At 95 years, the French theologian Joseph Moingt honored the Christians and Catholics, those who experienced the liberating breath of the Second Vatican Council, as those born after that time. First man of high culture, can say the Christian faith with fair and precise words, accessible to the greatest number, a faith understood from the gospel. He knows the difference between religion, faith, and the various expressions that all this has produced throughout 2000 years of Christianity. He points to the fundamentalist excesses of all religions, when man gives up thinking his faith or beliefs. It is not resigned to the abuses that exist at that time even in Roman Catholicism. He even denounces vigorously. A great book, although initially it had the form of a book of interviews. Thanks to his personal work, his patient proofreading and demanding, Joseph Moingt gives us something else to chatter: a clear book, incisive same, suggesting the Christian faith. It sums up perfectly what someone else has said before him: religion is for man, [all mankind], and not man for religion.