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272 pages, Paperback
Published June 24, 2025
"God is not just a being. God does not just happen to be good. God is not just occasionally beautiful. No, God is Goodness, Being, and Beauty itself. God is the absolute, objective, eternal, unchanging entity who grounds the deeper qualities of reality." – page 93
Jonathan Lyonhart admits that The Journey of God could just as easily have been titled The Journey of Jonathan. It reads as a spiritual memoir of one man's journey from exotic places like Canada to equally exotic places like Lincoln, Illinois, with other exotic places peppered in here and there. Along the way, as we're introduced to Jonathan, we also meet the God he loves, the Savior who . . . well . . . saved him, and the church with whom he often wrestles, with grace and grit.
In the introduction, Lyonhart writes, "My goal as a pastor and now a professor has always been to say things my younger Vancouver self might actually have bothered to listen to . . . I didn't write it for you; I wrote it for my younger self. But you are more than welcome to listen in." The invitation to eavesdrop is well worth accepting—because if you do, you'll find glimpses of your own story and maybe even hear the voice of your Creator in the background.
Early in the book, Lyonhart draws a comparison between The Journey of God and C. S. Lewis' Mere Christianity. Now, this isn't like when I claim my sermons are similar to Tim Keller's (with just a touch more whimsy)—it's actually a fair comparison! Both books aim to articulate the heart of the Christian faith within the context of their time. Lyonhart isn't trying to replace Lewis' timeless classic, and that's exactly the point. This book isn't timeless—it's timely. It's rooted in the faith questions and cultural tensions of right now, and that's where its strength lies.
As I read, I kept thinking of people I'd like to give this book to—the same people I might have handed Mere Christianity to, if only its language and cultural references felt more current. The Journey of God speaks into today's world with fresh clarity, and I suspect I'll be buying more than a few copies to pass along.
The author comes through loud and clear on every page—even in the footnotes. Don't skip them. It's not that they add more information; they add more Jonathan. His wit, playfulness, and occasional absurdity shine through. In another timeline, I'm convinced he would've been a writer for Monty Python's Flying Circus. But this timeline is, thankfully, something completely different.
"So why is God called Father?!!?! I wrestled with that question for years. Then something occurred to me: Perhaps God came to us as a Father because he knew there would be such a lack of them. Perhaps God sought to fill the void in so many of our lives, sought to come as the parent you never had." – page 104