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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Freedom from
Having to Choose Between Science and
Unconditional Belief
Whittier, CA - God is a Symbol of
Something True by Jack Call
(O-Books) is a fresh and insightful look at
what constitutes true religion for people
who were raised as Christians but who no
longer believe; people who still maintain a
soft spot for Christianity and care about
meaningfulness and morality and want to make
sense of religious concepts.
Jack Call has been teaching
introductory philosophy to students in
southern California for many years. He has
been recognized as an outstanding educator
in Who’s Who Among America’s Teachers, and
his essays have been published numerous
times. A clergyman in a psychedelic church
in his earlier years, which provided the
theme of his two previous books, here is a
man who has ‘walked the talk’ - one of many
reasons why people want to hear what Jack
Call has to say.
The central claim of Call’s book is that
‘everything is fundamentally all right,’ in
spite (or because) of the fact that there
are important things that one cares about
deeply over which one has no control. This
is a way of understanding religion that
rejects the false predicament of having to
choose between believing in a literal
creator God or a blind, indifferent
universe. This amazingly heartfelt book
allows the reader to objectively think
through many controversial claims, such as,
how the Biblical account of God’s
personality is a symbol of the personal
significance, for each of us, of the ways in
which we are helpless and yet safe; how we
should hope that life is just as fresh and
astonishing at the end as at the beginning;
that we should not hope to be resurrected on
Judgment Day, and how the meaningfulness of
life depends on how we control some
important issues and accept we have no
control of others. Probably the most
important controversial claim is that while
we are in control of whether or not we act
morally, we are not in control of our own
salvation. Salvation being the realization
that everything really is fundamentally all
right!
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TIP SHEET:
Dale Salwak, Ph.D., author of
Teaching Life: Letters from a Life in
Literature (2008), Wonders of Solitude, Anne
Tyler as Novelist, Living with a Writer,
Faith in the Family: “With its firmness
of thought and modesty of tone, God is a
Symbol of Something True is a captivating
meditation on some of the dilemmas of the
modern mind and spirit. If this is any
indication of how the author seeks to
nourish and stimulate the thoughts of his
students in the classroom, then they are
fortunate indeed. I came away from it both
comforted and enlightened.”
Janice Daurio, Ph.D., author of Is
It Good To Be Bad? Immoralism in Narnia in
The Chronicles of Narnia and Philosophy:
“Others have tried and failed to do what
Jack Call succeeds in doing in this book…to
suggest thought-provoking answers to the
most important of life’s questions, in a way
accessible and appealing to those who
describe themselves as nonreligious, as well
as those who consider themselves religious.
Because of the compelling objections he
gives to the standard version of
Christianity, this book is just as …
valuable to thoughtful committed Christians
as it is to the nonreligious. I don’t think
there has been a better stimulus to my own
thinking recently than this book. Reading it
provides meaningful joy.”
Kurt Smith, Ph.D., author of
Matter Matters: “In God is a Symbol of
Something True, Jack Call takes the
proverbial baton from Alan Watts and
argues…how religion, or “true religion” as
he calls it, must be understood as that
which underwrites the very possibility of
meaning…True religion, Call argues, arises
from something akin to reverence, the
insight that there are incomprehensible
forces at work beyond one’s control…Call
looks carefully at several important
philosophical problems-for example, the
mind-body problem, free will and
determinism, and personal identity – showing
how true religion has dealt with each.
Although perfect for the general reader
(which is why I make the connection to the
great Alan Watts), Call’s book is a
scholarly work…No doubt, whether novice or
expert, readers will enjoy this insightful
and clearly written book!” |