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Jacques Berlinerblau

The God Vote

Jacques Berlinerblau

Jacques Berlinerblau is associate Professor and Director of the Program for Jewish Civilization at the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University. He's also editor of faith2008.org. Many years ago he received a doctorate in ancient Near Eastern Languages and Literature from New York University. Soon after, for reasons that he himself has never fully understood, he completed another doctorate in theoretical sociology from the New School for Social Research. Feeling sufficiently credentialed to write about and research any topic under the sun, his areas of interest include the Bible, its composition, its interpretation, and in particular the way that it has been dragooned into modern political discourse. To this end his new book is called "Thumpin' It: The Use and Abuse of the Bible in Today's Presidential Politics" (Westminster John Knox), described by First Things as "laugh-out-loud funny as well as astute." He also has published "The Secular Bible: Why Nonbelievers Must Take Religion Seriously" (Cambridge:2005). An earlier book, "Heresy in the University: The Black Athena Controversy and the Responsibilities of American Intellectuals" (Rutgers: 1999) probed the manner in which institutions of higher education handle scholarly dissent. He has written extensively in scholarly journals on the subject of heretics, intellectuals, secularism, and Jewish civilization. This confluence of interests accounts, to a great degree, for his fascination with modern Jewish-American literature. A life-long New Yorker, he has recently moved to Washington D.C. with his family and is beguiled by the strange traffic lights that count down the seconds until they finally change colors. Close.

The God Vote

Jacques Berlinerblau

Jacques Berlinerblau is program director and associate professor of Jewish Civilization at the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University, editor of faith2008.org and author of "Thumpin’ It: The Use and Abuse of the Bible in Today’s Presidential Politics." Full bio »

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Secularism: Boring (Part 1A)

On Friday I will write about the Giuliani candidacy, but given the ructions kicked up by the previous post let me pause to respond. Rest assured, there will be more columns critical of secularism--in particular its political and intellectual listlessness (and, yes, religious groups will get some of the same, especially the ones that are anything but politically listless). Too, there will be posts that speak about interesting new possibilities and trends in nonbelief, especially in literature.

But please note that the ideas discussed in Monday’s post were not tantamount to saying that secularism is evil, that nonbelief is an unworthy way of life or that there is anything the least bit wrong with individual atheists or agnostics. Why would anyone have drawn such conclusions? I just said it was a bit, you know, predictable.

Another thing struck me: The certainty by which all the respondents assumed that the author must be a religionist, a fundamentalist of some sort, or a person constitutionally ill-disposed toward atheists and agnostics. It was as if the assorted crowd had never—never once—heard a nonbeliever (yoo hoo!) criticize nonbelief.

So, come now nonbelievers, forgo the martyrdom complexes, conspiracy theories and herd mentality. You are the heirs of a restless and proud tradition of inquiry, are you not? Soar, little ones, soar like Nietzsche’s noble bird who flies high because he wants to see, and then flies higher because he wants to see more.

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» David Bordson | Thoughtful atheism is not boring, but like thoughtful theology, it takes more effort than Americans would like to expend. Americans like to ...
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