About this item
Highlights
- Most of us have a sense that there may be more out there than only what we can see or touch--not necessarily a God but something.
- About the Author: Luke Cawley is the director of Chrysolis, a non-profit which helps churches and organizations develop innovative projects that engage with the people and culture around them.
- 144 Pages
- Religion + Beliefs, Christian Life
Description
About the Book
Shows how our sense that there's something more to life points to Jesus.
Book Synopsis
Most of us have a sense that there may be more out there than only what we can see or touch--not necessarily a God but something. You could call this intuition "somethingism." Some who believe this would also say they are "spiritual but not religious."
This book offers those with this sense of belief in "something" the opportunity to begin to explore faith. Imaginative and thoughtful chapters consider the possibility that the sense of something out there correlates to a someone who not only exists but can be encountered and known in the person of Jesus.
A fresh approach to evangelism that particularly resonates with younger generations, this book is great to read individually, with a friend, or over four sessions in a group. There are questions to fuel reflection and discussion.
About the Author
Luke Cawley is the director of Chrysolis, a non-profit which helps churches and organizations develop innovative projects that engage with the people and culture around them. He has written or coedited several books, including Campus Lights: Students Living and Speaking for Jesus Around the World (Muddy Pearl, 2019), a journalistic account of God's work in universities across the globe, and The Myth of the Non-Christian: Engaging Atheists, Nominal Christians and the Spiritual but Not Religious (IVP, 2016) -- a practical guidebook to contextualised apologetics. Luke also serves on the leadership team of a growing local church in the south-west of England.