Why do the hardest parts of Christianity make it true?
God dies on Friday and lives on Sunday. We find freedom through slavery. Joy emerges from suffering. The last become first. We die to live.
These aren't contradictions to be solved-they're the tensions that hold up the cathedral of faith.
In The Both/And God, theologian Arthur A. Tiger explores fifteen paradoxes that offend our logic but sustain our faith. Drawing from Scripture, church history, and decades of theological research, Tiger shows why Christianity's "impossibilities" aren't bugs but features-not weaknesses to overcome but the very source of its power.
This book is for:
Those struggling with Christianity's apparent contradictionsBelievers tired of oversimplified faithSkeptics who find Christianity intellectually offensiveAnyone seeking a faith robust enough for real lifeDiscover why:
Doubt strengthens rather than threatens faithGod's limitations reveal His true powerThe narrow path remains narrow for good reasonHell actually proves divine loveSuffering produces what comfort never couldNeither liberal compromise nor fundamentalist rigidity, The Both/And God presents Christianity as it actually is: a faith built on unresolved tensions that create space for genuine encounter with the divine.
PART I: The Scandal of Faith and Doubt God dies every Friday. Faith requires atheism about false gods. Doubt as an essential element of belief.
PART II: The Scandal of Divine Weakness What God cannot do-and why that's good news. How power is perfected in weakness. Why the last shall be first.
PART III: The Paradox of Holiness and Sin The holy church of sinners. Loving sinners while hating sin. The narrow path that refuses to widen.
PART IV: The Mystery of Divine Sovereignty Election and responsibility in tension. Suffering as blessing. Hell as proof of love.
PART V: The Paradox of Christian Life Dying to live. Freedom through slavery. Joy in suffering.
Drawing from global Christianity, including the persecuted church in China, Iran, and beyond, Tiger reveals what Western Christianity has forgotten: the paradoxes we try to resolve are the very things that make faith real, powerful, and transformative.
What readers are discovering: "This book gave me permission to think and believe simultaneously." "Tiger doesn't resolve the tensions-he teaches you to live in them." "Finally, a Christianity that doesn't insult my intelligence or compromise the gospel."
Stop trying to solve Christianity's paradoxes. Start living in them.