The Shack, by Aleathea Dupree Christian Book Reviews And Information

Shop Now At Amazon Buy Christian Music On iTunes Buy Music Now At FamilyChristian.com Buy Christian Books and Music Online Shop Now At Amazon Buy Christian Music On iTunes Purchase Christian Books And Music Buy Christian Music On iTunes Shop Now At Amazon Buy Christian Books and Music Online Buy Music Now At FamilyChristian.com

ADVERTISEMENT

The Shack
by Aleathea Dupree | Genre: Fiction
Release Date: May 2007
 

Mackenzie Allen Philips' youngest daughter, Missy, has been abducted during a family vacation and evidence that she may have been brutally murdered is found in an abandoned shack deep in the Oregon wilderness. Four years later in the midst of his "Great Sadness,"Mack receives a suspicious note, apparently from God, inviting him back to that shack for a weekend. Against his better judgment he arrives at the shack on a wintry afternoon and walks back into his darkest nightmare. What he finds there will change Mack's world forever. In a world where religion seems to grow increasingly irrelevant "The Shack"wrestles with the timeless question, "Where is God in a world so filled with unspeakable pain?"The answers Mack gets will astound you and perhaps transform you as much as it did him. You'll want everyone you know to read this book!

Pages: 256
Format: Paperback
EAN/ISBN: 9780964729230
Publisher: Windblown Media

+ Entry lasted edited by NRTeamAdmin on 04.25.08

NRTeam Reviews (23)
Average NRTeam Rating: Rated 0 Stars
Add Your Review    Join The NRTeam
Sort Reviews By: Most Helpful | Most Recent
Showing reviews 1 through 10 of 23:  

Different.... | Posted March 16, 2009
First of all, I actually found the Shack to be depressing and boring. I couldn’t wait to finish reading it so I could end my agony! lol

There were things that I enjoyed in the Shack but mostly I found it all a bit odd. I wanted to read this book to see what all the hype was about and I am glad that I did :) I noticed that there were a couple of cuss words in this book and I wouldn’t recommend the Shack to young readers.

I do like allegorical books but I didn’t enjoy this one as much as some others… If you are looking for more books that have allegory in it then I would suggest you read Pilgrim’s Progress, The Kingdom Series, and Hinds’ Feet on High Places.

Comments (0)Add Comment | Is This Review Helpful? Yes | No
teague (9)
Rated 4.5 Stars

Thought-Provoking and Real | Posted July 02, 2009
There have been a number of books that have had the world talking. Books like ‘Pilgrim’s Progress’, ‘The Purpose Driven Life and ‘The Chronicles of Narnia’ comes to mind. The Bible has already accomplished this for centuries. Another book that comes to mind is ‘The Shack’ by William P. Young. Many an enthusiastic (reading) audience has likened this book to the new generation’s ‘Pilgrim’s Progress’ – a statement with which I must agree.

Though not as ‘fantasy’-based as Bunyan’s novel, (and with fantasy, I refer to completely imaginative from start to end) ‘The Shack’ remains spell bounding and gripping. The third person point of view (which tells Mack’s story) creates an atmosphere of sitting in on a conversation where Mack is speaking a foreign language and his friend is translating (with a few random, personal inserts here and there). Interesting, well- (and enthusiastically-) told as well as realistic enough in its inventive imaginativeness (a mouth full, but yes, this is all possible in one book).

The story takes us on a journey with Mark – a man with a painful past and an even more tormenting future – when he receives a note from God in his mailbox to meet him in the shack in which his daughter was murdered. In the weekend that follows, Mack discovers God (or rather, God reveals Himself to Mack), the Trinity and has the opportunity to discuss forgiveness, grace, love and other concepts that affect God’s children with God (the Father), Jesus and the Spirit.

Many people has noted this book to be sacrilegious and blasphemous in some instances, but, remembering that this is only Young’s interpretation of certain spiritual concepts to explain pain to his children and close friends, we, as readers, can draw some deep truths and lessons from the book, even if we only learn to have our beliefs challenged, but still remain standing firmly in the truths of God’s Word.

