Patience with God is an excellent book. The early sections on atheist and christian fundamentalists are especially interesting. Frank Shaeffer while writing from a sort of christian point of view keeps it real and visceral by not shying away from strong language. He is never shackled by politeness. His criticisms of fundamentalist atheists are especially good.
Later in the book where he focuses more on his backstory and history and philosophy, the salient points are further between, but Frank is a good writer, and if he doesn't expand your vocabulary, you're probably an english major. Unlike other books where I feel like the author was writing to a ninth grader, Frank keeps it more up to my level.
I heartily recommend this book especially if like me, you're searching for not just something to believe in but the best and most truthful something to believe in. And I don't mean truth in a "We have the truth, join us" sort of way, but a level headed look at the real factual truth, the truth that God is not the god of the fundamentalists, or the right wing, but the creator and redeemer of our planet.
I don't recommend reading Schaeffer's book to believe everything that's in it, but rather to read it to glean information and ideas from it. Schaeffer takes an even more liberal and cynical view of religion than I do, and if you read his Huffington Post articles, you'll find that. At times he can even be a bit overly hostile especially toward the Older Testament. But he has a very interesing and eye opening point of view.
If you plan to read this book, I suggest you read "Crazy for God" first as this book may seem to build upon it in a few places. They were written in that order, so it only makes sense to read them in that order.
9/10
WiredForStereo
Showing posts with label Crazy for God. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crazy for God. Show all posts
Thursday, September 9, 2010
Book Review: "Patience with God: Faith for People who Don't Like Religion {or Atheism}" by Frank Schaeffer
Topics:
Atheist,
Atheist Fundamentalism,
Book Review,
Christian Fundamentalism,
Crazy for God,
Frank Schaeffer,
Patience with God
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
Book Review: Crazy for God: How I Grew Up as One of the Elect, Helped Found the Religious Right, and Lived to Take All (or Almost All) of It Back by Frank Shaeffer
In the last few days, I've been reading this very interesting book. I had seen Frank Shaeffer several times on shows like Rachel Maddow and on YouTube. I was very interested in his points of view considering that he is a left leaning Christian, I guess you could say.
I was even more intrigued when I learned about his past, how he was the son of the late great evangelical theologian Francis Shaeffer, though after reading this book, he might just be late, but everyone has their flaws. The subtitle really explains a lot. Frank was the one or one of the main ones who brought the abortion issue into the mainstream conservative religious right playbook.
Frank grew up in Switzerland, the child of two evangelical royalty as he calls them. Of the many things I learned from this book was a couple of ways how not to raise your children. Frank was for most of his childhood given the run of the land and little education. It also didn't help that he had dyslexia.
He doesn't hide much, talking about how controlling, hyperspiritualized, and condescending his mother was, and how abusive his father was toward his mother. He also tells about his own inheritance of these traits, how mean he was to his wife and children. He also tells how his parents were uncommonly kind and understanding to people commonly rejected outright by the contemporary American church. There don't seem to be any subjects that Frank doesn't cover, including masturbation, spousal abuse, and a crush he had on a star of one of his movies.
He talks about his abandoned art career, his successful professional Christian career, his failed movie director career, and finally his success and contentment as an author and conversion to the Greek Orthodox church.
Most interesting was the inner workings for the christian right movement which has taken political power for the past few decades. It was very interesting to learn the history, the behind the scenes wrangling, attitudes, and control.
I would recommend this book to anyone. It's the real life story of real life people whose fingerprints on society have shaped history for decades and will continue to do so for the foreseeable future. This book gets pretty real, there's swearing, there's sex, there's yelling, and there's the behind the scenes lives of revered people. 9/10.
WiredForStereo
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