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Robert M. Price - The Reason Driven Life: What Am I Here on Earth For?

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Robert M. Price The Reason Driven Life: What Am I Here on Earth For?
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Pastor Rick Warrens The Purpose-Driven Life has been both a commercially successful best seller and a widely influential book in the Christian community. As a rejoinder to the fundamentalist assumptions of Warrens book, Robert Price, a biblical scholar, a member of the Jesus Seminar, and a former liberal Baptist pastor, offers this witty, thoughtful, and detailed critique. Following the concise forty-chapter structure of Warrens book, Prices point-counterpoint approach emphasizes the importance of reason in understanding lifes realities as opposed to Warrens devotional perspective.
Price, who was once a born-again Christian in his youth, is in a unique position to offer an appreciation of the wisdom that Warren shares while at the same time challenging many of his main points. In particular, Price takes issue with Warrens use of numerous scriptural quotations, demonstrating how many of them have little to do with the points Warren is trying to make. An important section of the book shows that the popular evangelical notion of a personal relationship with Jesus Christ is utterly without any scriptural basis.
Besides criticism, Price also provides many persuasive arguments for the use of reason as a tool for developing moral maturity and an intelligent, realistic perspective on lifes highs and lows. Ultimately, the reason-driven life offers a healthier, alternative approach to wisdom and motivation, says Price, than the simplistic answers and feel-good emotionalism at the heart of Warrens prescription for life.

Robert M. Price: author's other books


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What Am I Here
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Contents Foreword Whenever Im around Bob Price I think Th - photo 7

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Contents
Foreword

Whenever I'm around Bob Price, I think "Thank God for him." And then I remember that I really mean, "Thankfully, we have a Bob Price" and God probably had nothing to do with it. Bob Price is such a rare individual. He really gets it: the value of religious stories, the value of the community, camaraderie, and sense of communal spirit that religious organizations provide. He has great respect for the Bible as a repository of ancient wisdom and a source of the narratives we tell ourselves about how we came to be and how we see our struggles with nature and with each other. Bob Price isn't just a scholar of Christianity; he often references Buddhist parables, too. He can bring up just the right story to provide a counterpoint or add emphasis to an idea. And not just Buddhism, psychology, too: he can call on Jungian theory when it's meaningful and appropriate.

Most important, he knows bull when he hears it.

This book is not just a polemic against Rick Warren's The PurposeDriven Life. It's a beautiful, inspired, insightful work in its own right. I walked around for days after reading it filled with new ideas and a better way to look at my own life's predicaments. Then I read it again, and I got even more out of it.

For almost my entire life, I was much like some of the people Price describes in this book. I was a Christian by default, and I didn't take it seriously enough for it to cause me any real trouble. Bob says that the most well-adjusted Christians he knows are those who don't take it seriously. (Whether they are exactly conscious of this or not!) I think that was me. I think I was well adjusted. But that doesn't mean that I wasn't also stunted in my maturity by the side effects of benignly believing in the Christian stories and the childlike idea of a loving God who was pulling all the strings.

Then, there came a time when I was in crisis and I looked to my Christian faith to guide me. And it worked... at first. But then I looked closer and closer at what I professed to "believe" in and real ized that if you followed the Bible's own logic and reasoning, if you expected it to stand up to even a modicum of scrutiny, you were going to be bitterly disappointed. I began to think that even Jesus, if he existed, would have to agree that the Bible itself was a house built on sand. Ultimately, I had to discard my faith. Bob Price says that, for him, this moment was simultaneously a relief and a great disappointment. Exactly. That's what I felt, too-maybe more disappointment than relief. But my discarding of my faith was based mostly on science and psychology and history. I didn't take the time to go over the Christian viewpoint again and decipher what made those religious ideas so compelling, so insidious, and so seductive. I didn't have the scholarly background or the patience to look into each seemingly harmless evangelical belief and find out where it came from and why it deserves to be thoroughly trashed! But Bob Price has that background! Which means that I especially enjoyed and learned so much from reading this book.

This past February, I attended and spoke at the annual Technology, Entertainment, and Design (TED) conference in Monterrey, California. Rick Warren was also one of the speakers. The organizers had included his book, The Purpose-Driven Life, in our packets of goodies. I read most of it the night before he was scheduled to speak. The first thing that struck me was Warren's liberal-and really disrespectful-paraphrasing of Bible quotes and reinterpretation of Bible stories. I had recently reread the New Testament gospels myself (for my monologue "Letting Go of God") and much of what I read in The Purpose-Driven Life seemed utterly unlike anything I had read in the Bible. In any case, I was eager to hear Pastor Warren speak.

Chris Anderson (who hosts the TED conferences) introduced Rick Warren saying that The Purpose-Driven Life "was the secondbest selling nonfiction book ever, and that's if you count the Bible as a nonfiction book, which Rick Warren certainly does." Warren wore a Hawaiian shirt and sported a goatee; he's likable and approachable. He began as I expected, telling us that he didn't think we were accidents and that God planned for us to be alive and in fact even planned for us to hear his speech. But then Warren said something that surprised me. He said he thought his book was so popular because, "Most people never think it through. They don't codify it or quantify it, and say this is what I believe and why I believe it."

I was astonished that Rick Warren was so aware of why his book was so effective. I think he is right: most people don't think it through. I used to be one of those people. I was handed a moral code by my culture and religion, and I was overtly and subversively not encouraged to think out my own morality. It was given to me from above, first from the sisters at the Catholic grade school I attended, then from the Jesuits who gave it the polish and feel of something intellectual, and then by my family who equated our rituals and culture with ethics and morality, and therefore questioning one part of this was tantamount to questioning all of it. Completely out of the question!

So for Rick Warren, "people who don't think it through" means "people who haven't accepted the fundamentalist Christian worldview based on the Bible." Those who never ask themselves "why I believe it" are people who just don't listen to their evangelical pastors telling them exactly what to believe and how to "serve" the church with their "gifts."

Bob Price has the intelligence and the persistence to tackle all these contradictions. He's spent the time looking at what Bible translations Warren uses, and Price addresses the deeper, darker side-the shadow side-of what Warren is really proposing. Price points out that encouraging people to deeply think about "why they believe what they believe" causes individualism to triumph over conformity, creativity over subservience, and empowerment over "joining the flock." Additionally, I was delighted to read along as Price nails Warren time and time again for his ridiculous, even comical use of Bible passages and quotations (as "translated" for a "modern" audience).

So, this book you're reading is a deeply thought out, theologically accurate, heartfelt dismantling of Rick Warren's (and all evangelicals') worldview. Even the ideas that seem, on the surface, to be unassailable (like Warren's call to a life of service to others) Price takes apart, reveals each for the sham it is, with elegance and charm and disturbing accuracy.

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