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No part of the Bible goes unstudied in this book's search for God's hidden nature.
More Reviews and RecommendationsPhilip Yancey serves as editor-at-large for Christianity Today magazine. He has written twelve Gold Medallion Award-winning books and won two ECPA Book of the Year awards for What's So Amazing About Grace? and The Jesus I Never Knew. Four of his books have sold over one million copies. He lives with his wife in Colorado.
Philip Yancey es editor regional de la revista Christianity Today. Ha escrito once libros premiados con la medalla de oro, entre los que figuran: La Biblia que leyó Jesús y El don del dolor. Sus libros El Jesús que nunca conocí y Gracia divina vs. condena humana también recibieron premio como libro cristiano del año. Además, es autor de Alcanzando al Dios invisible entre otros.
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May 11, 2009: Disappointment With God by Phillip Yancy
Yancy's begins his book with examples of circumstances from several Christians who have suffered greatly and feel disappointed with or abandoned by God. The author chooses the situation of Richard, the person suffering the least of the examples (but a fellow author), to follow throughout the book. Using OT scriptures, Mr. Yancy tries to explain the mind of God. His attempt actually turns eerie (downright creepy) when Yancy imagines himself as God questioning in his mind whether or not man would obey when created. It is my opinion that Mr. Yancy conveys the message that those who are disappointed in God are pretenders. They are people who never had "real" faith so they never were true believers. Instead of helping a friend out of a spiritual depression, Mr. Yancy slapped him down and decided he just did not have enough faith. There was no compassion in the book for the suffering Christian. Mr. Yancy has his own experience being a pretender as he explains in the book that he deliberately pretended to be a Christian in college until one day he began praying out loud and "had a vision of Jesus". It is also my opinion that Mr. Yancy's answers in this book are no better than the callous conversations the friends of Job had for his sufferings.Mr. Yancy's questions in the book were:1. Is God unfair?2. Is God silent?3. Is God hidden?My questions for Mr. Yancy are:1. Are you trying to prove the old adage "Christians shoot their wounded"?2. Do you have no compassion for a suffering Christian?3. Did a tree have to die for this book?I would never recommend this book to a Christian who is going through trials.Reader Rating:
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March 11, 2006: Yancey's fearless wrestling with the uncertainties of faith comes around once again in this book, which I discovered only recently. The beginnings of many of the points he explores in later writings are here. The reassurance that God still reigns, even in our darkest times, has touched me deeply at this time in my life. As he says in this book: 'Faith means believing in advance what will only make sense in reverse.' The illustration about Beethoven's Ninth Symphony is exceptional! The concluding story about his father is so poignant that I could barely read it. Each time I finish one of his books, I have a new marker on my faith journey. God is honoring now--and will honor in eternity--Yancey's transparency and honesty.