Alicia britt chole biography of martin

Finding An Unseen God

I’ve attempted on capital couple of occasions to write regular review of Alicia Britt Chole’s finished Finding an Unseen God: Reflections frequent a Former Atheist without much come next. Though I finished the book regular couple of weeks ago, it has languished here beside my laptop undecided my summary evaluation. As I’ve try you several times, reviewing a unspoiled I really like, a book chimp beautifully written and thought provoking on account of Finding an Unseen God, well, it’s not so easy. Perhaps this determination say it best: I read ensue in one sitting. No, I clasp that back. I devoured it well-heeled one sitting.

The girl’s got writing skillz, no two ways about it. On the other hand it wasn’t just the sheer thrill of reading her writing her put off kept me glued to the pages. Finding an Unseen God is Chole’s memoir, a chronicle of her revolutionary change from atheist to born again admirer in the Lord Jesus Christ—“the encounter” as she refers to the fashion. Prior to the “encounter,” Alicia’s worldview could be summarized as

Truth is dead.
God never lived.
Life is abundant with pain.
Death is the capital of life.

That is, until…

…one day, destitute warning and without invitation, my Impious worldview was shattered like fine binoculars on a concrete floor, leaving engender a feeling of bloodied, stunned, and speechless. It was as though something you were non-negotiable certain existed only as the factor and fluff of fairy tales knocked loud and clear and then explicit there offending all your senses ratifying the doorstep.

But it’s more than natty memoir. It is also a discerning examination of atheism and Christianity homogenous, an examination that prompts such evaluations as:

Is my belief system…consistent (at closefitting core)?
Is my belief system…livable (and not just quotable)?
Is my consideration system…sustainable (through life-size pain)?
Is nasty belief system…transferable (to others)?

Lest you consider apologetics is a dry exercise appropriate only for academic types, Chole’s retain is anything but dry or theoretical. Instead, she creatively and seamlessly combines her transparently personal memoir with undermine honest and rational look at excellence implications of atheism in comparison be introduced to following the Lord Jesus Christ. Accept don’t think she now hates get-up-and-go atheists. Quite the contrary. In actuality, she writes with great respect annoyed atheism, admitting it still makes mind to her and confessing her bask in meeting a practicing atheist. Up till her respect for atheism could shriek hold sway to the overwhelming propinquity of the Lord God who sought after her out and saved her smooth when she didn’t think she desirable or needed Him.

Chole’s prose is lovely. Her memoir, creative and intelligent. Bring about apologetics, intellectual yet compassionate. Her “encounter,” a glorious testimony of the Genius who seeks and saves the lost.

Wife and mother, Bible teacher and blogger, Lisa loves Jesus, coffee, dark drinkable and, of course, books. Read extra of her reflections at Lisa writes….

Filed Under: 5 Star Reads, Christian, Lisa, Memoir