Religion didn’t end with modernity – it transformed, fractured, and reinvented itself repeatedly. This volume examines those transformations.
We begin in the medieval world, where religious institutions wielded enormous power, mystics pursued direct experience of the divine, and the Crusades brought Christianity into violent conflict with Islam. The Protestant Reformation shattered Christian unity, spawning not just new churches but new ways of thinking about authority, scripture, and individual conscience. The Enlightenment challenged religious claims with reason and science. Darwin’s theory struck at literal readings of Genesis.
Nietzsche proclaimed God’s death. Yet religion adapted and persisted. New movements arose – Mormonism, Seventh-day Adventism, Pentecostalism. Eastern traditions found Western audiences. Spiritualism and Theosophy offered alternatives to both orthodox religion and secular materialism.
The twentieth century brought both religion’s bloodiest conflicts and its most hopeful dialogue. Vatican II reformed Catholicism. Liberation theology emerged in Latin America. Buddhist teachers established centers in Europe and America. Hindu gurus attracted global followings. Meanwhile, fundamentalist movements arose in Christianity, Islam, and Judaism, often in reaction to modernization.
Today, religion exists in paradox – declining in some regions while growing explosively in others, dismissed by some as obsolete while providing meaning and identity for billions. This volume explores how traditional faiths navigate scientific knowledge, pluralistic societies, gender equality, and the internet age.










