Christian Uniqueness Reconsidered: The Myth Of ... ● | TESTED |

The volume features fourteen prominent scholars, including John Milbank, Wolfhart Pannenberg, Lesslie Newbigin, and Jürgen Moltmann.

Some reviewers note a lack of "concrete interaction" with non-Christian religions, as most essays focus on internal Christian doctrine rather than detailed comparisons with faiths like Buddhism or Islam. Others find the book fails to clearly distinguish between the "uniqueness of Jesus" and the "uniqueness of Christianity".

The “End of Dialogue” and Christian-Muslim Interrelations

Critics generally agree that the book provides a powerful "knockout punch" to the pluralist enterprise by highlighting its internal contradictions. It is praised for defending the particularity of Christian faith in a way that is intellectually rigorous rather than simply defensive.

John Milbank famously argues that the pluralist version of dialogue is unreliable because it ignores the fundamental differences and "metanarratives" that define each faith.

The volume features fourteen prominent scholars, including John Milbank, Wolfhart Pannenberg, Lesslie Newbigin, and Jürgen Moltmann.

Some reviewers note a lack of "concrete interaction" with non-Christian religions, as most essays focus on internal Christian doctrine rather than detailed comparisons with faiths like Buddhism or Islam. Others find the book fails to clearly distinguish between the "uniqueness of Jesus" and the "uniqueness of Christianity".

The “End of Dialogue” and Christian-Muslim Interrelations

Critics generally agree that the book provides a powerful "knockout punch" to the pluralist enterprise by highlighting its internal contradictions. It is praised for defending the particularity of Christian faith in a way that is intellectually rigorous rather than simply defensive.

John Milbank famously argues that the pluralist version of dialogue is unreliable because it ignores the fundamental differences and "metanarratives" that define each faith.