Product Details
Finding God in Unexpected Places

Finding God in Unexpected Places
By Philip Yancey

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Product Description

God may not be as far away as you think.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #358209 in Books
  • Published on: 2002-01-17
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 256 pages

Editorial Reviews

About the Author
PHILIP YANCEY is a multi-award winning author and journalist, and one of the most popular religious writers of our day. His searching and refreshingly honest books, which include What's So Amazing About Grace? and The Jesus I Never Knew, have encouraged and inspired millions of people around the world.


Customer Reviews

thought provoking reflections on past times and events.4
The best conversations are those that stimulate you to think along new lines and this is what Yancey does in this book.Forget the boring official commentaries and news reports of the time and be challenged by a new insight on people and events that have shaped 'us' as a society.Looking at situations from this spiritual standpoint will excite you.God is always amazing and Yancey helps us to see that in the most dire of circumstances He was there in unexpected places. A heartening and challenging book.In the future,in both personal and world situations, will you accept the challenge to find God in unexpected places? Perhaps then a whole chain of new thinking will produce amazing results!

Something for the believer2
I had heard that Yancey was an insightful writer who would not be satisfied with glib responses to difficult questions - the type of responses that never stand up in the debate of conversation, only in the unopposed form of the printed word. However in general I was disappointed with this book. I found it superficial, bordering on embarrassing, in it's dealing in three or four pages of anecdotes with, for example, science, the Muslim faith, health, and so on. I realise it is meant to be a book of short cameos to stimulate reflection but there is simply too little substance to challenge ones thinking. Nevertheless Yancey does shine in places, for example when recounting the role of Christians in the overthrow of communism- here he seems to write with more power and conviction, in less sugary fashion. The description of the growing movement of churches in Leipzig is a powerful testimony. Overall however this is a book that will feed the believers, but not convince the searching.