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The Bible Tells Me So: Why Defending Scripture Has Made Us Unable to Read It Kindle Edition

4.6 out of 5 stars 1,768 ratings

The controversial Bible scholar and author of The Evolution of Adam recounts his transformative spiritual journey in which he discovered a new, more honest way to love and appreciate God’s Word.

Trained as an evangelical Bible scholar, Peter Enns loved the Scriptures and shared his devotion, teaching at Westminster Theological Seminary. But the further he studied the Bible, the more he found himself confronted by questions that could neither be answered within the rigid framework of his religious instruction or accepted among the conservative evangelical community.

Rejecting the increasingly complicated intellectual games used by conservative Christians to “protect” the Bible, Enns was conflicted. Is this what God really requires? How could God’s plan for divine inspiration mean ignoring what is really written in the Bible? These questions eventually cost Enns his job—but they also opened a new spiritual path for him to follow.

The Bible Tells Me So chronicles Enns’s spiritual odyssey, how he came to see beyond restrictive doctrine and learned to embrace God’s Word as it is actually written. As he explores questions progressive evangelical readers of Scripture commonly face yet fear voicing, Enns reveals that they are the very questions that God wants us to consider—the essence of our spiritual study.

Editorial Reviews

Review

“In The Bible Tells Me So, Peter Enns addresses the problems of scripture form the position of an evangelical Christian who observes with candor and fresh humor that too often faithful readers approach the Bible with expectations it is not set up to meet.” — Publishers Weekly

“Peter Enns has written a great book about The Book. If you’ve ever struggled with the violent or contradictory or just plain strange passages in the Bible, this book is for you . . . And he’s funny.” — Rob Bell, author of Love Wins

“Cross a stand-up comic, a robust theological mind, a college professor, and a decent normal guy, and what do you get? Peter Enns. And what does he write? A super-enjoyable, highly informative, disarmingly honest, and downright liberating book. The message of this book needs to get out. Fast.” — Brian McLaren, author of A New Kind of Christianity

“The question of how to read, inwardly digest, and eventually ‘live’ the Bible is probably the most divisive one among Christians today. This is a book that every Christian will be the better and richer for having read.” — Phyllis Tickle, author of The Great Emergence

“Peter Enns has emerged as one of the stars of biblical interpretation for thinking Christians. With writing that is winsome, readable, and non-intimidating, he cuts a path between wooden literalism and faithless liberalism, giving us a way to read the Bible that is both faithful and intellectually credible.” — Tony Jones, theologian-in-residence at Solomon's Porch and the author of Did God Kill Jesus?

From the Back Cover

What Do You Do When the Bible Doesn't Behave?

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B00H7LXHJQ
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ HarperOne
  • Accessibility ‏ : ‎ Learn more
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ September 9, 2014
  • Edition ‏ : ‎ Reprint
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 4.5 MB
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 293 pages
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0062272058
  • Page Flip ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.6 out of 5 stars 1,768 ratings

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Peter Enns
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Dr. Peter Enns (PhD, Harvard University) is Abram S. Clemens professor of Biblical Studies at Eastern University, St. Davids, PA. He has taught courses at several other institutions including Harvard University, Fuller Theological Seminary, and Princeton Theological Seminary. Enns is a frequent contributor to journals and encyclopedias, and is the author of several books, including, The Bible Tells Me So: Why Defending Scripture Has Made Us Unable to Read It (HarperOne), The Bible and the Believer: How to Read the Bible Critically and Religiously (with Marc Brettler and Daniel Harrington, Oxford University Press), Inspiration and Incarnation: Evangelicals and The Problem of the Old Testament (Baker), and The Evolution of Adam: What the Bible Does and Doesn't Say about Human Origins (Baker).

