Subscribe Twitter Redeemer City to City Facebook Share
Share on:
blog

The Shack - Impressions

27 Jan 2010, by Tim Keller

Over the holidays I read a good (and devastating) review of William P. (Paul) Young's The Shack in the most recent print edition of Books and Culture: A Christian Review (Jan/Feb 2010.)  It was a reminder that I was one of the last people on the planet not to have read the book. So I did. So why write a blog post about it? It had sold 7.2 million copies in a little over 2 years, by June of 2009. With those kinds of numbers, the book will certainly exert some influence over the popular religious imagination. So it warrants a response. This is not a review, but just some impressions:

At the heart of the book is a noble effort -- to help modern people understand why God allows suffering, using a narrative form. The argument Young makes at various parts of the book is this. First, this world's evil and suffering is the result of our abuse of free will. Second, God has not prevented evil in order to accomplish some glorious, greater good that humans cannot now understand. Third, when we stay bitter at God for a particular tragedy we put ourselves in the seat of the 'Judge of the world and God', and we are unqualified for such a job. Fourth, we must get an 'eternal perspective' and see all God's people in joy in his presence forever. (The father in the story is given a vision of his deceased daughter living in the joy of Christ's presence, and it heals his grief.) This is all rather standard, orthodox, pastoral theology (though it's a bit too heavy on the 'free-will defense').  It is so accessible to readers because of its narrative form. I have heard many reports of semi-believers and non-believers claiming that this book gave them an answer to their biggest objections to faith in God.

However, sprinkled throughout the book, Young's story undermines a number of traditional Christian doctrines. Many have gotten involved in debates about Young's theological beliefs, and I have my own strong concerns. But here is my main problem with the book. Anyone who is strongly influenced by the imaginative world of The Shack will be totally unprepared for the far more multi-dimensional and complex God that you actually meet when you read the Bible. In the prophets the reader will find a God who is constantly condemning and vowing judgment on his enemies, while the Persons of the Triune-God of The Shack repeatedly deny that sin is any offense to them. The reader of Psalm 119 is filled with delight at God's statutes, decrees, and laws, yet the God of The Shack insists that he doesn't give us any rules or even have any expectations of human beings. All he wants is relationship. The reader of the lives of Abraham, Jacob, Moses, and Isaiah will learn that the holiness of God makes his immediate presence dangerous or fatal to us. Someone may counter (as Young seems to do, on p.192) that because of Jesus, God is now only a God of love, making all talk of holiness, wrath, and law obsolete. But when John, one of Jesus' closest friends, long after the crucifixion sees the risen Christ in person on the isle of Patmos, John 'fell at his feet as dead.' (Rev.1:17.) The Shack effectively deconstructs the holiness and transcendence of God. It is simply not there. In its place is unconditional love, period. The God of The Shack has none of the balance and complexity of the Biblical God. Half a God is not God at all.

There is another modern text that sought to convey the character of God through story. It also tried to 'embody' the Biblical doctrine of God in an imaginative way that conveyed the heart of the Biblical message. That story contained a Christ-figure named Aslan. Unlike the author of The Shack, however, C.S. Lewis was always at pains to maintain the Biblical tension between the divine love and his overwhelming holiness and splendor. In the introduction to his book The Problem of Pain, Lewis cited the example from the children's text The Wind in the Willows where two characters, Rat and Mole approach divinity.

"Afraid?" murmured the Rat, his eyes shining with unutterable love. "Afraid? of Him? O, never, never. And yet -- and yet -- O Mole, I am afraid."

Lewis sought to get this across at many places through his Narnia tales. One of the most memorable is the description of Aslan.

"Safe?...Who said anything about safe? 'Course he isn't safe. But he's good. He's the King, I tell you."

That's better.

