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Paperback Meeting the Living God: (Fourth Edition) Book

ISBN: 0809195925

ISBN13: 9780809195923

Meeting the Living God: (Fourth Edition)

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Book Overview

If there is in fact no God--no Entity outside our minds to validate the idea even atheists have of God--then all theology, all belief, all religion is a delusion. Whichever conclusion you've come to, did it ever occur to you that you might be wrong? What validates opinions? What intrusions from propaganda systems skew our ideas of the value of anything--especially values that defy dollar signs, like love, honor, soul, hope, God? Faith in God (or anything...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

I Wish They Taught This Book in My CCD Class

I am a profoundly questioning Catholic with a fair number of issues with the Church. For many years, those issues completely got in the way of my relationship with God. I was introduced to this book because I read an article Fr. O'Malley wrote more than fifteen years ago. I was so moved by the article, I wrote Fr. O'Malley a letter. In his reply, among many other thoughts, he suggested I get a copy of Meeting the Living God from the library and give it a try. Unlike a previous reviewer's experience, for me this book was an enormous help in regaining my relationship with God. During the time I worked through this book, I wrote reams in response to the questions at the end of each chapter. I mailed every one of those pages off to Fr. O'Malley. I never once had him reject any of my concerns and he always responded in ways that I felt were authentic and honest. We had great conversations in those letters. Sometimes I agreed with him and sometimes we agreed to disagree. I still have huge issues with the Catholic hierarchy and the positions the Church takes in the modern world. However, I also have a thriving relationship with God and the courage to contine seeking. I also felt the book was wonderfully organized. For me, the way Fr. O'Malley worked deeper in each chapter made perfect sense. I felt that the suject matter flowed smoothly from one chapter to another. In particular, the questions at the end of each chapter rely on the thinking you've done in previous chapters. I came to this book as an adult. I wish that I'd been introduced to the book as a teenager. I would still have all the same problems with the Church, but I wouldn't have ignored God, my Friend, for all those years.

Good.

A good and definetly entertaining read. However, as a priest of the Catholic Faith, O'Malley fails to recognize his own bias but does bring up numerous interesting points.

may I recommend this book

I had the pleasure to meet the author and his students, they're fine people______a beautiful refection of the book itself, I recommend this book.

The Man and his Book

Inseperable from the book Fr. O'Malley is a teacher to those who seek the most basic questions of ethics. As Kant realizes that morality comes from a sense of duty--so Fr. O'Malley teaches his students and readers what it means to be human. This book connects, compares, and touches upon the essential subjects of morality and God. A great read for anyone who questions. As a friend and former student I can say that here is a man analogous to his words. Meet him and his thoughts, in "Meeting the Living God."

This is a book that challenges you in certain ways.

Back in the mid-70's, I was a high-school student of Father O'Malley. He used his "Meeting the Living God" in a theology course he taught for seniors, so it is hard, if not impossible, for me to separate the book and the person. I'd like to say this, though: One Friday or Saturday night way back then, relaxing on a cool night in a parked car with two or three buddies, we were not talking about the upcoming big game or trying to get into a bar without IDs. Of all things, we were talking about Father O'Malley and his book. One basic idea in both the class and the book was for the student/reader to realize what a Christian is and to act on that by kind of lighting a fire under one's ....arse. At one point in that parked car of twenty years or so ago, a buddy, talking about Father, blurted out (a little too emotionally), "He's a living god." Father O'Malley would balk at that, but my friend was probably talking more about himself and whatever changes he was going through. Both the course and the book really did get many of us past the point of thinking about certain things and into the realm of acting. In this way, and through my "Meeting the Living God" experience of the book and the course, I felt very similar to my feelings about Soren Kierkegaard's "Concluding Unscientific Postscript." In both books, the authors are asking and trying to find out the answer to this question: "What do I have to do to become a Christian"?
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