The modern-age era of Western society emerged with promises of rational solutions to all our problems; these solutions have been pursued with an unshakeable faith in scientific, economic, and technological progress.
And yet: "Our society is environmentally and politically unsustainable." "Our world is broken . . . a world of crowded inhospitality." "Many people today are anxious, very anxious." "Failing states, unequal distribution of power, wealth, and poverty." These are studentsā impressions of a vulnerable, volatile world. And it's these impressions that provide their professors, philosopher Craig Bartholomew and economist Bob Goudzwaard, a platform to explore the dashed promises of modernity.
Modernization has brought wealth, health, secularism, and tolerationābut also crippling poverty, rampant consumerism, environmental degradation, costly militarization, and religious violence. For Goudzwaard and Bartholomew, these tensions are intrinsic to the modern age. They show us that modern worldviews create problems they cannot solve and leave unfulfilled our deepest human longings. A critique from outside modernity is needed to bring shalom to ādeathworkā contemporary cultures (Philip Rieff).
is a thoughtful, critical, and practical response to the widely felt crises of modernity, yet one that isnāt reactionary or despairing. The authors are confident that the Christian story has the power to move us ābeyondā the modern age and heal the scars of modernization. This is a book that challenges and provokes, andāwith endorsements from both the former general secretary of the World Council of Churches and the current president of the Evangelical Fellowship of Canadaācuts across the theological and political spectrum. It is at the same time both deeply conservative in its appeal to the givenness of creation and to tradition and radical in its practical recommendations.
As an archaeology of contemporary culture, Beyond the Modern Age carefully sifts through the religious, cultural, and philosophical layers that make up the modern age. The authors engage with the expected āismsā (capitalism, utilitarianism, liberalism) and thinkers (Locke, Hegel, Freud, Nietzsche) but, in moving from excavation to construction, also introduce important conversation partners for thinking beyond modernity: Abraham Kuyper on pluralism, the Jewish philosopher Rieff on authority and sacred order, and the Catholic thinker RenĆ© Girard on desire.
Throughout, Goudzwaard and Bartholomew write clearly and with nuance on complex topics and ideas that will appeal to college students, seminarians, professors wanting a textbook for worldview or social philosophy courses, or engaged laypeople. Further, they insist that Christians must not only understand modernity but must also act upon it as agents of healing, perhaps especially in response to the crisis of global poverty. āChristians in the West will need to develop, with the help of Christians from the South, a critical grasp of the bloated consumer cultures in which we live. And this critique will need to be accompanied by repentance and the widespread embrace of a simple lifestyle that strenuously resists consumerism.ā
This is exemplary Christian scholarship: intelligent, relevant, rigorous, and deeply faithful to the biblical witness and Christian tradition. My only regret after reading it was that it wasnāt more āchurchy.ā It is difficult at times to see how the institutional church and local congregation, which is, after all, the herald of God's kingdom, fits into this program for social renewal. Others who have wrestled with the problem of modernity, including James K. A. Smith, Oliver OāDonovan, and Lesslie Newbigin, are stronger at this crucial point, and itās curious that Goudzwaard and Bartholomew donāt seriously engage these other Reformed thinkers. (IVP Academic)
About the Author
Todd Statham is the Christian Reformed chaplain at the University of British Columbia (Okanagan Campus) and a research fellow at the Kirby Laing Centre for Public Theology in Cambridge.