WHAT GOD WANTS
1230 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10020
www.SimonandSchuster.com
Copyright 2005 by Neale Donald Walsch
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever. For information address Atria Books, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Walsch, Neale Donald.
What God wants: a compelling answer to humanitys biggest question / by Neale Donald Walsch.
p. cm.
1. God Miscellanea. 2. Spiritual life Miscellanea. I. Title.
BF1999.W2289 2005
04 dc22
2004062687
ISBN-13: 978-0-7432-6713-7
ISBN-10: 0-7432-6713-3
ISBN-13: 978-0-7432-6714-4 (Pbk)
ISBN-10: 0-7432-6714-1 (Pbk)
eISBN-13: 9781439106815
This Atria Books trade paperback edition January 2006
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
ATRIA BOOKS is a trademark of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
Letter on pages 37-38 as seen in DEAR ABBY by Abigail Van Buren, a.k.a. Jeanne Phillips, and founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. 2004 Universal Press Syndicate. Reprinted with permission. All rights reserved.
Manufactured in the United States of America
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WHAT GOD
WANTS
1.
Very few people will be able to believe whats in this book.
At least, at first.
That may make it one of the most unbelievable books of all time.
2.
This book answers the most important question in human history.
What does God want?
For many people that answer will be startling.
Even for those who arent completely surprised, the answer will be dramatically different. It will not even come close to the ideas that people usually hear about God.
Humanitys ideas about God produce humanitys ideas about life and about people. Dramatically different ideas about God will produce dramatically different ideas about life and about people. If the world could use anything right now, thats it.
We stand today on the brink of a global cultural war. The opening volleys have already been exchanged. The really major clashes, the unthinkable Future World battles, may be yet to come.
Given the direction in which humanity appears to be moving, it may seem as though this larger conflict is inevitable. It isnt. Theres something very powerful that can stop it: dramatically different ideas about God and dramatically different ideas about life and about people.
Such ideas, if accepted and adopted, will produce dramatically different ways of living and being. Values will change. Priorities will change. Power structures and power holders will change.
Some of those power holders do not want any of this to happen.
That may make this not only one of the most unbelievable books of all time, but also one of the most dangerous.
3.
How long has it been since youve read a dangerous book?
Youll be in and out of this one in very little time. Its a short book. So its not only dangerous, its fast.
Fast and dangerous. Thats often a fascinating combination. Maybe even a little exciting. Danger and excitement are two sides of the same coin. Which of the two you experience depends on whether youre racing toward something or away from it.
Which way are you racing with regard to change? Do you want things to remain pretty much the same, or do you want things to be different?
If you want things to stay the way they are, you could find this book dangerous. If you cant wait for things to change, you could find it exciting. Which do you want?
Well, you might say, that depends on what were talking about here. Are we talking about my life? My job? My marriage? My relationship? My health? Or are we talking about my country? The world at large? The international political scene? The global challenges being faced by humanity?
So let me help you with that. Were talking about all of it. Every bit of it. Not one thing or the other, but all of it. Because the information in this book could change all of it.
Change can be a dangerous thing to suggest, not only around people of power (to whom change is the ultimate threat) but also around ordinary people (for whom change is threatening simply because it leads to the unknown).
Former U.S. vice president Al Gore had it exactly right in a September 2004 interview in the New Yorker:
In a world of disconcerting change, when large and complex forces threaten familiar and comfortable guide-posts, the natural impulse is to grab hold of the tree trunk that seems to have the deepest roots and hold on for dear life and never question the possibility that its not going to be the source of your salvation.
The final part of that sentence (italics mine) tells the tale of humanitys belief about God and life in fifteen words. Mr. Gore confirms this with his next statement. And the deepest roots, he says, are in philosophical and religious traditions that go way back.
Al Gores insight leaves us all facing a thunderous question: Is the way forward to be found by going way back?
The answer is no.
And while, as the former vice president notes, we never question the possibility that our philosophical and religious traditions are not going to be the source of our salvationpresumably because we feel threatened by such questioningcould there be times when not to question those traditions presents an even larger threat?
The answer is yes. And this is one of those times.
The biggest danger in the world today is not the asking of questions but the assumption that we have all the answers; not the invitation to change but the tendency to run from change; not dramatically new ideas about God and about Life but the same old ideas.
If some of those old ideas continue to be embraced, life as the human race now knows it may not survive the first half of the twenty-first century. The way things are going, it may not even survive the first quarter.
I know, I know, that sounds like an exaggeration.
Its not.
Pick up the morning paper. Turn on CNN.
In the years immediately ahead the human race could make a dramatic upward jump in its evolutionary process, or it could fall back, staggering and stumbling and ultimately crumbling under the weight of its own past misunderstandings.
Its happened before.
It is what can occur when the technological advancement of a species races ahead of its moral, ethical, and spiritual development. Then what the universe has to deal with is children playing with matches.
These days, thats us.
The human race is in the childhood of its evolution. Theres nothing wrong with that. Childhood can be a wonderful time. But its also a time when great care must be taken.
If we watch what we are doing during our childhoodif, as author Robert Fulghum suggests, we look both ways before crossing, if we learn to share, if we hold hands and keep track of each other, if we walk and dont run, if we quit pushing and say were sorry when we do, if we clean up our messes, and if we stop fighting with our brothers and sisterswell get to grow up, and our future can be spectacular.
I believe thats what will happen. I believe the future were about to create is going to be so spectacular! But I also know it could turn out another way. And I know that if we dont start behaving, it very well might. Failure to acknowledge this is foolhardy. Its more than foolhardy. Its irresponsible. Its what a child would do.
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