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Paperback Christ Among Other Gods: A Defense of Christ in an Age of Tolerance Book

ISBN: 0802416497

ISBN13: 9780802416490

Christ Among Other Gods: A Defense of Christ in an Age of Tolerance

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Book Overview

You've heard it said, "All religions are equal." But do you know how to respond?Tolerance sees all religions as spokes of one wheel, spinning everyone together in harmony with God. Christ Among Other... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

To a Reader from Philadelphia

Dear Sir, please understand that I say this with love, but I am afraid you are somewhat mistaken about what this book is about, and what indeed Christianity is all about. You want someone to recommend a truly worthwhile book on Christianity while discounting the Bible as not much more than frivolous, when in fact the Bible is the only source of truth for the Christian faith. It is the only authoritative text that deals with who God is, what he has done, and who Jesus Christ was, and what he did for all mankind by dying on the cross so we might have eternal life. The fact is that even from a purely academic view, the Bible could not have been fabricated for too many reasons to name here, so therefore, even before theology enters the picture, we have a historically accurate document, which proves at least part of its validity. So then enter the actual doctrine the Bible teaches, and clearly no other source of truth can stack up against it. All the other religions in the world which teach relative tolerance, no absolutes, etc. etc., while at the same time proclaiming truth contradict themselves at the most fundamental level: truth, by definition, is eternal, unchanging, and certainly not relative. God would be much more a malicious God is he created relative truth than a narrow path. And, believing Jesus Christ to be the son of God, said that no one gets to the Father except first through the Son and beleiving in his power to forgive and love and mold into righteousness, and asking him into our hearts and lives so he can live in us and do a work in us to cleanse us from all unrighteousness, than yes, there is only one way to God. It is not so much a question that God is smaller than the ocean, except that only one river flows into that ocean, all others flow into the Dead Sea, if you will. Remember, God is much bigger than the ocean, but, being a holy God, only those who have accepted his Son in their lives will be with him. His Holiness, by definition, cannot have communion with unholiness. He can definetely have communication, but they are two very distinct things. Finally, to quote the author Frank Peretti, "There is no way for you to know whether what I am telling you is true, unless you know what the truth is, and there is no way for you to know what the truth is, unless there is a truth that you can know." (Again, truth by definition, being of an unrelative nature). No doctrinally sound book on Christianity is going to have the philosophical relativism you seem to be searching for, but remember, even the greatest of philosophers even conceded the superiority of theology over philosophy when, they said, "I climbed the mountain of wisdom all my life, and finally reached the plateu, only to discover the theologians had been sitting there for years." Hope this has cleared up any misconceptions you may have had about the Christian faith. God bless you as you search for truth, you seem hungry for it, which is always a first step in th

The God, No Other

Erwin Lutzer's book titled Christ Among Many gods is similar to Ravi Zacharias' book titled Jesus Among Other Gods. Both are attacks on religious relativeness. My preference is Lutzer's work. Ravi Zacharias starts his book talking his life's journey before accepting Jesus as His own Savior. His approach is less analytical and more anecdotal. Lutzer does use his own fairly recent encounters with those who believe in religious relativeness and his response to those who hold this contrary view. Lutzer's work is more scholarly. How does one want to perceive Jesus: mere man or God? To believe scripture or to cast Him differently? Does one want to incorporate Jesus into other belief systems? Those who preach relativeness seek to portray Jesus as mere man or to portray him as one of many gods. Scripture depicts a different Jesus. Jesus is the Christ because He is God who became man while staying God. Not a god but the only God; Lutzer argues that Jesus Christ cannot be incorporated into another belief system. Who is the liar but he who denies that Jesus is the Christ? This is the antichrist, he who denies the Father and the Son. (1 John 2:22 RSV) Lutzer talks about the activity of some to fuse different religious beliefs together. They want to create a global village where those from different "religious traditions" can get along. To believe one has a choice in determining who his god is. Four rules in such a thought process [a] Traditions (no doctrines of truth)[b] spirituality ( may retain one's particular religion, move "beyond into a spirituality inclusive of other religions. [c] No religion is superior [d]no evangelism or proselytizing. Lutzer argues that Tolerance is the idol. He argues Christians should have a Legal Tolerance ( no coercion into making others believe as we do) and Social Tolerance ( A commitment to respecting all men even when one vigorously disagree with their religion and ideas) . But Christians should never have Uncritical Tolerance ( avoiding vigorous debate, because one does not believe he has no right to defend morality, religion, or respect for human life). Thus Tolerance becomes the faith (religion). Only through uncritical thought can the `peaceful' `co-existance' of religion and syncretism (beliefs can mindlessly be combined) Jesus then said to the Jews who had believed in him, "If you continue in my word, you are truly my disciples, and you will know the truth, and the truth will make you free." (John 8:31-32 RSV) Lutzer argues Jesus is the one who provided us the truth. The truth is available through the Bible. Truth is independent on what an individual may perceive, believe or want. Truth is universal. God is not capable of self contradiction. God cannot deny and affirm the same thing in the same way and at the same time. There are many ways to be wrong but there is only one way to be right. He further argues all false teaching agree with the doctrines of the anti-Christ; Namely the perfectibili

