Oh dear. I’m not entire sure where to start with this one. I genuinely dislike religion, but I don’t begrudge others their beliefs. You do you, boo. Just keep it to yourself. I have studied human history for quite some time, and so many human conflicts are based on religions, so yeah, I’m not a fan.
Somebody gave me this book, and I admit I was intrigued because these people are so young, and many studies have shown that their particular generation has rejected religion. I was sincerely hoping there would be some specific biblical interactions that interacted with their lives, and that didn’t really happen. There was one instance where Michael was able to confront his own god-fearing father with quotes from the bible, but otherwise this book is about how these two both grew up in church-going families. There was consistent bible reading throughout their entire lives, and that inspired them to devote themselves to the church. Clearly, the bible was a highly motivational text for them, but again, there weren’t specific examples…which I guess is what I was hoping for. Like somewhere a specific quote was read and it turned on the proverbial lightbulb.
Instead, they gave us insight into their lives. It was more biographical than it was full of biblical insight. I know that they guard their brunch routine like I guard my reading time, which is not abnormal…lots of people enjoy brunch. I know what their childhoods were like, I know they want to adopt their kids…I know they enjoy reading (the bible) quietly in a variety of places. I know an awful lot about this couple, but I don’t know how the bible is “different” than I thought it was. I was not persuaded.
So, while I was disappointed in this book, it does make me reflect on my own reading. I read hundreds of books a year from a wide variety of genres, yet I haven’t read the bible since I was a kid (I think I was eight when I started…and maybe fourteen when I finally finished). My family is not religious, we are, however, insanely academic. I personally rejected the bible simply because it feels so farcical. As a teacher, I battled deeply religious parents over reading Harry Potter because of the witchcraft, yet the bible includes stories of a man parting a sea and a burning bush speaking. That sounds a lot like “witchcraft” to me. Regardless, I have decided that I need to give that particular tome a fresh read with a 45-year-old mind. This process will likely take quite some time and a significant number of notebooks, but I’m gonna do it.
I’ll keep you all posted.