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4.6 out of 5 stars
1,768 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find this book thought-provoking, with one review noting how it helps explain the Old Testament. The writing is clear and engaging, with a narrative that keeps readers laughing throughout. Customers appreciate its approachable style and historical meaningful analysis, with one review highlighting how it provides historical explanations for biblical issues. They value its accessibility, with one noting it's useful for study groups.

219 customers mention "Thought provoking"206 positive13 negative

Customers find the book thought-provoking and enlightening, describing it as profound and challenging, with one customer noting how it helps explain the Old Testament.

"...also has a podcast called ‘The Bible for Normal People’ which is interesting and compelling!" Read more

"...book is well written and the author is obviously well educated and intelligent...." Read more

"Extremely well written, easy to read. Challenging! Any serious Christian should not be afraid to read what Enns has to say!" Read more

"...in church but the way Enns causes us to re-view them is new and thought-provoking...." Read more

167 customers mention "Readability"159 positive8 negative

Customers find the book engaging and excellent for understanding the Bible, describing it as a fun read.

"Great book. I want to re-read it because it's a lot to follow...." Read more

"...Great read. Well worth the effort." Read more

"This is a great book that summarizes liberal and progressive theologies in a way that doesn't discredit the entire Bible...." Read more

"Excellent book in good condition at an excellent price" Read more

114 customers mention "Readable"103 positive11 negative

Customers find the book clearly written and easy to read, with the writing style compelling them to keep reading.

"Very engaging and very readable. I am reading it for the second time. I would encourage believers and non believers to read this...." Read more

"...It is what it is brought to one in a clear, respectful manner." Read more

"Well written, argued and articulated treatise on reading the Bible within its own context...." Read more

"...I like the writing style" Read more

94 customers mention "Bible understanding"86 positive8 negative

Customers appreciate the book's approach to understanding the Bible, with one customer highlighting its refreshing engagement with biblical difficulties, while another notes how it provides a fresh perspective on faith.

"...I can truly say that this book has strengthened my faith in the one God of all ages...." Read more

"...me and stretched me and has me thinking more deeply and more honestly about the Bible than I ever have...." Read more

"A good look a biblical context. Enns doesn't bash the Bible, but he challenges the reader to think differently about the Bible...." Read more

"...Like it or not, theological diversity is everywhere in Scripture...." Read more

87 customers mention "Humor"83 positive4 negative

Customers enjoy the book's humorous style, which keeps them laughing throughout.

"...He is both funny and fascinating, which are two traits that don't seem to go together with biblical scholars...." Read more

"...Funny and informative." Read more

"...This is a great read, humorous and serious at the same time...." Read more

"...any of his other books or his blog then you'll know he has a great sense of humor and he certainly doesn't hold it back in "The Bible Tells Me..." Read more

27 customers mention "Approach"23 positive4 negative

Customers find the book approachable, with one mentioning that the introduction and first chapter grabbed their attention.

"...The Bible, like God, is not a safe, easy, passive book that is to be used as a almanac to answer every question...." Read more

"I like the approach and the explanation of some material that I never read before. It is refreshing and challenging...." Read more

"...Bible is Truth downloaded from heaven, God’s rulebook, a heavenly instructional manual—follow the directions and out pops a true believer, deviate..." Read more

"...pat answers, this book will give that invitation and even some direction for that struggle...." Read more

9 customers mention "Accessibility"9 positive0 negative

Customers find the book accessible, with one mentioning it is excellent for study groups.

"...brings us a book in "The Bible Tells Me So" which is at once accessible and illuminating...." Read more

"Accessible, Engaging, Challenging, Cerebral... and Hilarious..." Read more

"..." but he does it in a way that makes these topics accessible for all people, whether or not they have studied religion at the collegiate or..." Read more

"This book is useful for a number of different kinds of people...." Read more

9 customers mention "Historical accuracy"9 positive0 negative

Customers appreciate the historical accuracy of the book, with reviews highlighting its meaningful analysis and archaeological insights.

