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N. T. WrightA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
The author states that Wright is interested in describing the nature of Christianity to all interested, both within and without the definite boundaries of Christian faith. To that end, he identifies four different worldly “echoes” that speak to the possibility of there being a “someone” beyond ourselves: “the longing for justice, the quest for spirituality, the hunger for relationships, and the delight in beauty” (x).
Wright lays out the structure of the book from a bird’s eye view and insists that he is presenting the clearest and simplest argument that he can make for the inner rationality and coherence of the Christian faith, and why it should matter to a contemporary audience. In the first part he wishes to survey human experience at the natural level, tracking down the questions and desires that each human person feels at some point in their lives that imply some greater reality. In the second part, he wishes to lay out the basic Christian beliefs about God and Jesus as well as the history of Israel leading up to the events of the first century that the New Testament details. In the third part he wishes to describe how the human person is meant to respond to the divine call to loving communion within the church and in relation to one another. The author acknowledges the difficulty that Christianity encounters in the modern world; it is not simple in itself—in fact, it is rather complex—but there are times that require an attempt at simplicity, even if it is a poor one.
As a bishop of the Anglican Church and a lifelong academic, N. T. Wright is both a pastor and a scholar, and both of these vocational identities play a part in this book wherein he lays out for a popular audience the inner logic of the Christian faith. Other books argue from a more philosophical position, or from a biblical starting point, or even from various ethical claims, but Wright grounds his argument in a few of the most basic human desires. By starting with a handful of emotions and desires that almost every single person has felt for themselves, he starts on solid ground apologetically speaking. Grounding the argument in the quest for justice, beauty, and love, he builds the argument on what is most human. He is then free to link these various experiences to what he will argue are their ultimate source and goal: the inner life of the loving God who poured out his own love into his creation.