What's So Great About Christianity by Dinesh D'Souza

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: October 2007
  • 256pp
  • Sales Rank: 137,067

    Reader Rating: (14 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Informative" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: October 2007
    • Publisher: Regnery Publishing, Incorporated, An Eagle Publishing Compa
    • Format: Hardcover, 256pp
    • Sales Rank: 137,067

    Synopsis

    Is Christianity obsolete? Can an intelligent, educated person really believe the Bible? Or do the atheists have it right? Has Christianity been disproven by science, debunked as a force for good, and discredited as a guide to morality? Bestselling author Dinesh D'Souza (What's So Great About America) looks at Christianity with a questioning eye, but treats atheists with equal skepticism. The result is a book that will challenge the assumptions of both believers and doubters and affirm that there really is, indeed, something great about Christianity. D'Souza reveals:

    *Why Christianity explains what modern science tells us about the universe and our origins-that matter was created out of nothing, that light preceded the sun-better than atheism does
    *How Christianity created the framework for modern science, so that Christianity and science are not irreconcilable, but science and atheism might be
    *Why the alleged sins of Christianity-the Crusades, the Inquisition, the Galileo affair ("an atheist's fable")-are vastly overblown
    *Why atheist regimes are responsible for the greatest mass murders of history
    *Why evolution does not threaten Christian belief, but actually supports the "argument from design"
    *Why atheists fear the Big Bang theory and the "anthropic principle" of the universe, which are keystones of modern astronomy and physics
    *How Christianity explains consciousness and free will, which atheists have to deny
    *Why ultimately you can't have Western civilization-and all we value from it-without the Christianity that gave it birth.

    Provocative, enlightening, a twenty-first-century successor to C. S. Lewis' Mere Christianity, Dinesh D'Souza'sWhat's So Great About Christianity is the perfect book for the seeker, the skeptic, and the believer who wants to defend his faith.

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    Biography

    Dinesh D'Souza, a former White House domestic policy analyst, is currently the Rishwain Research Scholar at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. He is the bestselling author of What's So Great About America, Ronald Reagan: How an Ordinary Man Became an Extraordinary Leader, and many other books.

    Customer Reviews

    Disappointingby Anonymous

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    April 13, 2009: I was very disapointed in this book. It comes off, in my view, as simple pandering to Christians. Frankly, as a Christian I resent it. I have read some of the books cited in this book and I do not believe the author has read those books. I also found the reasoning to be a little thin. If however you want a book that will make you feel good about Christianity this is it.

    An articulate exposition but . . . .by Anonymous

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    April 18, 2008: Mr. D'Souza's description of the impact of Christianity in the history of the world is persuasive. He tends to gloss over the failings of the church where its warts are all too apparent, however, in order to minimize claims that organized religion in general and Christianity in particularly are the cause of much suffering in the world. As only one example, D'Souza acknowledges the horrors of the Spanish Inquisition but attempts to downplays its impact, claiming that the Church did not target Jews but only those who had claimed to convert to Christianity but in fact still practiced their original faith. He totally ignores why so many Jews and Muslims converted or claimed to convert to Christianity in the first place - after the Spanish/Christian conquest of Granada from the Moors, King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella dispossessed all Jews and Muslims from their property and drove tens of thousands from their homes and out of Spain altogether. Thus, to say that the madness of the Inquisition was limited to lapsed Christians is blatantly misleading and only adds fuel to the fire that rages between the fundamentalist Christians/Muslims/Jews on the one hand and the fundamentalist atheists on the other. This discussion is best served by a more balanced presentation of the facts.


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