Above All Earthly Pow'rs: Christ In A Postmodern World
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About this book
In our postmodern world every view has a place at the table but none has the final say. How as Christian faith adjusts to a new culture should the church confess Christ? "Above All Earthly Powrs " the fourth and final volume of the set that began in 1993 with "No Place for Truth " paints a picture of the West in all its complexity brilliance and emptiness. As David Wells masterfully depicts it the postmodern ethos of the West is relativistic individualistic therapeutic and yet remarkably spiritual. Wells unabashedly locates American postmodernisms roots in the last centurys waves of immigration waves that for all their diversity have brought with them numerous new religions and a cultural relativism born out of confusion and a fear of offense. Wells also carefully differentiates between intellectual and popular postmodernism; while few Americans read Foucault or Derrida nearly everyone is subject to the permeating flood of TV ads. Wellss book culminates in a critique of contemporary evangelicalism aimed at both unsettling and reinvigorating readers. Churches that market themselves as relevant to consumption-oriented postmoderns are indeed swelling in size. But they are doing so Wells contends at the expense of the truth of the gospel as the trappings they adopt come laden with theological consequences. By placing a premium on marketing the evangelical church is in danger of selling authentic engagement with culture for worldly success. Welding extensive cultural analysis with a formidable theological contribution "Above All Earthly Powrs" will grip pastors educators and all serious readers concerned about the fate of evangelical Christianity.