"...Thanks, Peter Enns, for providing a well-reasoned and historically and theologically sound explanation for why the Bible is not and was never meant..." Read more

"...just allowing it to be what it is in all its messy, organic, historically-conditioned, difficult glory and not trying to make it into something else." Read more

"...However, this book has that discussion and deals with the historical, sociological, cultural, and motivational contexts represented...." Read more

"...He gives a historically meaningful analysis of this in such a way that respectfully acknowledges what it is actually in the Bible, while also..." Read more

A Must Read for Christians Seeking Deeper Understanding of the Formation of Scripture!
5 out of 5 stars
A Must Read for Christians Seeking Deeper Understanding of the Formation of Scripture!
There are very few contemporary books on scriptural understanding that I would recommend more strongly than Peter Enns' "The Bible Tells Me So." The spiritual journey that Peter Enns describes for himself within the book is parallel to those that numerous other Christians, such as myself, have also travelled or will eventually travel. The evangelical community needs to become much more knowledgeable regarding the evolution of oral traditions, and the cultural and sociological influences on, and development of the writing of the texts comprising the Bible. Unfortunately, the truths about scriptural formation are so often either intentionally evaded or avoided by pastoral leadership so as not to raise controversy within congregations, or are directly denied by them. Enns' books present a vital supply of scriptural knowledge absent in many congregations.
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on September 20, 2014
    Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
    "The Bible Tells Me So" is the third book that I have read now from Peter Enns. I can summarize my reaction to be book by saying, "Whoa, that was awesome!" Let me unpack that for you so that I do not come across as a total deadhead (at least for now, feel free to think that way at the end of these remarks).

    Nearly two years ago, I initially came across "Inspiration and Incarnation" by accident. Having recently graduated from a neo-Reformed seminary, I remembered that Enns' work had been described there as "dangerous" by the students, and as "problematic" by the faculty -- like contraband. Yet with anything akin to contraband, I could not help but wonder what all of the so-called controversy was about with the book. Why avoid engagement with a person or a topic if it is as solid as people suggest?

    Like many recently graduated seminarians, I still had many questions that were left unanswered. Where was I to go? Should I treat seminary like a closed book or like a stepping stone that takes me to new places in theology? Those two options seem to be common for graduates, especially of evangelical schools.

    Opting for adventure, I took the risk and began reading it, although, I admit, I read it in private. Sadly, my reason for doing this was because I did not want other friends from seminary and in my denomination to find out that I was actually engaging with Enns' material. If they found out that I was considering his arguments, let alone reading it, I feared what that might mean for my life and my hopes for pursuing vocational church ministry in the future. I could be blacklisted, because, I was in possession of contraband.

    What I encountered then took my breath away, and in many ways, I am still reveling in what Enns' arguments introduced me to in the world of biblical scholarship. In "Inspiration and Incarnation," not only did Enns show how the Old Testament/Hebrew Bible was influenced by other ANE writings, but he also began to probe into the diverse ways that the theology takes shape throughout Israel's history. In addition, he provided a helpful overview of some of the ways that writers in the New Testament handle Old Testament texts. In short, Enns was one of the voices who forced me to consider that my seminary education was insulated from the rest of the world and academia, and quite frankly, that was very upsetting for me. I thought that my professors were the toughest dogs on the block, but I began to realize that their barking just stayed on their street--they didn't reverberate out into the rest of the city (okay, I will stop with the lame analogies).

    This contributed to a major conflict in my life, but one that I look back upon now with gratitude: if I was to take the Bible seriously, as I had been taught, how should I respond to a text like this one? Should I consider the strength of these arguments and look further into similar discussions? What if it challenged the system of doctrine that I had been taught? What would that mean to someone like me and my future?

    Or, was I to immediately reject them and revert to the system of biblical interpretation that I had been taught in seminary and to that which was normative in my conservative Reformed denomination? In other words, I had two options: take a risk or play it safe.

