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Why Being Yourself Is a Bad Idea: And Other Countercultural Notions

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Building on the success of books offering key concepts in digestible form, Graham Tomlin writes for millennials and emerging adults who are seeking to make sense of life. Each of the ten chapters focuses on a common human experience - WONDER, LOVE, SUFFERING, SACRIFICE, SOUL, FREEDOM, TOGETHERNESS, CONNECTION, CHANGE, JOY - revealing how reflection on that experience points towards the God revealed in Christ. This is not a book of apologetics in the sense that it is arguing for the truth of Christianity; instead it shows how Christianity makes sense of our experience in a remarkably coherent way, opening up a much bigger and more exciting world than secular visions, or even other religious interpretations. It is written in a deliberately non-academic and popular style, though drawing on theological resources from the past.

192 pages, Paperback

Published September 17, 2020

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About the author

Graham Tomlin

39 books12 followers
Graham Tomlin (Ph.D., Exeter University) is dean of St. Mellitus College, London. He taught on Martin Luther and the Reformation in the theology faculty of the University of Oxford for eight years. He is the author, among many other publications, of The Power of the Cross: Theology and the Death of Christ in Paul, Luther and Pascal and Luther and His World.

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
33 reviews
March 17, 2023
Helpful but he leaves some trains of thought unexplored. You definitely have to push through certain parts but well worth it
Profile Image for Amy Crouch.
23 reviews3 followers
January 30, 2025
A thoughtful little book on stepping into the countercultural vision of Christianity.
194 reviews3 followers
December 13, 2022
This is a book that advocates a Christian approach to life, as against an individualist one which is taken to comprise the gospel of self-fulfilment and its corollary consumerism, of things, experiences and relationships. So in that respect, it was refreshing.

However, there were at least two enormous inferential leaps: one, a blithe acceptance of the First Cause argument for a creator of the universe, the other an argument from the human need for love to the conclusion that love is the driving force of the universe, which therefore requires a God who is love.

This theological flavour made a light-looking book a surprisingly slow read, though I enjoyed the feeling of getting into a very different emotional world.
Profile Image for Josh Carter.
54 reviews9 followers
February 15, 2021
If you are someone who is curious about the Christian faith or you are someone who is surprised that people still believe in this stuff then you should give this a read...
After years of being a Christian myself and reading loads of books on faith; this is one of the best at clearly outlining, defining, explaining and describing what it really means to follow the God-Man Jesus...
Give it a read...
Profile Image for Mike Beranek.
82 reviews
May 13, 2021
Good strong voice, hammering away at a very vital point about the cult of self today. I don't know how to say but I found it a bit 'shouty' in places. It seems a bit like addressing the proverbial converted.
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