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James Sire

The Universe Next Door: A Basic Worldview Catalog

Nonfiction | Reference/Text Book | Adult | Published in 1976

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Key Figures

James W. Sire

James W. Sire was born on a ranch in the Sandhills region of Nebraska in 1933. He was educated at the University of Nebraska (BA in chemistry and English), Washington State University (MA in English), and the University of Missouri (PhD in English). In his early adult years, he served as an officer in the US Army and then as a professor of English literature, philosophy, and theology at various universities including Nebraska Wesleyan.

In 1968 he became the first full-time editor at InterVarsity Press, an evangelical Christian publishing company, and remained in this position until 1999. Lectures that he delivered at the Christian Study Project (a series of summer courses) led to his crafting The Universe Next Door in 1976 as a guide for Christian university students encountering divergent worldviews at college. An immediate success, the book went on to sell over 350,000 copies in its first five editions. It was translated into 18 foreign languages, proving particularly popular in Eastern European countries after the fall of the Soviet Union.

Sire went on to explore the relation of worldview to the Christian faith in such books as Apologetics Beyond Reason (2014), Chris Chrisman Goes to College (1993), Naming the Elephant (2004), Why Should Anyone Believe Anything at All? (1994), and Habits of Mind (2000); the latter three books all won Christianity Today Book of the Year awards, as did the fifth edition of The Universe Next Door.

In addition to his own writing, Sire worked as an editor, sponsoring and developing the work of other Christian authors, thus contributing to the increasing intellectual profile of the American evangelical movement. Sire’s framing of religious questions in terms of a worldview in The Universe Next Door and other books led evangelical thinkers into a greater engagement with the changing ideological landscape of Western culture in the late 20th and early 21st centuries.

Dubbed “a keystone in the intellectual renewal of evangelicalism” (“James W. Sire, ‘A Keystone in the Intellectual Renewal of Evangelicalism,’ Dies,” Rush to Press), Sire died on February 6, 2018, aged 84. The sixth edition of The Universe Next Door was published posthumously in 2020.

Winfried Corduan

Winfried Corduan was born in Hamburg, Germany, in 1949 and later settled in the US. He attended the University of Maryland (BS in zoology), Trinity Evangelical Divinity School (MA in philosophy of religion), and Rice University (PhD in religious studies). From 1977 to 2008 he was a professor of philosophy and religion at Taylor University in Indiana.

Corduan’s books include Neighboring Faiths: A Christian Introduction to World Religions (1998), In the Beginning God: A Fresh Look at the Case for Original Monotheism (2013), and Reasonable Faith: Basic Christian Apologetics (1993). An evangelical Christian who is an expert in comparative religion and has led undergraduate tours focusing on world religious practices, Sire enlisted Corduan to write the ninth chapter of The Universe Next Door, which covers the Islamic worldview; in footnotes throughout the book, Sire also recommends Corduan’s own published works.

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