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| The Reason for God: Belief in an Age of Skepticism | 
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Avg. Customer Rating:   (based on 131 reviews) Sales Rank: 293 Category: Book
Author: Timothy Keller Publisher: Dutton Adult Studio: Dutton Adult Manufacturer: Dutton Adult Label: Dutton Adult Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published) Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 293 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.2 x 1
ISBN: 0525950494 Dewey Decimal Number: 239 EAN: 9780525950493 ASIN: 0525950494
Publication Date: February 14, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
  Great book for Christians, Atheists, Agnostics, anyone March 29, 2008 5 out of 10 found this review helpful
Takes on the major issues and difficulties any thinking person might have with the classical Christian faith. The book handles in the first half the most common arguments against believing in the Christian God, and in the second half lays out compelling reasons for putting one's faith in that same God.
Tim Keller at his best; this book deserves the accolade "Mere Christianity" of our time. Finally a Christian book that won't insult anyone's intelligence, but still challenges us at our core. A must read.
  Eye Opening March 29, 2008 5 out of 8 found this review helpful
I listened to this book on audio CD, read by the author.
The Reason for God presents a lot of both doctrine and apologetics, and as a Christian I had several eye-opening moments throughout the book. For example, I had never thought about why Jesus on the cross asked, "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?" as opposed to martyrs throughout history who give calm, encouraging and uplifting final statements at their moment of death. Keller's explanation made me appreciate the cross in a whole new way that I had never thought of or realized before.
Another example would be Keller's explanation and answer to skeptics' questions about hell and what it really is, and I was again in awe at his explanation of it. One thing that I walked away with was that no one in hell will be pleading with God to leave, as opposed to peoples' common perception.
Much of the book is devoted to answering common questions that skeptics have (and pretty much questions that everyone has at some point), and I found his arguments and explanations to be very compelling. Keller does not just set up straw-man skeptic positions and knock them down. A lot of the time he actually quotes positions of famous atheists like Dawkins and Hitchins, and many other scholars I have never heard of, and responds to their arguments. Many times he then gives a rebuttal that the skeptic might give in response to his answer, and then he responds to that as well.
You'll be surprised at how many different scholars Keller quotes throughout the book (his favorite is C.S. Lewis), and I gather that he is a very well-read man. All of the references in this book to other scholars will at the very least give a person some more options for reading.
The only part I really disagreed with Keller in the book is his position on evolution/science. He seems to be a theistic evolutionist (I gather in attempt to 'harmonize' science and the Bible, while I believe the two are not in conflict), and Keller seems to equate 'evolution' with 'science' in that regard, which I believe is an unnecessary and inaccurate equation. However, overall it is obvious that Keller upholds the infallibility of scripture, and I would not tell someone to bypass this book because of that one issue.
Anyway, The Reason for God has a lot of information in it. One thing that I liked most was how Keller does not skimp when he addresses an argument. He really explains his arguments fully, and I believe that anyone would benefit from reading this book, Christian and skeptic alike.
  A Nice Effort, but... March 28, 2008 17 out of 43 found this review helpful
...ultimately not what I hoped for. I was wanting a fresh, validating, positive response to Dawkins/Harris et al (the angry atheists) while also not swinging too far in the literalist direction. I was hoping for the sweet spot, and instead got a bit of the slightly stale warmed-over C. S. Lewis. I like Lewis, but I wanted something fresh...and non-circular, logically. If you are looking for that middle path between militant atheism and the intellectual straight-jacket of Christian literalism, I would recommend Marcus Borg's The Heart of Christianity, rather than Timothy Keller's pretty good effort. He ultimately veers toward a literalistic view of Christianity which is intellectually unfulfilling for many.
  Absolutely outstanding! March 26, 2008 6 out of 8 found this review helpful
Tim Keller's new book is a thorough, well presented, defense of belief in God in general, and Christianity in particular. It compares well with C.S. Lewis' "Mere Christianity" and is not only a great read for longstanding Christians but is also a terrific evangelical tool. Non-believers should find it a clear and logical look at the reasons why belief in God simply makes sense.
