Paul F. Knitter

God at the Margins does two things: (1) offers a refreshingly lucid overview of the contemporary Christian conversation (often contentious) about how to make sense of and engage religious diversity, and (2) offers a perspective that will clarify and vivify that conversation. Let Christians (really, all religious believers), both scholars and ordinary folk, first listen to the voices of those suffering on the margins——especially the universally marginalized: women——and then, in light of what they hear and feel, engage in their theologies of religions and their comparative theologies. [Aimee Upjohn Light’s] message needs to be taken seriously by anyone concerned about living religiously in an ever-more-connected multireligious world.”