It is the great virtue of Robert P. Kraynak’s Christian Faith and Modern Democracy to question the assumptions of both sides in the culture war. Kraynak strongly supports those who advocate a greater role for the church in American public life. He powerfully defends the view that liberalism is incapable of vindicating the human dignity on which liberal rights are based.”
“Kraynak brings a much-needed sense of prudence and political sobriety to Christian political discourse. … an impressive book. Christian Faith and Modern Democracy raises a series of tough questions about the relationship of Christianity and liberal democracy that no one who thinks seriously about these matters can afford to ignore. Kraynak’s book promises to play an essential role in this debate for the foreseeable future.” —Modern Age
“[T]his learned and provocative book is an excellent introduction to the problem of Christianity and democracy in our time, and to the enduring tension between religious faith and ‘the logic of rights’ in modern liberal societies.” —The Public Interest
“It is the great virtue of Robert P. Kraynak’s Christian Faith and Modern Democracy to question the assumptions of both sides in the culture war. Kraynak strongly supports those who advocate a greater role for the church in American public life. He powerfully defends the view that liberalism is incapable of vindicating the human dignity on which liberal rights are based.” —First Things
“In his important and controversial new book, Kraynak argues that democracy is the result of several historical and political developments that were not in themselves the inevitable result of either Providence or the secular course of history.” —Commonweal
“For those anxious to understand more about the thorny topic of religion and government in the new century, this book will furnish provocative material about an endlessly important issue.” —America
“Robert Kraynak has produced one of the most significant political books for American Catholics since John Courtney Murray’s We Hold These Truths. Kraynak deserves mention along with Murray, Jacques Maritain, and Reinhold Niebuhr as a thoughtful commentator on the most profound of issues. His work will shake any reader, secular or faithful, to rethink the relationship between one’s citizenship and one’s faith.” —Religion & Liberty
“Kraynak, a professor of political science at Colgate University, has written a clear, concise summary of this very complicated issue. It will enlighten students and challenge the presuppositions of scholars, as well as making suggestions about a possible solution. Together with the writing of Ernest Fortin, Kraynak’s writings are among the soundest guides to the pitfalls that Christianity and especially Catholicism face in attempting to accommodate modern natural rights theory within their teachings.” —History: Reviews of New Books
“. . . unified and tightly organized. A stimulating book rethinking liberal democracy and Christian political theology.” —American Political Science Review
“This is a masterful work and, at the very least, a necessary corrective to a contemporary Christian tendency to blindly endorse anything that can be labeled democratic. This book should be required reading for students (let alone teachers) of politics and is heartily recommended for the educated reading public.” —Markets & Morality