Surprised by Hope - by N T Wright (Hardcover)
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2 May, 2024
Portal to the Upside-Down
Plato depicted a brilliant allegory of a man who lived in a cave all his life. Eventually, this man leaves the cave to find that there is a whole world outside, and it’s full of light and warmth and trees and life. In “Surprised By Hope,” theologian NT Wright poses the question: what if this man (and all of us) are still living in a cave? A cave that is much bigger and filled with a lot of goodness and novelty to keep us busy, but that we’re still living with Matrix-caliber blinders that prevent us from realizing we’re in a cave? Then, with the finesse of an early-Shyamalan script, Wright blows the doors off the hinges of western Christianity by making the compelling argument that the New Testament has clearly affirmed that we’re all living in Plato’s Cave, and the western world has done a bang-up job of misconstruing eternity and the purpose of Christ’s resurrection. Prepare yourself for the irony, because Wright argues that the culprit for this is the pervasiveness of… Platonic gnosticism! Plato was so close to “being right” that it was more damaging than if he’d been completely wrong: western Christians have accepted a theology that’s 90% accurate, which might make for an “A” in academic circles, but the 10% we’ve gotten wrong has deeply damaged the world. “Life after death is a serious distraction,” Wright says, admonishing Christians for being wrapped up in “life after life” so badly that we’ve failed to recognize what the Scriptures say about life after life after life. Or, if you’re one of my contemporaries who has a Netflix subscription: you and I are living in the Upside-Down, and in the absence of Demogorgons, we’ve been tricked into believing we live in the true dimension. Every Christian ought to read “Surprised By Hope: Rethinking Heaven, the Resurrection, and the Mission of the Church,” sure. But more importantly, every Jew, atheist, and anyone who thinks of Christianity as a “moron’s religion” should read it. In fact, anyone interested in religion at all should read this, but for those who find religion boring and/or not worth thinking about, this book is especially for you.