Available Formats
The Idol of Our Age: How the Religion of Humanity Subverts Christianity
By (Author) Daniel J. Mahoney
Foreword by Pierre Manent
Encounter Books,USA
Encounter Books,USA
30th April 2020
United States
General
Non Fiction
Christianity
Humanist and secular alternatives to religion
230
Paperback
186
Width 152mm, Height 228mm
This book is a learned essay at the intersection of politics, philosophy, and religion. It is first and foremost a diagnosis and critique of the secular religion of our time, humanitarianism, or the "religion of humanity." It argues that the humanitarian impulse to regard modern man as the measure of all things has begun to corrupt Christianity its
Written with passion and clarity, The Idol of Our Age identifies the false moralism that threatens to shipwreck the West. Not satisfied to lament, Mahoney rouses us to defend our political heritage rooted in reason and truth.
R. R. Reno, editor of First Things
Daniel Mahoney is one of those true intellectuals whose wide reading feeds into and is fed by his experience of life. The world he lives in is a world illuminated by books, and one in which books are also put to the test. Few writers today are so aware of the pervasive influence of ideas, especially among those who have no ability to grasp them. In this study of the religion of humanity, propagated by Auguste Comte, but now the source of a thousand escape-routes from the burden of responsible existence, Mahoney shows the great damage done by forgetting that man is made in Gods image. His devastating criticisms of the self-congratulatory sentimentalism of Pope Francis are backed up with refined studies of thinkers who today are unjustly neglected, partly because they saw what is at stake in the religion of humanity: the American Catholic convert Orestes Brownson, the Russian social thinker Vladimir Soloviev, and the Hungarian phenomenologist Aurel Kolnaiall three of them at odds with the humanism of their day. Those thinkers do not agree about the alternative to humanitarian ways of thinking, but, as Mahoney shows, they are united in their belief that being human consists in the search for something higher than the human. I recommend this book to all who share that belief, and who want to know exactly why it should be adhered to.
Roger Scruton, writer and philosopher
With rare clarity,The Idol of Our Ageexposes the degree to which a post-political, post-Christian humanism has acquired quasi-religious status in contemporary Western societies to the detriment of authentic political life.Like a Paul Revere of the spirit, Daniel Mahoney sounds an alarm that should be heeded by all who are concerned about maintaining the indispensable cultural conditions for common life in a decent polity.
Mary Ann Glendon, Learned Hand Professor of Law, Harvard University
Christ said: Ye are the saltof the Earth, love your enemies. The new humanitarian religion says: Yeshould be the sugar of the Earth, you have no enemies.This spiritual diabetesaffects Christians, too, and deprives them of any possibility of action. Thenew idol is all the more dangerous that it apes Christiancharity and tries toreplace it. As a diagnosis, and proposal of a cure, Dr. Mahoney draws upon theinsights of Orestes Brownson and the great RussiansSoloviev and Solzhenitsyn,as well as the little-known Hungarian Aurel Kolnai. By unmasking the Religionof Humanity as the soft version of the oldenemy of mankind, Dr. Mahoney givesus a precious help for us to exorcize it.
Rmi Brague, professor emeritus of philosophy, University of Paris, University of Munich
Daniel J. Mahoney holds the Augustine Chair in Distinguished Scholarship at Assumption College, where he has taught since 1986. He is a specialist in French political philosophy, anti-totalitarian thought, and the intersection of religion and politics. His books include The Liberal Political Science of Raymond Aron (1992), De Gaulle: Statesmanship, Grandeur, and Modern Democracy (1996), The Conservative Foundations of the Liberal Order (2010), and The Other Solzhenitsyn: Telling the Truth about a Misunderstood Writer and Thinker (2014). He is executive editor of Perspectives on Political Science and book review editor of Society. In 1999, he was awarded the Prix Raymond Aron.