Jesus in books

The Shack by William Paul Young


The Shack by William Paul Young
 Suffering, forgiveness, redemption

On a family camping trip to a lake in the American northwest, Mack, the main character in this bestselling novel, loses his youngest child, Missy. It happens when one of his other children almost drowns in a canoe accident and Missy disappears from their campsite in the confusion. An abandoned shack in the woods reveals that Missy has been abducted and murdered. Soon after that summer, Mack’s life is invaded by what he calls the great sadness, which “draped itself around Mack’s shoulders like some invisible but almost tangibly heavy quilt”.

Against that tragic background, the novel starts four years later when Mack receives a mysterious letter inviting him to meet at the shack. Mack is initially angry at the letter, but when he goes to the shack, he encounters Papa, a jolly African American woman; Jesus, a middle eastern labourer, and Sarayu, an Asian woman. The novel continues from this highly unusual portrayal of the Christian trinity to explore the themes of evil, suffering, forgiveness and redemption. Because they are earthed in a powerful human story, these themes come across in a deeply felt and transforming way.

Since its publication in 2007, The Shack has attracted equal amounts of praise and criticism from Christians (one writer accused the book of heresy in a review titled, “Stay out of the Shack”) – and has gone on to sell an estimated 7 million copies and counting. William Young, explaining the success of the book, which he originally wrote as a private story for his children, says that The Shack is “a metaphor for the places you get stuck, you get hurt, you get damaged… the thing where shame or hurt is centered.”

What readers have said about the book…

“This book was a breath of fresh air for those who find the church’s traditional emphasis of the anger, judgment and remoteness in the Father’s character has stifled any real affection or love for Him. The Shack opens up some new vistas in regard to God’s grace, love and desire to really engage with us at a meaningful level if you’re open to it.” Stel, USA Today

“In a bad place myself, and wondering why bad things happen, I was recommended this book. Through the story of Mack it brought back some perspective in my life and in my faith.” M West, Amazon

Buy your copy here


Back to the top
Bookmark this page: del.icio.us Favicon  Digg Favicon  Facebook Favicon  Reddit Favicon  StumbleUpon Favicon  Technorati Favicon

Search rejesus


Advanced Search

About this module

Jesus has probably inspired more books and biographies than anyone else in human history. But which of them are worth reading if you’re exploring the life of Jesus for the first time – or even for the second or third times?

Written by Simon Jenkins

Categories: Story, Biographical, Reviews,

Module contents

arrow Introduction

arrow Jesus of Nazareth by Pope Benedict XVI

arrow Jesus by Marcus Borg

arrow The Secret Message of Jesus by Brian McLaren

arrow The Jesus I Never Knew by Philip Yancey

arrow Simply Christian by Tom Wright

arrow Tokens of Trust by Rowan Williams

arrow The Orthodox Way by Kallistos Ware

arrow The Bible from Scratch by Simon Jenkins

arrow The Shack by William Paul Young

arrow The Last Temptation by Nikos Kazantzakis

arrow The Shadow of the Galilean by Gerd Theissen

Related modules

Categories

arrow Art & image

arrow Articles

arrow Biographical

arrow Downloads

arrow Experiential

arrow How to

arrow Interactive

arrow Interviews

arrow Poetry

arrow Reviews

arrow Seasonal

arrow Sound & vision

Latest Blog posts

Dying to die?

I blogged back in December about my father in law who is very ill. Thanks to a wonderful care home… more

TV Review: The Bible: A History - Jesus (With Gerry Adams)

Gerry Adams’ exploration of Jesus and his teaching was always going to prove controversial, but it was pleasing to see… more

Ash Wednesday - the faith race

Today is Ash Wednesday and many Christians across the world will be attending services and having ash placed on their… more

Life as we know it

Most visitors: 249 on 29/11/2009
Here now: 43
Last comment: 09/03 at 04:21 pm
Total comments: 297

Newsletter

Sign up to keep up to date.

prayer christian auschwitz faith artist timeline text message interaction foodball simon taylor poor quotable pdf christmas office photo amen veronica slum interview jerusalem global warming forgiveness photographer poverty sayings bishop clouds animation quiz mother teresa celtic war course workplace friar golf happiness nun abolitionist mark exercise nature plants poet cross astrophysicist saint freedom theology
© copyright
rejesus 2002 to 2010
Powered by ExpressionEngine
Design by Embody