I do not agree with some of the statements made in ‘The Shack’, but it has taught me to measure all that I read according to God’s Word and create definite lines according to which I believe and to which I can return for reference when my beliefs are challenged. Being able to be flexible and open (but allowing this to cause growth in your spiritual walk and not teach you ungodly concepts) is and aspect of freedom of reading (in comparison to freedom of speech, or in this case, writing).

I enjoyed this book. It may, though, not appeal to the more conservative reader. If you decide to read this book, read it once as a story, then read it again to understand it completely and finally read it a third time in order to study, research and compare its statements to Biblical truths. It is relatively easy reading, continually compelling and heartfelt in its honesty to all the questions asked. All these aspects make this a brilliant book to read.

Happy reading!








Comments (1)Add Comment | Is This Review Helpful? Yes | No

BREAKING NEW FRONTIERS | Posted September 13, 2010
Amazing read! I think this book needs rereading a few times due to the fact that it has so many truths interwoven into the story line. A very deep read - controversial but definitely God breathed. If you havent heard of this book...where have you been?!

Comments (0)Add Comment | Is This Review Helpful? Yes | No

BREAKING NEW FRONTIERS | Posted September 13, 2010
Amazing read! I think this book needs rereading a few times due to the fact that it has so many truths interwoven into the story line. A very deep read - controversial but definitely God breathed. If you havent heard of this book...where have you been?!

Comments (2)Add Comment | Is This Review Helpful? Yes | No
SJ1977 (3)
Rated 0 Stars

A Sham | Posted May 07, 2010
This book is an AWFUL, scary book. Anyone who says it is a Christian book is mistaken. I am afraid that many cannot see the evil that is in this book and reviewer comparisons to Pilgrim's Progress make me VERY disturbed.

Comments (0)Add Comment | Is This Review Helpful? Yes | No

Performance vs. Grace | Posted February 02, 2009
The Shack is story. The Author tells you it is a story. The entire book is a combination of stories and life experiences. The author plainly tells you it started out as a story for his kids. “Young” is not trying to teach you anything. He is trying to share with you a story. So there are embellishments to make the story work. Just like any other “fiction” book. I have read some reviews that want to discredit the book as heresy because “God” presents himself as a woman. After all God is a man right? After all the bible does say that “God is spirit, neither male or female”. Yet God saw fit to reveal himself in Jesus as well as a dove. Oh and not to mention a burning bush, a pillar of fire at night and a cloud in the day. But hay it’s heresy to think God would show himself as a woman.

We live in a world today that is pretty much void of grace. Yes we speak about it like it’s a good luck charm. We say we live in it, yet we still perform to try and win God’s Love. How quickly we are to justify ourselves for our hollow and void performance in front of our God. How quick we are to justify that while Jesus died for my sins it really was not enough despite what he said. I have to add my little bit into it to make my acceptance to God complete. How quick we are to tell God how entitled we are to whatever we think we should get. Welcome to the world of “POP Religion”. Welcome to “The Shack”, the very center of our pain.

The Shack very quickly address’s POP Religion and puts it up on center stage. It does it in an amazing way and quickly reveals where you are at with regards to the performance vs. grace equation. And then God shows up. For all that this story say’s, one thing is for certain it takes you on an incredible journey. A journey of grace. How much does God love you? When Mack gets judged by the spirit of God, I had to sit down and repent before a “Most High God”. I preach against the “entitlement” philosophy all the time and yet it still hit me like a Rocky Balboa punch. When you recognize the grace weaved throughout the story you are left questioning not how much God loves you but have you let God love you? Then the story has achieved its goal. God loved us long before we loved him. Are we telling God how to love us or are we on God’s terms letting him love us? Not what can you give us, but how do we receive your gift of grace. You will walk away from this story asking that question. That’s a good question to be asking.


