What if creation itself is a wound? What if God is not the perfect being beyond suffering, but a trembling presence within it?
In Fractured Theology, Ryan Lamb offers a daring reimagining of Christian thought. Drawing from Hegelian dialectics, mystical traditions, biblical rupture, and theopoetic insight, this book explores a vision of God not as complete, but becoming-a God who sins by creating, who repents through history, and who suffers in order to love.
Through a series of meditative, interconnected chapters, Lamb reframes sin as the metaphysical engine of Spirit, Christ as the site of divine contradiction, and salvation not as escape from the world, but as participation in its sacred fracture. This is theology for a world on the edge-honest, raw, and radiant with paradox.
Perfect for readers drawn to radical theology, philosophical mysticism, or spiritual thought that refuses false certainties, Fractured Theology invites us to dwell in the wound-and discover that even there, God is speaking.