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Book Reviews of The Reason for God: Belief in an Age of SkepticismBook Review: A must read Summary: 5 StarsKeller's book gives a fresh and extremely coherent apologetic for the issues which believers and skeptics both question. The last chapter in his book, The God of the Dance, is alone worth the price of the book.
Book Review: Cleaver arguments, but neither original or thought provoking. Summary: 3 StarsI thought the author used alot of "spin" to make his points. Seemed to think that "correct" social behavior is inherited from God. I kind of wonder what his position would be if religious scripture had a demonic theme. i read a book in college entitled, "The Existence of God", which I thought was more thought provoking. Because this book is more of a modern "spin" on todays issues, makes it worth reading, but don't expect to always nod your head "yes".
Book Review: Makes you think, question and dig deeper Summary: 5 StarsI truly enjoyed this book, due to the fact that it invites you to think beyond the easy answers and the author invites conversation about very relevant questions. It doesn't sum up all the world's problems and answer every question about God, religion and Christianity. If we are looking for that in a book then why live life? He offers up suggestions that EVERYONE subscribes to some sort of "belief system," even saying you believe in nothing is a way of belief. As a good book should, it asks you to think, seek out deeper roots to why you believe and what you believe. The questions he discusses are the questions he's been asked a thousand times, and he offers up thoughtful and respectful responses. I do not think this is a book to agree or disagree with, but a book to engage and let roll around in your heart and head. An important book in an age of pluralism that is shredding the depth of community.
Book Review: Thought-provoking and relevant Summary: 5 StarsExcellent resource for a civil, informed argument for the God of the Bible and Christian world view.
Book Review: Indispensable read for doubters Summary: 5 StarsGiven the title, it is ironic that I was skeptical about this book at first. I had read so many apologetic works making the same recycled arguments with varying degrees of shrillness that I honestly assumed this would be one more well-intentioned by disappointing book by a well-intentioned by substandard thinker. Was I ever wrong. In The Reason for God, Timothy Keller finally provides what I and many others have been looking for in modern apologetics--reasonableness. Not since C.S. Lewis--and I do not make this comparison lightly--has the case for Christianity been made with such coolness and clear-headed logic.
Keller's book is divided into two broad sections. In the first, "The Leap of Doubt," Keller draws on his experience as a Manhattan pastor to present the most common objections or doubts about Christianity expressed by healthily-skeptical modern people. Keller argues for Christianity with great tact--"argue" is entirely too strong a word--showing not just the flaws in the doubt and its atheist or skeptical roots, but how religion, and Christianity specifically, answer those questions and can fill the voids in the doubter's life. Throughout it is clear that Keller respects and understands the doubts people have about the exclusivity of Christianity, or the Church's history of injustices, or the uncomfortable thoughts of Hell and the supernatural.
The second section, "The Reasons for Faith," builds on the first. If in the first half of the book Keller defends Christianity with his quiet and respectful apologia, here he argues for Christianity with just as much respect, and just as much success. Chapters on the "clues" that point to God and His relationship with human beings--especially in regard to the thought, so terrible to people, of sin--are outstanding. Each section and chapter builds on those that come before, making this book difficult to summarize but a joy to read.
If The Reason for God has any one flaw, it is one of scope. Keller opens up so many deep, complex issues that they cannot possibly be covered in-depth in a single book--any one chapter here could easily justify dozens of books. But Keller's goal is to operate like his "clues for God" and point the reader in the right direction rather than lead them by the hand. This was one book that, for me, could have been twice as long.
I came to this book as a skeptical Christian and found myself not only won over by Keller's calm reasoning but encouraged by his work. The section on sin, in which he presents S?ren Kierkegaard's definition of the term as a means to understanding how it breaks man's relationship with God, moved me and helped me understand flaws in my own life. One need not be converted by this book to have one's life changed. And as a believer who has often doubted, it was encouraging to know that those doubts are not only reasonable, but answerable.
Highly recommended.
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