What it means to be human in a world of faith and power.
This exploratory work examines how faith, culture, and history shape our sense of virtue, purpose, and life after death. It offers a provocative view of how religious systems can influence both personal belief and social justice, urging readers to weigh tradition against living truth.
Across centuries of thought, the book traces how spiritual ideals rise and clash with institutional power. It invites readers to consider a hopeful, practical vision of humanity renewed by faith, not by dogma or coercion. The author argues for a faith that awakens conscience and aligns belief with compassion and moral action.
- Bright, accessible discussions of faith, ethics, and the human story
- Critiques of how religious authority has shaped history and culture
- A hopeful, eschatological view of a world redeemed through living truth
- Prompt questions about personal belief, responsibility, and community
Ideal for readers drawn to thoughtful religious history, moral philosophy, and the search for a faith that uplifts all people.