    So, I opted for the latter and two years later, after a complete paradigm shift, I do not regret my decision at all. Throughout the past two years, I have read other books and various articles that make the similar arguments as Enns' did with "Inspiration and Incarnation." Due to the almost overwhelming amount of material out there in biblical scholarship that critiques inerrancy, I was looking forward to the day when I could find a book that would condense the arguments into a broad overview that I could give to others who asked the same questions as I did years ago as a college student and as a seminarian. How else could you expect to describe biblical criticism to someone desiring to know more about it, especially to someone who has only heard nasty things about critical scholarship--like, all critical scholars rip Bibles apart for fun or use them for coasters? And who would be qualified to write such a book? It seems that the options were limited.

    That is, until now. Thankfully, in "The Bible Tells Me So," Enns not only continues this conversation with these same themes that were introduced several years ago in "Inspiration and Incarnation," but he does it in a way that makes these topics accessible for all people, whether or not they have studied religion at the collegiate or graduate level. Unlike many books that handle these topics, Enns' writing style feels as if you are having a conversation with him over a bite to eat or over a cup of coffee. He is both funny and fascinating, which are two traits that don't seem to go together with biblical scholars. I'll go ahead and say it: he makes theology "fun"! (Didn't see that one coming, did you?)

    Not only this, but he takes very complex arguments that are shared by many biblical scholars and unpacks them so that readers can see the social backgrounds of the biblical text, like the ANE backgrounds of the Old Testament, the plurality of perspectives about God and ethics in those books, and the ways in which the New Testament writers interact with the Old Testament. If you are coming from an insulated background in the church or seminary, then you can be assured that Enns' is not the only person out there speaking in this way. He is polite and he is also transparent about what led him to have the perspectives that he does today. By doing so, there is a human touch to this book that other books dealing with these themes omit.

    In addition, Enns puts a Christological focus on the interpretation of Old and New Testament texts which should give comfort to readers who might be wondering about the conclusions that Enns is drawing from his critical examination of the Old Testament while reading along in the book. He even spends some time showing the ways that the writers of the Gospels portray Jesus' interpretation of the Old Testament, too. This helps the reader see for herself that it's not as nice and neat as one might suspect. Jesus didn't treat the Bible as a rulebook, so why should we?

    Coming from someone who works in a church, I think that this book would be of wonderful help for people as young as high school (as long as they are avid readers) and up, especially those who are frustrated with evangelical and/or fundamentalist readings of the biblical text.

    Only if, however, you are ready to be contradicted and challenged by God, then this might just be the book for you. As Enns tells us, "we are free to walk away from [the invitation to trust God], of course, but we are not free to make a Bible in our own image. What the Bible looks like is God's call, not ours." And what Enns does with "The Bible Tells Me So" is show us that we don't get to decide what the Bible is all about.

    Thank you, Dr. Enns, for taking the risk that you did years ago by taking the Bible seriously. You've changed the lives of many people, including me.
    55 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on September 12, 2014
    Format: KindleVerified Purchase
    I had read Prof. Enns' previous book "Inspiration and Incarnation: Evangelicals and the Problem of the Old Testament" and have been looking forward to this book "The Bible Tells Me So: Why Defending Scripture Has Made Us Unable to Read It" ever since I heard it was coming out a few months ago. Forty-eight hours after I got it, the book was read.

    The two books pair very well in the sense that "Inspiration and Incarnation" is like strategy while "The Bible Tells Me So" is like tactics. The first book gives us the basic principles for what Prof. Enns wants to tell us while the second gives more concrete examples of his message.

    What is that message? Basically, as the subtitle for The Bible Tells Me So" says, "defending Scripture has made us unable to read it" as it really is.

