christopherjhlee

Christopher JH Lee JH Lee itibaren Yunispur, Uttar Pradesh, Hindistan itibaren Yunispur, Uttar Pradesh, Hindistan

Okuyucu Christopher JH Lee JH Lee itibaren Yunispur, Uttar Pradesh, Hindistan

Christopher JH Lee JH Lee itibaren Yunispur, Uttar Pradesh, Hindistan

christopherjhlee

Neal Plantinga draws heavily from the Augustinian and Calvinistic streams of the Christian tradition to help contemporary readers see in our own world what previous generations called "sin". It becomes clear a few pages in that Plantinga is not out to simply point fingers or to condemn; rather, he is attempting to convey a way of thinking and feeling that has been almost entirely lost in modern (more 'therapeutic') forms of thought. Like his literary hero CS Lewis, Plantinga's attention to meanings embedded in colloquialisms allows him to demonstrate how foreign the concept of sin has become to many people - including many Christians. So this book is a sustained attempt to winsomely reinstate the content behind one single word: sin. Plantinga's refusal to subvert the sense that something is wrong with me and the world brings to light a tender courage that is perhaps the virtuous corollary to a traditional harmatology. Amazingly, the book is not depressing to read nor does it engender an overly dark assessment of one's surroundings. In fact, the book climaxes with a lucid explanation of how our doctrine of sin qualifies what we say about grace. This book is not only robust theology but also masterful prose. The book itself performs a truth that Plantinga nowhere directly states - that the doctrine of sin increases our enjoyment of the world, God, and one another.

christopherjhlee

Every poem is dogmarked as a 'favorite'. The edges look less like a book and more like origami.

christopherjhlee

Anansi Boys is very good book, as much about stories and the telling of them as it is about a particular story, that of Fat Charlie Nancy and his family. The resolution is not wholly satisfying, but it's not wholly unsatisfying either - like American Gods, the very ending felt trite, though not quite wrong. All in all, though, It's a fun read, and also a thoughtful one, full of great lines about stories (and songs) and what they do.