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Hardcover Letters to a Young Doubter Book

ISBN: 0664229298

ISBN13: 9780664229290

Letters to a Young Doubter

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Book Overview

In Letters to a Young Poet , the poet Rainer Maria Rilke advises to "be patient towards all that is unsolved in your heart and to try to love the questions themselves," for gradually, "you will live... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Great Experience

I recently used this book in an adult book study for my church: It was fantastic. It is easy to read which meant that individuals whose time to read is fairly constricted were able to complete the assignments. The topics covered are vast and prompted much discussion about the biblical story, culture, and our experience in the world. Would highly recommend for any individual or group who is looking for an exciting and stimulating book to study.

Concise and makes one think

A short book but one that caused me to stop and think what I believe and what I want with my life. Coffin puts forth hard questions: Who tells you who you are? What would it be like to have God tell us who we are? Do you think God is too hard to believe in, or too good to believe in? Does religion bring out the worst as well as the best in people? Throughout the book, he asks the reader to question is a better life lived with faith or without forcing the reader to look within.

A Great Man's Last Book

On April 12th of this year we lost a great man, Rev. William Sloane Coffin, Jr. Of all his writings I want to recommend for your reading edification a small but wise volume, written shortly before the author's death at 82, Letters to a Young Doubter. The work was inspired by Rainer Maria Rilke's Letters to a Young Poet, who in his July 16, 1903 letter wrote these famous and wise words of encouragement to the young aspiring poet, Franz Xavier Kappus: "... have patience with everything unresolved in your heart and to try to love the questions themselves . . . Don't search for the answers, which could not be given to you now, because you would not be able to live them . . . Live the questions now . . . , someday far in the future, you will gradually, without even noticing it, live your way into the answers." Coffin was also encouraged by Tolstoy who believed that certain questions are put to humanity "not so much that we should answer them, but that we should spend a lifetime wrestling with them." For he believed that faith is no substitute for thinking, but faith makes good thinking possible. In several ways Rev. Coffin shares the company of people like Dietrich Bonhoefer, Francis of Assisi and those who came from wealthy, comfortable and established families only to find their calling in leaving a life of ease to enter the service of Christ. Impossible to pigeon hole, this sagacious man went from being a CIA Agent to Chaplin of Yale University, to President of SANE/Freeze (now Peace Action), and to Senior Minister at Riverside Church, NYC, where he hosted notables like Martin Luther King, Jr, Desmond Tutu and Nelson Mandela. If you have never heard of him, surely you have heard one of his most famous aphorism, "Remember young people even if you win the rat race, you are still a rat." In this light but thought-provoking short work, Coffin, author of the Theological Booksellers' 2004 Book of the Year Credo, exchanges an academic year-long series of letters with a fictional young college student named Tom (after the Bible's Doubting Thomas?) who struggles with issues of his faith, complexities of the modern world, sin, problems with his personal life, values, God's love and God's Power. It is an easy read offering small delicacies that you need to savor slowly. The book is full of wit and witticism that will make you stop to think and perhaps wish Coffin went deeper into each topic. But we are left with that task to ponder and even struggle with applying his words to our life, as when he writes to Tom and says: "There are two ways of getting rich. One is to have lots of money, the other is to have few needs" and "If you are religious, remember that doctrines are only signposts; love alone is the hitching post.". If you are like most and have doubts, I recommend this book. Coffin's sense of humor and affection allow him to keep the gravest considerations in perspective. How else can one believe that doubt moves us forward not back

Letters To A Young Doubter

Definitely not just for a young doubter, this book addresses several challanges to the spiritual journey. I find William Sloan Coffin's writing straight-forward and well thought out. This book is very "readable." Approaching it a letter at a time gives one a chance to digest the thoughts and ponder the topic.

Passionate Preacher shares simple --yet profound wisdom

From experiences as Chaplain-Relig Prof at YALE; Freedom-Rider marching with MLK Jr; distinguished service in 1980's as Pastor of Riverside Church in NYC; president of SANE/FREEZE; Speaker on issues as, World Hunger, Minority Rights; Justice and Peace or Freedom. Who other than William Sloane Coffin has gained enough expertise sufficient to quell Doubters of any Age? While serving as Pastoral Chaplain in Georgia Diagnostic Center, alongside Drug-Alcohol Rehab groups and in Worship Services, I discovered in reading his sermons, his dramatic passionate plus a truthful direct approach, addressed needs of prison inmates. I soaked-up Coffin's first writing in "The Courage To Love, also in A PASSION FOR THE POSSIBLE. They guided me two ways: to meet complex needs of addicted inmates, but also to give me wee bites of material in carving out personal growth to write and deliver sermons based upon Homosexuality, To Face both Suffering and Death, Being Open to Change, Seeking Justice for Minorities! The same issues are addressed in "Letters To A YOUNG DOUBTER. W. S. Coffin's simple language yet profound, relaxed, laid-back style is also reasonable, thoughtful, keenly passionate, even at times humorously questioning the young Tom. Upon hearing W S Coffin preach sermons at the Montreat Services in mid-1980's I was personally impressed by his singing Bass in Elaine Brown's Choir, seated next to me! From deeper personal reflection, I found his love and respect for beauty in music alongside personality, when he questioned me about "that young lady who was singing Soprano part in the Vivaldi Duet." My only anwer could be, "She happens to be my Wife!" That gave new perspective in hearing his mellifluous bass voice, both in singing and prophetic preaching. I admit never feeling comfortable as others, in calling him "Bill" Coffin! In speaking with Davis Perkins, his Publisher: "I never interviewed another Author with his many interests or keen imagination. Others whom he had published were Walter Brueggemann and Elie Wesel! Added to the simple beauty & profound truths illuminated in this brief treasure, I am blessed by his Easter Sermon from Riverside Church, "Like Him We Rise!" I commend him, adding my prayers for his continued endurance to not "being the victim" from his heart problems in California. Respectfully...Chaplain Fred W Hood
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