bermensch: Contending Nietzsche is S. C. Sayles's penetrating theological and philosophical engagement with the thought of Friedrich Nietzsche-the modern prophet of unbelief. In this work, Sayles meets Nietzsche on his own ground, wielding his adversary's aphoristic style, rhythm, and intensity, yet turning every blade back toward the throne of the Logos. Nietzsche declared that "God is dead." Sayles replies, with Scripture and the logic of the Logos, "Christ is risen." Through a sequence of rigorous, devastating analyses, bermensch dismantles Nietzsche's most enduring doctrines-the death of God, the slave and master morality, the will to power, the bermensch, and the eternal recurrence-showing each to be self-defeating when tested by the light of divine revelation and the coherence of Reformed theology. Where Nietzsche offers the abyss, Sayles reveals the architecture of meaning: The Death of God unravels into nihilism; only in the providence of God can reason and morality survive.Slave and Master Morality collapses before the Cross, where humility becomes power and power is transfigured by grace.The Will to Power destroys itself; the true will is the sovereign will of God, the fountain of all purpose.The bermensch is unmasked as a false Christ before the glory of the true God-Man, Jesus Christ.Eternal Recurrence dissolves in despair; the resurrection proclaims a new creation where time has direction, not repetition.Throughout, Sayles integrates his Logos-centred metaphysic-the doctrine that all reality is informational (IΔF), authored and sustained by the Word of God. The Second Shamay, the created realm of the soul, becomes the field in which divine meaning and human perception meet. The Hieroglyphic Stream of Conscious Perception (HSCP) reveals that every thought, symbol, and moral intuition is inscribed within the informational order of the Logos. Against Nietzsche's chaos of power and chance, Sayles sets a cosmos of authored order and relational coherence. Drawing from John Calvin, Cornelius Van Til, Francis Schaeffer, and Carl F. H. Henry, bermensch unites theology, metaphysics, and cultural critique in one sustained act of witness. Each refutation is not merely polemic but doxology-truth spoken before the face of God. In the final chapter, "Ecce Homo - Behold the Man," Sayles turns Nietzsche's own title against him. Pilate's words become prophecy: the true bermensch is Christ Himself, crowned with thorns yet sovereign over all creation. The book concludes not in despair but in worship: "That at the name of Jesus every knee should bow... and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord." - Philippians 2:10-11 bermensch stands as both theological refutation and devotional act-a manifesto of Veritas Contra Mundum, truth against the world.
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