Wrestling with God Review

Wrestling with God
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I am an atheist. For the past year I have attended bible study at Journey, the church founded by Rick Diamond after he left Riverbend Church and after he wrote this book. One might think that I'm biased, and I am to a degree, pulled in one direction by my atheism and in the opposite direction by my respect and admiration for Rick, whose whole mission in life is Love. I'm not even sure what Love is, but I'm hanging out at bible study, listening attentively, hoping that I'll learn.
So it is with mixed feelings that I read this book, cover to cover in just a few short sittings. It's not a long book, 172 pages, easy and fun to read and sometimes funny. But there are plenty of passages that really make you question your life. As an atheist, one might rightly say that I have no purpose, or at least haven't discovered it yet. As an atheist, I'm not sure that "Purpose" really exists apart from the wishes of our own egos. And I'm not sure that Rick's book really answers the question of what our purpose should be. But, in fairness, that's not what Wrestling With God was trying to accomplish, in my opinion.
The concept of "desert" is very big in this book. Wrestling With God uses the struggles of biblical characters (Jesus, Moses, Jacob, and others), characters from pop culture and literature (Luke Skywalker, Hamlet, etc), and real people, to teach us about how the desert can cleanse our spirit. The desert is a metaphor for struggle. It's a place where we are alone, where we don't want to be, but yet are there because of circumstance (foreclosure, cancer diagnosis, loss of a loved one). The desert is where Jesus fasts for 40 days and 40 nights, and where He is tempted. Luke Skywalker is tempted by the dark side of the force. Even though I am an atheist, I very much believe in the struggles of life. Maybe I'm missing something by not believing in God and the divinity of Jesus, and that's why I'm attending bible study and reading books such as this one.
The desert forces you to strip down to your bare nature, to find what is most important to you and to tear all the rest away. Your survival sometimes depends on it, both your physical and spiritual survival. I've been in the desert a couple of times in my life, and it is at those times that I turn to books such as Wrestling With God, and to people such as Rick Diamond, to help me survive. This book has helped me see that I need to start to focus on what's most important in my life and, most importantly, to find a purpose, a purpose that will help lead me out of the desert.
I recommend this book to believers and non-believers alike.

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WRESTLING WITH GODYou're hungry to know God. You want to encounter Him. You can feel it in your bones that there's more to life, but everywhere you've looked to fill the void you feel has left you empty still: Culture. Career. Things. Even church. Your soul's stomach continues to growl. This book will satisfy that hunger. Wrestling With God is raw. It's about getting outside the confines of dogmatic religion and encountering something real. It is a guidebook into the rich journey of surrender and exploration that can lead to a deep trust in a radically loving ­ but never tame ­ God. Warning: This book will mess you up. But that's a good thing. The end of religion is the beginning of relationship.

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