“In his second If I Were God book, John Dickson considers the vast array of spiritual claims made by different religions and individuals and asks whether any clarity about God can be found…
With so many religions on offer, can one of them be considered true? Or are they different paths up the same spiritual mountain? And how can any one person sort their way though the maze of claims?”
– From the back cover.
While I admit the title is eye-catching, and I understand that Dickson is titling each book in this series from the perspective of common objections posed to Christians, I have to say it still makes me a little uncomfortable and causes some possible confusion among Christians and non-Christians alike.
Nonetheless, John Dickson does an excellent job in this book (published by the venerable Matthias Media) of doing exactly what he sets out to do: explaining the exclusive claims of Christianity and how we can know they are true. He starts out answering this question from the book’s introduction:
In the following chapters, Dickson accomplishes what very few similarly themed works ever do effectively, in my opinion: genuinely meet the unbeliever/questioner with good-humored, understandable arguments for the validity of the Christian faith.
In other words, this is not just a Christian pep rally masquerading as an apologetics resource; it does not pretend to speak to unbelievers’ objections while really targeting believers with a “aren’t you glad we’re so right” message. And in presenting such a winning, uncompromising explanation of Christianity, Dickson provides a wonderful example and helpful resource for all Christians who are seeking a way to effectively share and defend their faith.
Dickson takes a three-prong approach to the discussion of religion and truth-claims. He first takes note of the incurable ’spirituality’ of humanity throughout time and observes that to ignore or stifle discussion of religion is to obstinately oppose the flow of mainstream human thought. Second, he shows that the vastly differing, even contradictory, truth-claims of the world’s faiths can not all be equally true; therefore, it is intolerant and intellectually lazy to simply throw them all in one big pot and claim they are all saying the same thing in different ways. And, last, he articulates some important distinctions of the Christian faith and makes a case for its unique verifiability.
In his second chapter “The Attraction of Distraction,” Dickson points out an almost undeniable paradox in Western culture and spirituality. He writes:
Perhaps the best, and most interesting, chapter in the book is entitled “An Unknown God”, in which Dickson explains the intellectual contradictions and dishonesty of our pluralistic culture. While the great cry of our generation is religious “tolerance”, the truth is that pluralism is itself an arrogant, intolerant view of religion:
Having addressed some of the unthinking and cultural biases against the exclusive truth claims of Christianity in the opening 3 chapters of the book, Dickson proceeds in the remaining 2 chapters to offer a reasoned argument for the “verifiability” of Christianity — based largely upon the historical person Jesus Christ and his resurrection from the dead. While many of Dickson’s points will not be brand new to those familiar with other Christian apologetics work, his easy-to-read style, creative presentation, and winning approach will be instructive and interesting to almost any reader.Dickson closes with this thought-provoking and investigation-stimulating paragraph:
(Finding Grace)
(Finding Grace)
(Finding Grace)
(Finding Grace)
(Q&A)
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