    Most of us who are believers rightly approach the Bible with a hermeneutic of reverence and respect but in our zeal to protect our sacred book from all potential criticism we inadvertently try to force it to behave in ways it was never intended to. So many of us are uncomfortable with the precision tools provided by Biblical scholarship in the last couple of centuries to help us better understand the Scripture's original contexts that we either ignore that new knowledge or piously try to insulate the Bible from itself with book after book trying to harmonize contradictory Scriptures or explain Bible difficulties away.

    Unfortunately, the critics of Christianity are often very aware of these tools of modern Biblical scholarship themselves and do not hesitate to wield them like rubber mallets to debunk the Bible from a position devoid of nuance and balance.

    "The Bible Tells Me So" is an excellently written book that brings some of the main themes of Biblical scholarship to the popular level so the average believer can profit from them for a better understanding of the Bible as it was understood by the original audience.

    Like the previous book, "Inspiration and Incarnation", its chapters cluster around three basic ideas: we need to take the ancient Near Eastern evidence of genre and background seriously, we need to appreciate the theological diversity of the various books of the Bible, and we should recognize that Jesus and Paul and the other NT writers used the OT creatively in ways the original OT writers never meant in the original context- and that's a good thing.

    Before reading "The Bible Tells Me So" I was already on board with the literary genres and ancient contexts but this book really deepened my appreciation for the other two points.

    Like it or not, theological diversity is everywhere in Scripture. We tend to not notice this since each of us comes to the Bible with an interpretive lens already in place and we are constantly (and subconsciously) harmonizing apparent discrepancies as we read. It doesn't help that our Bibles LOOK like one book and we forget that it is actually a library of MANY books by many different human authors over a thousand year period in three different languages and various cultures.

    There is nothing wrong, imo, with approaching the Bible with an interpretive lens that helps us get "the big picture" but it is also soul-profiting to just let each individual book and author say what he wants to say to us on his own as the book was originally written and read. The way the confidently pious author of Proverbs experienced and understood God is different from the way the philosophically pessimistic author of Ecclesiastes did and different from the way the introspective and troubled author of Job did. We dilute the message of each individual book if we do not hear these individual voices. We are free to harmonize the overall picture of God later but instead of spending all our time "in the Bible" let's also sit alone with David for a while, with Solomon, with Job and hear where they were at at this point in their spiritual journey.

    Then there is the wild and wacky way the NT authors used the OT. Try this test: whenever you come across a passage in the NT which quotes the OT look up the cross reference. Far more often than not if we had simply read the OT passage first, unaware of the NT use of it, we would never have interpreted the verses in such a way. And if someone else had interpreted the passages this way outside of the NT we would have recommended they take some classes to learn how to properly read the Bible. Yes, most modern Christians would have sent Jesus and Paul back to a remedial class in Biblical exegesis.

    This point is probably the one that impacted me most in "The Bible Tells Me So". Although I am Eastern Orthodox and very at home with allegory and non-literal interpretations of Scripture as well as being acquainted with how the Church Fathers continued this creative re-interpretation of the OT which Jesus and the Apostles brought out of Judaism with them, the way Prof. Enns explains this really brought home to me how radically different (yet consistent) the NT is from the OT and what a shock a dying and rising Messiah must have been to Jesus' contemporaries. In their hands, the ethnic story of Israel became the story of us all by grace through Christ.

    In the end, "The Bible Tells Me So" does an excellent job helping us to first approach the individual books of the OT confidently in their originally intended contexts and then next to unabashedly approach the Jewish Scriptures as the Christian OT and see Jesus as the interpretive grid by which we understand the whole Bible.

