A new work of Christian fiction entitled The Shack, by author William P. Young, has
become quite the phenomenon of late. Being heralded as a book that could change
the face of Christianity, I had considered taking the time to read it; but my distaste
for most Christian doctrines in general made it very difficult for me to do so. Still,
every place I turned I kept running into this book it seemed. When my wife told me
she had recently received a copy as a gift from someone, I relented and began reading
it.
I must admit that I found it very difficult when confronted with a few traditional ideas from the author about God and Jesus, especially the view of God being separate from us and existing in three persons. Even though I disagree with the idea of the Trinity, I was refreshed to see it at least described in a distinctly different way. After all, our
perception of who God is needs to change and that is the point of this book.
And if those views were not refreshing enough, the author calls out the Christian church as a whole. He describes it as being a man-made system of religion, having missed the message of Jesus. In The Shack, Jesus declares himself declares he is not a Christian (or at least not the church definition of what a Christian should be).
There are many more insights to be gleaned from The Shack and I recommend it for those who are feeling that the Christian message is lacking. This book just may be a tool that can be used to wake people up from a dead religion.
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