Boy, do I miss Roger Lundin. Every time I read one of his books, I feel in some way that I'm back in his Modern European lit class at Wheaton during my junior year of college, and I certainly recognize so many of his ideas present in my own teaching. His writing and argumentation are profound, and his insights reveal powerful truths that years of wide-ranging reading and research have provided him. *Believing Again* simultaneously serves as a provocative intellectual and cultural history and a winsome analysis of the way some of Lundin's favorite poets, novelists, and theologians--Dickinson, Melville, Emerson, Dostoevsky, Nietzsche, Milosz, Frost, Bonhoeffer, Barth, Faulkner--reckoned with wide-scale disbelief in the Christian faith which emerged as a viable option in the 19th century. Each chapter is assigned a single word (History, Science, Belief, Interpretation, Reading, Beauty, Story, Memory) to demonstrate the ways that cultural and intellectual developments born out of modernity created the stage whereby the conflict between belief and unbelief was waged.
Many of the discoveries and ideas that led to the 19th century's understanding of God and self originated at the dawn of modernity--the birth of Protestantism, the mechanical view of the universe posited by the Scientific Revolution, the critical historical-theological method of skeptically reading Scripture, the turn inward inaugurated by Romanticism, and finally, the theories of Darwin and the "hermeneutics of suspicion" enacted by Marx, Nietzsche, and Freud. Desperate to re-enchant what seemed to have become a dead, lifeless world of purposeless "things" and objects, many artists sought refuge in the beauties of their own subjective creations (a "radical opposition between outward banality and inward beauty"). Yet bestowing the imagination with godlike powers to fill the vacuum of an apparently godless universe led many to a tyrannical subjectivism/perspectivalism that failed to appreciate the beauties of the finite, the material, and the timebound. It also encouraged artists to construct their own "higher reality" in order to protect themselves and to liberate themselves from mess, disorder, and apparent meaninglessness. Unfortunately, we always end up learning that the self and its own individual consciousness can't bear the burden of creating a fully unified portrait of reality. As he puts it, "How are we to believe in anything, if we consider truth to be something that has been *created* entirely by our desire to believe rather than something that has been *discovered* through our capacity to learn and to receive?"
One of the things I most appreciated about Lundin's work was the poetic conclusion to each chapter in which he demonstrates how a proper understanding of orthodox Christian truths about God the Father, His son Jesus Christ, and the world around us offers the most satisfying and fulfilling lives. But that doesn't mean that we don't reckon with what Bonhoeffer referred to in his *Letters and Papers from Prison* as our "world come of age." Nostalgia for a pre-modern past, free of the challenges and difficulties thrown up by the "brave new world" of science, philosophy, and technology is a non-starter and fails to appreciate the ways God always condescends to graciously meet us in the midst of our confusion, grief, and pain. As Emily Dickinson wrote, most of us now "both believe, and disbelieve a hundred times an Hour, which keeps Believing nimble." Yet instead of lamenting that belief and faith seemed so much easier for pre-modern individuals, we can confidently rejoice that the God of history has embedded us here and now "for such a time as this" and gratefully receive the gift of "explor[ing], envision[ing], and bear[ing] witness to the world in which God has placed us."