Harold A. Netland
Auteur van Encountering Religious Pluralism: The Challenge to Christian Faith & Mission
Over de Auteur
Harold A. Netland is professor of philosophy of religion and intercultural studies and director of the PhD program for intercultural studies at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School. He was a missionary in Japan for nine years with the Evangelical Free Church of America and is the author of Dissonant toon meer Voices: Religions Pluralism and the Question of Truth and Encountering Religious Pluralism: The Challenge to Christian Faith and Mission. toon minder
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Werken van Harold A. Netland
Evangelical Dictionary of World Missions (Baker Reference Library) (2000) — Redacteur — 166 exemplaren
Globalizing Theology: Belief and Practice in an Era of World Christianity (2006) — Redacteur — 133 exemplaren
Handbook of Religion: A Christian Engagement with Traditions, Teachings, and Practices (2014) — Redacteur — 52 exemplaren
Christianity and Religious Diversity: Clarifying Christian Commitments in a Globalizing Age (2015) 32 exemplaren
The Bible and Other World Religions 1 exemplaar
Gerelateerde werken
The Routledge Companion to Philosophy of Religion (2007) — Medewerker, sommige edities — 27 exemplaren
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Netland states that this is not an introduction to religion, but "a selective treatment of issues related to religious diversity and Christian commitment" (xi). He divides his exploration of the topic in two parts. In part one, he explores the nature of religion in the modern, globalizing world. In part two, Netland discusses 'Christian Commitments in a Pluralistic world.' Part one describes the lay of the land, and part two is designed to help Christian religious philosophers, missionaries and apologists navigate it.
Part one begins with Netland recounting recent academic debates about the nature of religion, its definition and its relationship to culture. He observes several important features of our contemporary religious climate: (1) a direct link between a religion, worldview or culture cannot be assumed; (2) religion and culture cannot be reduced into each other; (3) religions and cultures are fluid and change overtime; (4) People have already had multiple cultural identities, and increasingly people have multiple religious identities too (35-39). Chapter two explores the way that modernization and globalization have changed religious commitments by making choices available while simultaneously eroding our epidemiological certainty. Chapter three examines Buddhism and the way it has adapted with modernism and globalization. Chapter four shows how Jesus Christ has been adopted by many different religious and cultural traditions. Examples include the Hindu Renaissance (such as Mahatma Gandhi's use of Jesus), John Hick's pluralism and Shusaku Endo's novels.
Chapters five through seven of part two deal with the problem of making Christian truth claims in a pluralist age. Chapter five answers the question, "Can All Religions Be True?" [Spoiler Alert: No]. Chapter six explores the notion of 'Christianity as the One True Religion' and chapter seven talks about the reasons for belief in a diverse age. Netland, earned his doctorate under John Hicks and he unpacks many of the the problems with Hicks pluralism. Netland's final chapter forms a conclusion to these essays. Netland urges missionaries, apologists and evangelists to both remain faithful disciples of Jesus and to be good neighbors, respectful in dialogue with those in other faith traditions.
Netland is brilliant at synthesizing the literature from diverse disciplines such as philosophy of religion, missiology, sociology, economics, biblical studies, and theology. He offers a comprehensive analysis of our post-colonial, global religious landscape. Anyone interested in the effects of Globalization on religion will find this book informative. Netland's prose is careful and circumspect and what I appreciated most was his descriptions of religious trends. This will be most useful for apologists and students. I give it five stars.
Notice of Material Connection: I received this book from Baker Academic in exchange for my honest review… (meer)