I’m familiar with Skillet and like them well enough, but can’t really name any of their songs. I was not familiar with John Cooper as an author and podcaster. I ordered this book thinking it would be a quick, light read, a polemic by a Christian rockstar throwing out a lot of buzzwords as red meat to a cheering crowd.
All I can say is, boy was I surprised. If you’ve ever wondered why objective reality has been replaced by subjective feelings, this is the book for you.
This is an incredibly thorough look at the intellectual and philosophical underpinnings of our current state of post modernism, where subjectivity has replaced objectivity and group identity has replaced individual identity, and how it has infected the church. Even for someone like me, who got a Certificate in DEI from an Ivy League university to better understand what was going on around us, and has fought CRT in the public school system, it was revelatory.
Cooper takes us on a deep dive into the works of Hegel, Marx, Freud, Foucault, Derrida, and others and explains how their thought has influenced our culture. Even if you are not a Christian, this is an incredibly useful book to understand how we got to where we are today. This book is incredibly detailed, informative, insightful, and well documented, to the extent that it has 30-40 pages of end notes. And it’s not just quoting Wikipedia articles…he dives deep into primary sources to prove his points. e.g. he doesn’t just quote Karl Marx from Das Kapital, he dives deep into Marx’s personal correspondence to bring things to light that are very illuminating but not common knowledge. The chapter on Marx alone is about 25 pages with over 50 footnotes. Deeply researched, and deeply important.
I will skip the book summary as I’m sure you can find plenty of them elsewhere. I will say I read a lot, and this is hands down the most underlining I have ever done in a book. This is not an easy read, because many of the concepts are complex (although explained well for the layman), profoundly important, and honestly, distressing. While Cooper ends on a note of hope, this book is deeply disheartening. As I mentioned above, this is a topic I know something about, yet it was eye opening to me how thoroughly the toxic ideology described here has infected our culture, our media, our educational system, our interpersonal relationships, and our churches. This is not just an ideology that is at war with the one most of us grew up in – it has won.