Comments

ChadEstes
01/27/2010
I'm glad you took the time to read "The Shack" and to share your thoughts about it. Is it possible that much of the tension of the OT and the way we both understood and interacted with God during that part of our history was impacted greatly because of sin? Is it different now on the other side of the cross? Would Adam and Eve described their interactions with God in the Garden of Eden the way that the prophets did? For me reading this story wasn't a representation of one half of God's nature. In fact for me it was the parable-like shock that I've really not connected with the God of Love, even though that is how he describes himself. In terms of a lasting message, Young's story nudged me in the direction of freedom, hope and faith when a lot of the other books I read about God leave me cowering inwardly in fear.

nancypants
01/27/2010
Amen Pastor Tim!

joshcrews
01/28/2010
Thank you Dr. Keller, I think you expressed in writing a lot of things I've been thinking but just sound to angry when someone asks me my opinion about the Shack. Now I can just point them at this more thoughtful piece than my ramblings.

Tim Keller
01/28/2010
ChadEstes-- Thanks for writing, Chad. Yes, Adam and Eve may not have responded to God in the garden with fear and trembling (though it's a bit hard to be sure) but even if they did not, we should remember that they were pre-sinners. We are now sinners and even in the future we will be post-sinners. I think there will always be a combination of both awe and intimacy in our response to God's presence. That seems to be the case with John in Revelation 1. The Psalmist says that he fears God BECAUSE God has forgiven him (Ps 130:4). Joyful fear and trembling grow with the experience of love. I agree that an experience of grace doesn't make you 'cower' in fear of punishment, but there still should be an awe and wonder before God's glorious majesty that I think C.S. Lewis gets this across in his fiction better than Paul Young does.

RupZip
01/28/2010
Although the book did stretch my thinking, after some reflection, it stretched it too far into bad doctrine. The idea of putting God Almight in totally human terms ruins the majesty, divinity, and wonder of his nature. And Tim, as you said, where's the holiness? I can understand the Christ incarnation, but the idea of God flipping pancakes and passing gas was just a little much for me. David www.redletterbelievers.com "Salt and Light"

RupZip
01/28/2010
Although the book did stretch my thinking, after some reflection, it stretched it too far into bad doctrine. The idea of putting God Almight in totally human terms ruins the majesty, divinity, and wonder of his nature. And Tim, as you said, where's the holiness? I can understand the Christ incarnation, but the idea of God flipping pancakes and passing gas was just a little much for me. David http://www.redletterbelievers.com "Salt and Light"

RLCJ
01/28/2010
Thank you so very much pastor for over 2 years many have pushed the "Shack" on me and I have declined..recently my 22 year old daughter was quoting from it calling GOd the father "Papa" and I did not know enough about it to, challenge her comments or condone them. But with GODS incredible timing, today you have given me some tools & helpful insights,along with pastor mark driscoll's thoughts thank you for being so genuine, factual & in Love without bashing BTW why would i read Christian "fiction" when there is so much truth out there to read & be revealed In Christ alone Hope Filled & Forever Changed R 1st Corinthians 15:10

RLCJ
01/28/2010
PS: here is that Link to Pastor Driscoll's review on the shack which in tandem with Pastor Tim shares the heresy and false images portrayed www.youtube.com/watch?v=pK65Jfny70Y

EPeevie
02/03/2010
Yes. My favorite lines: The Shack effectively deconstructs the holiness and transcendence of God. It is simply not there. In its place is unconditional love, period. The God of The Shack has none of the balance and complexity of the Biblical God. Half a God is not God at all. What about the horrible prose? It is neither a good story, nor good theology: http://greenroomthoughts.blogspot.com/2008/09/book-review-shack.html

bruckoii
02/03/2010
If we can't teach about part of God with the understanding that it is only a part, then perhaps we better not write any books about God at all? *The Shack* is a good read for people who are angry at God, or who are in the midst of their own tragedy. It seems to me that a loving God who allows abduction, sexual assault, and murder is already pretty transcendent and aloof in the minds of many people. For many, *The Shack* provides a description of God's tenderness and immanence to balance the separateness and transcendence that they are already experiencing. Some of the Shack's popularity comes from people desiring a distorted God. Some of its popularity comes as a reaction to the distortion that many Christian institutions are perceived to be presenting.