
"God is not dead. Despite the predictions of academics and liberal religious leaders, the world is becoming more faith-filled, not less. . . . [Stark's] real battle, though, is with intellectual elites of the West, who have been declaring the demise of religion for centuries and have been advancing a secularization thesis for decades. . . . Mr. Stark pushes back against the secularization thesis in several ways. . . . Indeed, religious fervor has taken hold in many countries where modernity is a settled fact." --Wall Street Journal
"Stark [is] one of the most prominent, respected and consistently insightful sociologists of religion in the business. . . . I enthusiastically recommend this stimulating book to religious leaders and to those generally interested in what's going on in the minds of people around the world. It has much to offer, not only for understanding but also, in my judgment, for action."Praise for Rodney Stark
"Mr. Stark is especially adept at challenging received ideas." --Wall Street Journal
"Stark has a vigorous prose style and a gift for clear explanation." --New York Times
"Stark writes books that are models of popularly accessible scholarly writing." --World
"Rodney Stark is one of America's preeminent scholars of religion. . . . Often controversial, a slayer of historical myths." --Patheos
"Bracing, rollicking, startling, belligerent, informative, and guaranteed to provoke second and third thoughts about what readers thought they always knew about religion." --First Things
"Giants are rare in any day. . . . [But] maybe we do have giants . . . for example, Rodney Stark. . . . He continually throws the discipline of sociology of religion into chaos." --Andrew M. Greeley, University of Chicago
"An eminent sociologist of religion . . . Stimulating, provocative, even revolutionary." --Journal of Early Christian Studies
"[Stark] writes with a clarity and concision that make him a pleasure to read. . . . A number of fondly held myths get demolished." --National Review
"Here is theoretical brashness combined with disarming common sense, a capacious curiosity, and a most uncommon ability to tell a complicated story in simple prose." --Wayne A. Meeks, Yale University