And he does it for the Washington Times. Thank you,
Jim.
Money clip:
Early in "The End of Secularism," Hunter Baker of Houston
Baptist University talks about his religious awakening. He came
to believe that if the God of the Bible existed and was active
in human affairs, that had implications for his life. It made
no sense, Mr. Baker concluded, to have faith in God and
Christianity in the abstract but to live as if there were no
God in practice.
In this slim but compelling volume, Mr. Baker argues that this
is precisely what secularism asks of us: to hold our abstract
religious beliefs in private but live as if there is no God in
our public lives together. Religion then becomes like sex in
the Victorian era: something best done in private but seldom
discussed, much less seen, in public lest someone scare the
horses.
The argument for secularism is that it represents a kind of
neutrality. Because none of us possesses absolute certainty in
religious matters, a secular public culture restricts our
political and moral debates to that which is universally
accessible. The end result, according to this logic, is that no
one's religion is privileged above anyone else's and every
religion is treated fairly.
Mr. Baker counters that this argument is false - that
secularism, in fact, privileges one very specific understanding
of God and religion above everyone else's. It forces people who
believe in an active God to pretend He does not exist when
discussing matters of public import, and it rests on
assumptions no more "neutral" or scientifically rigorous than
most religious claims.
You can find the book here.