Logo

 

Banner Image:   Baptist-Times-banner-2000x370-
Template Mode:   Baptist Times
Icon
    Post     Tweet


The Sanity of Belief by Simon Edwards


A good presentation of the intellectual arguments in favour of the truth of the Christian faith - but will postmodern thinkers be persuaded? 



Sanity of beliefThe Sanity of Belief – why faith makes sense
By Simon Edwards
SPCK
ISBN: 978-0-281-08489-0
Reviewed by Philip Clements-Jewery 

 
Simon Edwards, the author of The Sanity of Belief, is a writer and speaker based at the Oxford Centre for Christian Apologetics. It comes with an impressive number of commendations by prominent Christians. The argument of the book is that Christian faith makes sense of reality in all its fullness across the full spectrum of human experience - intellectual, moral, relational, emotional and volitional.

I judge that this is as good a presentation of the intellectual arguments in favour of the truth of the Christian faith as it is possible to make. However, it is plain that this is not simply a work of apologetics; it is more an extended evangelistic tract, calling for the decision of faith. I suggest, though, that it would only be suitable to give to seekers who are educated at least to undergraduate level. 

But this is where a few doubts arise in my mind. People educated to university level and beyond might wish to explore further the works cited in the extensive bibliography. However, there are no footnotes that would enable exploration of the quotations and references in the main text. 

I also feel that perhaps too much reliance is placed upon the authority of C.S.Lewis. Indeed, one of the people whose commendations are printed at the beginning of the book exclaims that ‘there were moments when I felt like I was reading C.S. Lewis!’ However, Lewis lived and wrote in very different age to our own. Which leads me to suggest that there is also a cultural issue at stake here. 

The question is, are people really persuaded by such ways of thinking any more? The kind of arguments found in books like this belong very much within the rationalistic (modern) worldview of the Enlightenment, yet the culture in which we live today is postmodern. Truth has become relative and a matter of personal choice. Yet God, as ever, speaks in the language of a human life. A personal encounter with the risen Christ, mediated through the testimony of believers, may prove more persuasive. In a postmodern era, therefore, the best approach may be to invite people to ‘suck it and see’ and try things out for themselves in the context of a community of other seekers. For many people these days belonging is the way into believing rather than the other way round.

So, in the end I am not sure that I would want to give this book to a postmodern seeker. I would much rather give them Archbishop Stephen Cottrell’s recent book Dear England which has the same intent and purpose as The Sanity of Belief. It might be worth reading both these books alongside each other and noting the difference in style.
 

Philip Clements-Jewery is a retired Baptist minister living in Huddersfield



 
Baptist Times, 15/10/2021
    Post     Tweet
The Martyr and the Red Kimono by Naoko Abe
'I am personally very grateful to Noako Abe for this outstanding piece of work... Through her assiduous research she has retrieved the whole of Maximilian Kolbe’s life story'
Unforgiveable? by Stephen Cherry
'Explores forgiving and forgivability in the aftermath of serious, traumatic and life-changing harm. An important book, which deserves serious study'
Friend of God: The inspiration of Abraham in an age of doubt by John C. Lennox
'An excellent, deep read, which is more than just a Bible study'
P is for Pilgrim, by Stephen Cottrell
A simply written, evangelistic book for young and old from the Archbishop of York - but very Anglican
Here is Love by Paul Beasley Murray
Paul Beasley-Murray deals with preaching love and marriage; the bulk of the book, and its richness, consists of sermons emphasising the importance of scriptural preaching at weddings
Listening for God in Torah and Creation by Rabbi Jonathan Wittenberg
Wittenberg's engaging insights to the Torah; his wisdom and humanity are of benefit to those of us who are not Jews
    Posted: 01/03/2024