Reviews & Media
Review Excerpts
- “This is an important and timely text. It documents the relationship between spiritual experience and benevolence using a nationally representative sample. Perhaps more importantly, the study helps illuminate the underlying causal connections. This is among the first studies to shed real light on the processes whereby powerful experiences of divine love engender efforts to foster a more socially just world. Accordingly, this book is likely to be of interest to anyone interested in how spirituality is impacting contemporary culture.”
- Sociology of Religion
- “The Heart of Religion is a compelling study of people who manifest the love of God they themselves have experienced, calling readers to a similarly full life—‘thriving while serving others, loving as you have been loved, living a life of meaning.’”
- PRISM Magazine
- “Lee, Poloma, and Post give an incisive analysis of what can be considered the core element of religious involvement: namely, love. Among the virtues of this volume are the national-level survey data and the qualitative data used to explore processes and experiences related to religiously inspired love. The Heart of Religion avoids simplistic portrayals of the subject by recognizing that godly love is often forged in the crucible of suffering, and that expressions of godly love vary across social contexts and life circumstances. This volume demonstrates that thoughtful scientific investigations can and must take seriously the dynamics and experiences that are central to religion. It will offer an important correction to a longstanding oversight in the social scientific study of religion.”
- John Bartkowski, Professor of Sociology,
University of Texas at San Antonio
- “God’s love heals, energizes, and transforms. ‘Super-charged’ by divine love, people can accomplish great things. Blending sociological and spiritual perspectives, the authors provide powerful illustrations of how divine love leads people to respond to the needs of the world. In a world of hurt and brokenness, two themes especially stand out: (1) love transcends all of our differences, and (2) divine love makes it possible to love the unlovable. This is a book full of compelling and inspiring insights into the divine origins of the greatest commandment.”
- Robert A. Emmons, Editor-in-Chief of
The Journal of Positive Psychology