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Professor Roger Lundin

    Roger Lundin delved into the intricate relationship between faith and reason in the contemporary world. His work profoundly explored the nature of doubt, examining how it can serve to strengthen or transform belief. He investigated the possibility of finding and sustaining meaningful faith in a secular age, while also dissecting the art of belief within the context of Emily Dickinson's poetry.

    Believing Again
    • Believing Again

      • 292 pages
      • 11 hours of reading
      4.4(36)Add rating

      In Believing Again Roger Lundin explores the cultural consequences of the rather sudden nineteenth-century emergence of unbelief as a widespread social and intellectual option in the English-speaking world. Lundin's narrative focuses on key poets and novelists from the past two centuries -- Dostoevsky, Dickinson, Melville, Auden, and more -- showing how they portray the modern mind and heart balancing between belief and unbelief. Lundin engages these literary luminaries through chapters on a series of vital subjects, from history and interpretation to beauty and memory. Such theologians as Barth and Balthasar also enter the fray, facing the challenge of modern unbelief with a creative brilliance that has gone largely unnoticed outside the world of faith. --from publisher description

      Believing Again