4.6 • 620 Ratings
🗓️ 24 January 2025
⏱️ 73 minutes
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Ross Douthat occupies one of the most fascinating roles in the religious life of the American public. He is a serious Christian, a devout Catholic, a learned student of American religious history, and a perspicacious observer of the spiritual drives that are an inescapable aspect of the human condition. But what makes his role so fascinating is that he is also an opinion columnist at the New York Times. And readers of the New York Times tend to be considerably less religious, and if religious, then considerably less traditional in their religious habits and beliefs, than Douthat. So there are times when he stands on the fault line between two different epistemological universes, called on to explain the world of faith to progressive America.
In a couple of weeks he will publish Believe, a new book that takes notice of the longing for spiritual transcendence among non-religious Americans, people who look to exercise regimens, or astrology, or claims of extraterrestrial life to engage in a kind of spiritual play. To them, Believe has an arresting argument, which is that in light of what we now know about the universe, the claims of religion—not of occult and supernatural paganism but traditional, monotheistic religion—are a great deal more persuasive. Believe is a form of contemporary, monotheistic apologetics.
Earlier this week, Mosaic’s editor Jonathan Silver hosted Ross Douthat together with Rabbi Meir Soloveichik for a keynote discussion at the Redstone Leadership Forum. Rabbi Soloveichik is the leader of Shearith Israel, the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue, and the director of the Straus Center for Torah and Western Thought at Yeshiva University. The Redstone Leadership Forum is Tikvah’s flagship gathering of some 100 student delegates from our college chapters at over 30 campuses.
This week, we bring you the recording from that live event.
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | Ross Douthat occupies one of the most fascinating roles in the religious life of the American public. |
0:13.1 | You see, he is a serious Christian, a devout Catholic, a learned student of American religious history, |
0:18.9 | and a perspicacious observer of the spiritual |
0:22.0 | drives that are an inescapable aspect of the human condition. But what makes his role so fascinating |
0:28.4 | is that he is an opinion columnist at the New York Times, and readers of the New York Times |
0:33.8 | tend to be considerably less religious, and if religious, then considerably less |
0:39.6 | traditional in their religious habits and beliefs, than Ross. So there are times when he stands on |
0:46.5 | the fault line between two different epistemological universes called on to explain to |
0:52.3 | progressive America, the world of faith. |
0:55.7 | In a couple of weeks, he will publish Believe, a new book that takes notice of the |
1:00.4 | longings for spiritual transcendence among non-religious Americans, people who look to |
1:06.2 | forms of exercise or astrology, or claims of extraterrestrial life, and engage in a kind of spiritual |
1:13.6 | play. To them, Believe has an arresting argument, which is that, in light of what we now know |
1:19.7 | about the universe, the claims of not occult and supernatural paganism, but actually the traditional |
1:26.4 | forms of monotheistic religion are a great deal |
1:29.7 | more persuasive, believe is a form of contemporary monotheistic apologetics. |
1:36.1 | Welcome to the Tikva podcast. I'm your host, Jonathan Silver. Earlier this week, I hosted Ross |
1:41.5 | Douthit together with the Rabbi Mayor Soloveitchik for a keynote |
1:45.0 | discussion at the Redstone Leadership Forum. Rabbi Soloveitchik, of course, is the leader of |
1:50.0 | Shereath Israel, the Spanish and Portuguese synagogue, and the director of the Strauss Center |
1:54.9 | for Torah and Western Thought at Yeshiva University. The Redstone Leadership Forum is Tikva's |
2:00.4 | flagship gathering of delegates |
... |
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