Comments (0)Add Comment | Is This Review Helpful? Yes | No

"The Shack" is amazing! | Posted December 17, 2008
This book by William Paul Young is absolutely AMAZING! Its seriously life changing. It takes you on a journey through one man's own struggle with finding his relationship with Christ again after the brutal murder of his youngest daughter, and it makes you pause and reflect on your own walk with Christ. This book is so worth reading!

Comments (0)Add Comment | Is This Review Helpful? Yes | No

The Shack | Posted November 05, 2010
I read this book almost a year ago. It really opened my eyes. I am going to be honest, sometimes it was a little boring, and it seems like the chapters are never going to end. I think you need to read it more than once to get a better understanding of it. Definitely worth reading.

Comments (0)Add Comment | Is This Review Helpful? Yes | No

The Shack | Posted February 04, 2009
I absolutely loved this book! It challenges your theology and the way you view God. I loved the ideas and questions it presented and although I'm not sure that I agree with all of it, I still recommend this book to all Christians. Does anyone else notice that the book id number is 666, a bit stange, huh? Just kidding ;)

Comments (0)Add Comment | Is This Review Helpful? Yes | No

What a Book! | Posted June 06, 2008
I don't even know were to begin with this book. When I first read it I thought it be the same as all the other books I've read. But when I continued to read it I realized this is a book that is different...very different from all the other books I have read over the past years. This book has really stunned me and it gets me thinking. Most of it went right over my head but the jist of it I wondered about. This is NOT a book for little kids I tell you that. Its more for adults. Adults that have a LOT of faith and are very into God. If you are that person i suggest you read this book. Its nothing to sneer or scowl at. It's a book that really gets you thinking. Read this book.

Comments (0)Add Comment | Is This Review Helpful? Yes | No

Important Book | Posted May 06, 2014
I'm always surprised that discussion of this book continues to surface.  I read the book many years ago for the first time.  The first time I read it I was unimpressed.  For some reason, a year or 2 later I picked it back up and was completely overtaken by the content.  Shortly after this second reading I had a chance to go hear William Paul Young.  As it turned out I was in a "meet and greet" with about 20 other people.  Talking to him was like talking to a dear uncle or friend.  He was so genuine.  He told the story of how The Shack came to be.  It was never meant to be a theological book of any kind.  From abuse he had suffered early in his life, he simply sat down and wrote a "story" to help him better deal with the pain of his past as he worked through the healing process.  This book was never meant to be published.  He had the first copies simply printed like a manuscript for family memeber with whom he wanted to share his journey.  From there, copies were shared with friends and extended family and the rest is history.  

Since hearing William Paul Young speak, I feel a bit protective of him. :)  He chuckles at the idea that he is criticized in theological circles and he says there is zero theology in this except what an individual might make of it.  The fact that people have been so critical of him seems silly.  For all of the grief he has gotten, I am very glad he has made money.  He is a man, just like any other simple man, working through issues from his past.  Good for him.


Comments (0)Add Comment | Is This Review Helpful? Yes | No
NRTeam Review RSS Feed
Showing reviews 1 through 10 of 23:  

Christian Music, Facebook Christian Music, Twitter Christian Music, Google Christian Music, YouTube Christian Music, Instagram

ADVERTISEMENT
S
TRENDING NRT NEWS: Staff Voices: A Journey Through Sound | Sarah Reeves Essentials | Narnia Coming To Life

Christian Music

©2024 NewReleaseToday
A Division Of NRT Media Inc.

 

Secure
CHRISTIAN MUSIC
Discover New Artists
New This Week
Coming Soon
Playlists
Free Music
Album Reviews

NEWS
New Music
Movies / Media
Events
Tours
General

PODCASTS
NRT Now Podcast
NRT Podcast Network

VIDEOS
Music Videos
Exclusives

EXCLUSIVES
Articles
Devotionals
Interviews
Concert Reviews
We Love Awards

MORE INFO
RSS
Privacy Policy
Terms of Use
Advertising
Staff
New Music Email
Contact

RESOURCES
Music Studies
Artist Training

CONNECT
Facebook
Twitter
Instagram
YouTube