  A superaltive effort March 26, 2008 13 out of 21 found this review helpful
Subtitled "Belief in an Age of Skepticism," this very important book is a welcome antidote to the many atheist titles which have appeared lately. It very admirably fulfils the twin tasks of apologetics: dealing with objections to, and misunderstandings of, the Christian faith, and presenting the attractiveness of it.
The first seven chapters deal with the most common objections and criticisms of Christianity that Keller, a New York City pastor, has encountered, while the last seven chapters very nicely lay out the case for the Christian worldview.
Ministering to secular, sceptical New Yorkers has meant Keller has had to answer thousands of questions about the faith. He is very well read, quite intelligent, and has a heart to reach out to the seeker and the sceptic. Thus this book is a great blend of dealing with matters of both head and heart.
Consider how he deals with some of the objections. The problem of suffering and evil is always near the top of such a list, and Keller does a good job in providing biblical responses to this issue. And he reminds us that unbelievers also have to deal with the problem.
Modern "objections to God are based on a sense of fair play and justice," says Keller. People strongly believe we ought not to suffer, die of oppression and hunger, and so on. Yet in the evolutionary worldview, death, destruction and suffering are fully natural - they are part of the mechanism of natural selection and survival of the fittest. Crap just happens, in other words, in a secular scheme of things.
Indeed, where does the sense of justice and fair play even come from, in such a dog-eat-dog world, where only matter matters? The believer, on the other hand, can account for both evil (we live in a fallen world) and goodness (we are made in the image of a good God).
Moreover, our God is not aloof from suffering, but has entered into the very heart of the human condition, experiencing to the full our pain and suffering. God does not abandon us in our suffering, but is in a very real sense present with us.
Related to this is the objection of how a loving God could send people to hell. But hell is ultimately a destination that people choose for themselves. Says Keller, "hell is simply one's freely chosen identity apart from God on a trajectory into infinity". People who seek to be free of God, - who is the only source of love, goodness, beauty and kindness - can follow that path. And that path does lead to hell, which is the place where God is not. As C.S. Lewis said, hell is the "greatest monument to human freedom".
And love and judgement are not opposites, but two sides of the same coin. If you really love someone, you get angry at whatever hurts and destroys him or her. One can rightly hate cancer for what it does to people. And sin is a spiritual cancer that destroys people. God's love for us must entail hating our sin which separates us from his love.
Keller also offers some positives of the Christian faith. Probably the most basic and fundamental good is the cross of Christ. It is here that justice and mercy fully meet. The demands of justice are fully met at Calvary, but in a way in which the grace of God can be freely extended to us, undeserving as we are.
Sin demands a payment. Letting criminals go scot-free is not justice. God did not let sin go unpunished, but allowed his own son to take our punishment, so that he might offer us forgiveness and hope. God himself absorbed the debt, so that we might be freely forgiven. But a huge cost was still paid.
God becomes human in order to "honor moral justice and merciful love," says Keller, "so that someday he can destroy all evil without destroying us". That last phrase is a tremendously profound Christian truth. As Solzhenitsyn reminded us, good and evil runs through every human heart. So how can a just and holy God eradicate evil without eradicating us?
The glorious exchange that took place at Calvary is the answer. "All real life-changing love involves some form of this kind of exchange". There can be no God of love, Keller reminds us, if we take away the cross. This is indeed the good news of the Christian worldview.
Keller also deals with the issue of human relationships, and the alienation and selfishness that destroys such relationships because of sin. God is above all a relational God. The three persons of the Godhead are involved in a free, loving relationship.
We were created to be part of that love relationship. The joy and love found in the Godhead has been extended to us. But that can only be received as we have relationship with God. But sin and selfishness destroy that joy and love, and trap us in alienation and despair.
God wants that love relationship restored, not just in the sweet by and by, but here and now. In this, Christianity is unique among all the world religions in offering hope and wholeness in this material world. Biblical salvation lies not in escape from the world, but in its transformation.
The Christian story is bigger than just having our individual sins forgiven. It is about putting "the whole world right, to renew and restore the creation, not to escape it".
A short review like this cannot do justice to the riches found in this volume. In 250 pages a very articulate, rational and compassionate case is made for Christian truth claims. This is a book to both strengthen the faith of believers, and help answer many of the nagging questions of sceptics and seekers. I heartily recommend it.
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