Popular Searches
On October 13, 2022, Princeton Theological Seminary hosted The Challenge of Polarization, the first conversation in The Future of American Democracy series. Moderated by Princeton Seminary’s Heath W. Carter, associate professor of American Christianity, the 90-minute panel focused on political polarization, the possibility and limitations of bipartisanism, debating issues instead of people, the role of faith in all these matters, and more.
On hand for the discussion were Jane Coaston, columnist for The New York Times and host of The Argument; Congressman Peter Meijer, a Republican congressman representing Michigan’s third district since 2021; and Symone D. Sanders-Townsend, former chief spokesperson for the Vice President of the United States Kamala Harris, author, Democratic strategist, and host of SYMONE on MSNBC. The panel brought expertise as well as wisdom from personal encounters with polarization, and the perspective of a different generation of leaders in politics and media.
“The very idea of Christianity in the public square has come to mean something arrogant and exclusionary,” Carter shared in his opening remarks. “There are a lot of folks out there hungry for a different way.” The series — designed to be broad, fair, illuminating, and oriented toward truth — is intended to help highlight what that different way might entail. Upcoming conversations include:
All are welcome to watch or listen to The Future of American Democracy: The Challenge of Polarization, or view photos from this thought-provoking event, below. To access the discussion guide for this conversation, visit https://bit.ly/polarizationguide.
Click to view the photo gallery from The Future of American Democracy: The Challenge of Polarization!
The Future of American Democracy series will continue to delve into timely conversation topics with a range of thought leaders across ideologies and viewpoints over the course of this academic year.