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Overview
Is Your God Big Enough to Be Questioned?
The freedom to question is an indispensable and sacred practice that is absolutely vital to the health of our communities.
According to author David Dark, when religion won't tolerate questions, objections, or differences of opinion, and when it only brings to the table threats of excommunication, violence, and hellfire, it obstructs our ability to think, empathize, and live lives of authenticity and genuine engagement.
The God of the Bible not only encourages questions; the God of the Bible demands them. If that were not so, we wouldn't live in a world of such rich, God-given complexity in which wide-eyed wonder is part and parcel of the human condition. The possibility of redemption and revolution depends on the questions we ask of God, governments, media, and everyday economies. It is by way of the questions that we resist the conformity that deadens and come alive to visions that redeem.
Synopsis
In a wide-ranging, insightful, and often entertaining discussion that draws on a variety of sources, including religious texts and popular culture, David Dark talks about the sacred obligation we have to question our tightly held opinions and beliefs about such subjects as God, governments, religion, advertisements, history, news channels, and our often tragically misguided interpretations of Scripture.
Publishers Weekly
"Questions make new worlds possible," asserts author Dark (The Gospel According to America), a key premise in this thought-provoking meander of reflections on, and challenges for, living an engaged life of authentic Christianity. The well-read author draws insight and inspiration from a broad range of sources-Shakespeare, Ursula Le Guin, Johnny Cash and James Joyce-in calling into question the status quo, received history and conventional theology. Dark brings to his writing the kind of energy, offbeat enthusiasm and commitment to relevance that must make his high school English classes exciting places for inquiry and exploration. That each page yokes keen observation to practical application with wisdom and compassion inclines the reader to forgive the book's bewildering organization and abstruse section headings. "Questions for further conversation" at the end of each chapter will be useful for groups eager to put Dark's appeals into action. The author's passion for social justice, clarity about the "sacred obligation" of taking nothing at face value and confidence that unsettling questions yield rich rewards for both individuals and communities is convincing and moving. (Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Editorials
Publishers Weekly
"Questions make new worlds possible," asserts author Dark (The Gospel According to America), a key premise in this thought-provoking meander of reflections on, and challenges for, living an engaged life of authentic Christianity. The well-read author draws insight and inspiration from a broad range of sources-Shakespeare, Ursula Le Guin, Johnny Cash and James Joyce-in calling into question the status quo, received history and conventional theology. Dark brings to his writing the kind of energy, offbeat enthusiasm and commitment to relevance that must make his high school English classes exciting places for inquiry and exploration. That each page yokes keen observation to practical application with wisdom and compassion inclines the reader to forgive the book's bewildering organization and abstruse section headings. "Questions for further conversation" at the end of each chapter will be useful for groups eager to put Dark's appeals into action. The author's passion for social justice, clarity about the "sacred obligation" of taking nothing at face value and confidence that unsettling questions yield rich rewards for both individuals and communities is convincing and moving. (Apr.)
Copyright Β© Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Library Journal
In this book, Dark (The Gospel According to America) continues his project of modernizing belief or, rather, trying to reconcile it with the oddities of modernity. For Dark, it is not only right and devout but crucial for the believer to question God, government, media, and the ways the world seems to work, notions with which Jesus himself would be entirely comfortable. For most readers in religion.
βGraham Christian