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Cider Jim wrote:Read it; loved it. It gave me a whole new perspective on God. I'd highly recommend it for those who don't mind "thinking outside the box." Super, did you get a copy as a Christmas present?Wasn't a Christmas present but while we were at my grandma's she mentioned it and gave me her copy to read. I read three chapters last night. Started reading on chapter four around seven or so. I've got less than 80 pages left and will probably finish it up tonight before I go to bed. I've been reading two chapters then taking a small break.
Ed Dantes wrote:The message from the book, if I'm not mistaken, is that salvation can be found from within. I'm pretty sure that jives with Christian doctrine.I haven't gotten that vibe at all. The vibe I've gotten is that salvation is only through Jesus.
"When Jesus forgave those who nailed him to the cross they were no longer in his debt" (225).
"You asked me what Jesus accomplished on the cross...through his death and resurrection, I am now fulling reconciled" (192).
And the character of Jesus says this in the novel: "I came to give you life, real life, my life" (149)..."Mack, I don't want to be first among a set of values: I want to be at the center of everything" (207).
)..."Mack, I don't want to be first among a set of values: I want to be at the center of everything" (207).I have one friend in particular who BLAMES God for every bad thing in her life, that He allows all these "bad" things to happen to her, despite years of talking to her I haven't been able to break through, I'm hoping she can read this book and find something in it that will help her.
phoenix wrote:Haven't read it, and probably won't, just because of a lack of time (I'm way behind on my reading right now). Tim Challies did a fairly in-depth review of the book, and does a decent job of expressing and explaining the concerns that people have had about it --> http://www.challies.com/archives/book-r ... -young.phpPhoenix, thanks for sharing this. I have recently read and am currently re-reading "The Discipline of Spiritual Discernment" by Tim Challies. It is a book that I would highly recommend. He did an good job in his review of "the Shack". There is one area of his review with which I have questions, but it does not take away from his overall review. Challies had positive and negative things to say about the book, but ultimately, this was his conclusion in his review:
Like I said, I haven't read it, so I'm not offering a critique of it. Just offering a point of view from someone else who has.
Because of the sheer volume of error and because of the importance of the doctrines reinvented by the author, I would encourage Christians, and especially young Christians, to decline this invitation to meet with God in The Shack. It is not worth reading for the story and certainly not worth reading for the theology.