

Laddar... The Shack (Special Hardcover Edition) (urspr publ 2008; utgåvan 2007)av William P. Young, Wayne Jacobsen (Redaktör), Brad Cummings (Redaktör)
VerkdetaljerÖdehuset av William P. Young (2008)
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Books Read in 2013 (709) » 9 till Books Read in 2020 (3,238) Books Read in 2018 (2,842) Books Read in 2016 (4,209) Magic Realism (265) Carole's List (210) Christianity (19) Books About Murder (309) Det finns inga diskussioner på LibraryThing om den här boken. wow, absolutely amazing story. So much wisdom contained within and made me think a lot The Shack is an interesting, if elementary, discussion on why bad things happen to good people and the nature of God. The writing, however, is sloppy and riddled with metaphors that a good editor should have weeded out entirely. 3.5 This book got a lot of hype a few years ago and I avoided it for that reason. But a church group I admire was reading it so I jumped in. After a folksy, hokey start that explains the back story (Mack Phillips' youngest daughter Missy is kidnapped and murdered and the Great Sadness descends on Mack and colors his life with Nan and his other 2 surviving kids) the book gets interesting and challenges religious paradigms and institutions. Mack returns to the Shack (scene of Missy's murder) and has an encounter with God (really, the Trinity) who are presented in very unconventional ways and lots of thought-provoking dialogue and experience ensues that makes a lot of (common) sense and challenges some of the religious beliefs and conventions that have always been the norm (God is a white man, for example). A lesson about the power of forgiveness is embedded as well. Fiction, but lots of food for thought and some good plot twists prevent total predictability. This was such a thought provoking book; touched so many levels emotional, intellectual, spiritual, emotional, historical… one of the few book i found myself annotating even though I was reading it for pleasure.
Young's too-weird-for-the-pulpit thoughts about how Adam's rib and the female uterus form a "circle of relationship" have the appeal of knobby heirloom-produce in a world where much religion arrives vacuum-packed. His theories—how to believe in Adam while supporting particle-physics research; why the Lord is OK with your preference for lewd funk more than staid church music—accomplish what mainstream faiths tend to fail at: connecting recondite doctrine to the tastes, rhythms, and mores of modern life. ... And though the novel, as a novel, is a sinner's distance from perfection, it's an eloquent reminder that, for those who give some faith and effort to the writing craft, there is, even today, the chance to touch and heal enough strangers to work a little miracle. Would I recommend this book? No, I would not. It is full of theological problems as well as an irreverent and casual attitude toward God. Yes, there are nice things in it and people might even be helped by the book. But so what? There are some nice things in Mormonism, too. Should we encourage people to read the Book of Mormon because Mormonism might help someone feel better? Not at all. Sadly, experience has shown me that most Christians aren't interested in biblical fidelity. No, I'm not talking about biblical nit-picking. I'm talking about fidelity to the revealed word of God to the point where we don't contradict what is plainly stated in scripture! We Christians should regard the word of God as the final authority on all things, and any supposed accounts of actual occurrences should be compared to scripture, not our feelings, wants, and desires. In the case of The Shack, the book falls woefully short of scriptural truth in many important areas and has the strong ability to mislead people regarding God's nature, work, and plan for us. Again, I do not recommend it. Focusing on just three of the subjects William Young discusses in The Shack, we’ve seen that errors abound. He presents a false view of God and one that may well be described as heretical. He downplays the importance and uniqueness of the Bible, subjugating it or making it equal to other forms of subjective revelation. He misrepresents redemption and salvation, opening the door to the possibility of salvation outside of the completed work of Jesus Christ on the cross. We are left with an unbiblical understanding of the persons and nature of God and of His work in this world.
Mackenzie Allen Phillips' youngest daughter, Missy, has been abducted during a family vacation and evidence that she may have been brutally murdered is found in an abandoned shack deep in the Oregon wilderness. Four years later in the midst of his Great Sadness, Mack receives a suspicious note, apparently from God, inviting him back to that shack for a weekend. Against his better judgment he arrives at the shack on a wintry afternoon and walks back into his darkest nightmare. What he finds there will change Mack's world forever. In a world where religion seems to grow increasingly irrelevant, "The Shack" wrestles with the timeless question, "Where is God in a world so filled with unspeakable pain?" The answers Mack gets will astound you and perhaps transform you as much as it did him. Inga biblioteksbeskrivningar kunde hittas. |
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The narrative was weak and predictable - a basic forgiveness story - while the source material, the Bible and Christian theology was perverted to the point of pure heresy. While it may not be in the same vein of a systematic theology book, it is nevertheless a theology book wrapped in a fictional narrative. It betrays the Scriptures in many ways, and doesn't even engage with them directly.
If you wish to read it for the plot, go ahead. But if you wish to read it to improve your relationship with God, I can recommend several other books over this. Go read your Bible or A Pilgrim's Progress. (