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Remaking the World

How 1776 Created the Post-Christian West

Andrew Wilson

5.0

5.0

Remaking the World

How 1776 Created the Post-Christian West

Andrew Wilson

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With dizzying social transformations in everything from gender to social justice, it may seem like there’s never been a more tumultuous period in history. But a single year in the late 18th century saw a number of influential transformations—or even revolutions—that changed the social trajectory of the Western world. By understanding how those events influenced today’s cultural landscape, Christians can more effectively bear witness to God’s truth in a post-Christian age.


In Remaking the World, Andrew Wilson highlights 7 major developments from the year 1776—globalization, the Enlightenment, the Industrial Revolution, the Great Enrichment, the American Revolution, the rise of post-Christianity, and the dawn of Romanticism—and explains their relevance to social changes happening today. Carefully examining key documents and historical figures, Wilson demonstrates how a monumental number of political, philosophical, economic, and industrial changes in the year of America’s founding shaped the modern West into a “WEIRDER” society: Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, Democratic, Ex-Christian, and Romantic. This thoroughly researched yet accessible book offers a unique historical perspective on modern views of family, government, religion, and morality—giving Christians the historical lens they need to understand today’s post-Christian trends and respond accordingly.

  • Title

    Remaking the World

  • Author(s)

    Andrew Wilson

  • ISBN

    9781433580536

  • Publisher

    Crossway

  • Pages

    368

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Overall rating

5.0 based on 1 review

How we got here

Remaking the world is a sweeping analysis of Western culture as a post-Christian society, tracing the trends back to the late 18th Century (or 1776 to make it more catchy). The concept of the WEIRDER world is very thought-provoking and powerful. Wilson also discusses the Christian response both then and possibly now. One to read and digest. The only minor quibble is that Wilson gives signs of not believing Genesis to be history(language did not emerge in Africa, humans could speak from Creation - see Genesis 2, and the 18th Century geologists were wrong about the age of the rocks), but it is not really emphasised.
Stephen

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