Abstract
A concise look at the present "revolt" in both the Protestant and Catholic churches, a revolt hopefully leading to the radical re-structuring of the church so that it may serve today's "secular age," an age freed from thinking imposed "from above". Man in the secular age refuses to separate out a piece of life and call it sacred or religious, but instead sees Christ at work in "the events of our time," and struggles with him against destructive forces. Although he emphasizes the positive aspects of secularization, Williams points to a danger in this process: the shrivelling of man's sense of life to the narrow limits of the here and now. The book is a brief, clear introduction to a number of contemporary theologians. Although it breaks no new ground and fails to show why "metaphysical" principles cannot be validly applied to temporal events, its message of revolt against outgrown ideas and institutions bears repeating.—S. A. S.