ABSTRACT

How may people of faith respond wisely, constructively, and courageously to the challenges of a time of terror? How might religious reasons in public debate be a force for reconciliation rather than violence and hatred? In a world in which religious arguments and religious motivations play such a huge public role, there is an urgent responsibility for interpreting what is happening, and engaging with religious views which are commonly regarded as alien, threatening or dangerous. In Apocalypse Now?, Duncan Forrester argues that disorders and atrocities which include the Gulag, the Holocaust, 9/11, the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, and the Tsunami disaster have shown us that we stand not at the end of history but in the midst of an apocalyptic age of terror which has striking similarities to the time in which Christianity was born. Moving between two times of terror - the early Centuries of Christianity, and today - Forrester asks how religious motivations can play a positive role in the midst of conflicts and disasters. Reading the 'signs of the times' to try to understand what is happening in today's age of terror, Forrester argues that there are huge resources in the Christian tradition that can be productively deployed for a more constructive and faithful response. We are at a turning point - this is a book which should be read.

chapter |10 pages

Prologue: Two ‘Terrible Manifestos’?

chapter 1|10 pages

Vexed by a Rocking Cradle

chapter 3|10 pages

After the Cold War: The End of Ideology?

chapter 4|14 pages

The Public Voice of Resurgent Religion

chapter 5|16 pages

The Rebirth of Apocalyptic

chapter 6|12 pages

Conflicting Virtues: Saints or Heroes?

chapter 7|12 pages

Virtues in Conflict

chapter 8|20 pages

Just War and Just Peacemaking