When Answers Aren't Enough: Experiencing God as Good When Life Isn't - eBook
Stock No: WW3197EB
When Answers Aren't Enough: Experiencing God as Good When Life Isn't - eBook  -     By: Matt Rogers

When Answers Aren't Enough: Experiencing God as Good When Life Isn't - eBook

Zondervan / 2009 / ePub

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Stock No: WW3197EB

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Zondervan / 2009 / ePub
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Product Information

Title: When Answers Aren't Enough: Experiencing God as Good When Life Isn't - eBook
By: Matt Rogers
Format: DRM Protected ePub
Vendor: Zondervan
Publication Date: 2009
ISBN: 9780310543329
ISBN-13: 9780310543329
UPC: 025986543327
Stock No: WW3197EB

Publisher's Description

On April 16, 2007, the campus of Virginia Tech experienced a collective nightmare when thirty-three students were killed in the worst massacre in modern U.S. history. Following that horrendous event, Virginia Tech campus pastor Matt Rogers found himself asking and being asked, "Where is God in all of this?" The cliché-ridden, pat answers rang hollow. In this book, Matt approaches the pain of the world with personal perspective—dealing with his hurting community as well as standing over the hospital bed of his own father—and goes beyond answers, beyond theodicy, beyond the mere intellectual. When Answers Aren’t Enough drives deeper, to the heart of our longing, in search of a God we can experience as good when life isn’t.

Author Bio

Matt Rogers is copastor of New Life Christian Fellowship at Virginia Tech. Eight hundred students call it home.

Publisher's Weekly

Rogers, a pastor at New Life Christian Fellowship at Virginia Tech, reflects on the tragedy that shook the campus (and the nation) in April 2007 when Seung-Hui Cho shot and killed 32 fellow students and professors. However, this isn't primarily a message of pastoral comfort, or even a journalistic account about how students of faith have walked through their grief. (Rogers is more than 50 pages into the book before he mentions that one of the students who died attended his church.) Instead, it centers around Rogers's own heartache and struggle to understand how God can give so many good gifts and yet allow such horror. While there are poetic moments, and readers will be comforted by his thoughts on the way the world was meant to be and the world that is to come, there's little new, and all the brooding introspection can become wearying. With a release timed around the anniversary of the shootings, there promises to be a lot of interest and plenty of media opportunities. Unfortunately, the book could have been much better if Rogers had gotten out of his own pain and focused on the students he works with. (Apr.) Copyright 2008 Reed Business Information.

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