philosophy of religion in a way that will charm, entice, and instruct even readers who are completely new to the subject."
J. Budziszewski, author of Commentary on Thomas Aquinas's Virtue Ethics

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