Awesome!

Incredible and CRYSTAL CLEAR! A definite read for Christians in order to clarify the importance of Christianity and for those who are not Christians in order to clarify the importance of there being only one way to God.

Fabulous Except for One Chapter

Lutzer has done a splendid job of writing what I would consider to be an introductory work on comparative religious studies. From a Christian perspective, he attempts to take on the practice of watering down Christianity (and other religions as well) by those committed to achieving a mushy religious middle in the name of universal tolerance. For the most part, I think he does a very good job here.There appear to be two main areas of emphasis in the book. Lutzer spends the first several chapters in the book analyzing the notion of tolerance and critiquing the concept of reducing all truth claims to subjective experience instead of objective evidences. I think Lutzer does a very good job of demonstrating that subjective truth is a poor substitute for objective truth that can be independently proven by independent evidences and proofs. And I think Lutzer effectively shows this desire to redefine truth by what we feel instead of what we can prove is at the heart of the efforts to establish a "tolerant" universal religion. What struck me in Lutzer's analysis is that it is quite ironic that the systematic watering down and dismissal of Christianity's UNIQUE truth claims (and therefore the religious beliefs of countless millions of people) is seen as "tolerant". Quite the contrary, this is extremely intolerant because it attempts to undermine the period documentation of the unique nature of Christianity in order to conduct a selective and revisionist history exercise that is completely subjective in nature, and then uses this method to trump the overwhelming independent evidences that have been the traditional bases for belief among Christians for two millenia. One of the strong pillars of the tolerance movement is the belief that any religion (but particularly Christianity) that makes exclusive truth claims is both intolerant and arrogant. Well, I can think of little else that is more arrogant than supplanting objective and independent evidences documented within 100 years of the events with a present day set of subjective opinions, arrived at 2000 years after the fact, that "feel good" and calling this tolerant. Because it is very intolerant of virtually all methods to arrive at the truth objectively that have been practiced forever. And it is also guilty of being self defeating. By saying that Christianity can be lumped together with all religions as being no more true or valid than anything else, the tolerance movement is erecting an exclusive truth claim of its own and therefore failing its own tolerance test. I thought Lutzer examined this very well.Lutzer then spends many of the remaining chapters specifically examining areas where Christianity is completely unique and cannot be melted into other religions with intellectual honesty. I thought it was important for Lutzer to conduct such an examination to demonstrate to the reader that the uniqueness of Christianity is not merely an academic opinion, but a real life reality that raise

A Clarifying Work

Erwin Lutzer has succinctly put together the reasons why Christianity differs from other major religions, and why Christ is not just another great teacher or prophet to be put on the shelf alongside Buddha, Mohammad, Vishnu, Krishna, or any other. Lutzer tells not only of Christ's claims to divinity, but illustrates how others perceived Him, as well as how others--even His enemies--could not deny Christ's miracles and resurrection. This is a very important book for these times when there is such a proclivity to lump all religions together and call them the same. I highly recommend this work for anyone who wants to strengthen their faith and discover why Christ is unique and divine.
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