    I heartily recommend this book to all serious students of the Bible who are looking for ways to come to terms with modern Biblical scholarship while remaining faithful to "the Faith once delivered."
    32 people found this helpful
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  • Client Kindle
    5.0 out of 5 stars I would recommend it
    Reviewed in France on December 25, 2021
    Format: KindleVerified Purchase
    Very intersting and in depth. Also reachable. I love how it's not dogmatic pleasing but truth seeking. Also very funny titles!
  • Marcelo Rigo
    5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing and delightful book
    Reviewed in Brazil on June 15, 2025
    Format: KindleVerified Purchase
    Pete has a remarkable ability to gather information and weave it into a coherent vision of Holy Scripture. Rather than viewing it through the lens of our 21st-century evangelical culture, it is far better to let Scripture speak for itself — and then seek to understand it, always bearing in mind that final conclusions will likely remain elusive, especially after two thousand years of Christianity and who knows how much more of Judaism. Jesus was fully human. The Bible is inspired, yes, but also shaped by human hands. It is time we gratefully acknowledge that it did not fall from the sky, but was written by people — people very much like us.
  • Nightreader
    4.0 out of 5 stars Die alternativen Fakten der Bibel
    Reviewed in Germany on November 14, 2022
    Zuerst einmal das Positive. Peter Enns ist fachlich kompetent, hat einen guten Stil, aufgelockert durch lieben und niemals bösartigen Humor und greift ein Thema auf, an dem sich schon viele Christen die Zähne ausgebissen haben: Die "Problemzonen" der Bibel. Als da wären, um nur ein paar zu nennen, die sprechende Schlange, die Übertragung der Erbsünde quasi als Geschlechtskrankheit, die doch sehr skurrilen Gebote , die flache Erde, der grausige "Blitzkrieg" Joshuas, der in Dschengis-Khan-Manier den halben Nahen Osten ausrottet und zerstört, und und und. Fragt man Pfarrer, Pastor oder fortgeschrittene Christen, bekommt man meistens nur ein gequältes Lächeln zu Antwort. "Äh, stimmt doch alles nicht. Was nicht heißt dass es nicht stimmt, wohlgemerkt! Die Bibel ist schließlich Gottes Wort. Und überhaupt wollen wir jetzt lieber über das sonntägliche Kaffeekränzchen reden."
    Für mich war es eine ehrliche, große Erleichterung zu lesen, dass Peter Enns alle diese Problemstellen kennt und auch gleich die dummen Antworten zitiert, die man bekommt ("die Kanaaniter waren eben ur-böse Ungläubige, da musste Gott einmal ordentlich reinhauen ... nein, das ist kein Dschihad und auch nicht dasselbe wie der Holocaust und die Plünderung jüdischen Vermögens!" Ich hatte schon gedacht, ich bin die einzige Idiotin auf der Welt, die mit mit solchen Bibelstellen echte Probleme hat.
    Also - vom Problem weiter zu einer möglichen Lösung. Und die ist bei Peter Enns auf jeden Fall originell. Er weist sehr schlüssig nach, dass bestimmte "historische Berichte" einander grob widersprechen, nicht nur bei "dem alten Judenschmuß", wie ein Glaubensbruder as AT zu bezeichnen pflegte, sondern auch in den Evangelien, dass die Urzeitgeschichten der Bibel starke Ähnlichkeit und starke Differenzen zu den gleichzeitig kursierenden Mythen anderer Völker aufweisen, dass Adam z.B. im ganzen AT nur an einer einzigen, bedeutungslosen Stelle erwähnt wird (der war doch schuld an allem, oder?) und einiges mehr, das ich mit befriedigtem Kopfnicken zur Kenntnis genommen habe. Auch das Statement, dass so ziemlich das ganze AT während und nach der Rückkehr aus der babylonischen Gefangenschaft geschrieben und reichlich überarbeitet wurde, selbstverständlich basierend auf älteren Überlieferungen und Schriften. Peter Enns führt sehr überzeugende Beweise dafür an.
    Dann kommt der Knaller.
    Was da geschrieben wurde, nennt Peter Enns "kreatives Schreiben". Soll heißen: alternative Fakten, was ein anderes Wort für Lügen, Verdrehungen, Ergänzungen etc. in einem Ausmaß ist, dass man sich an die Geschichtsklitterer in "1984" erinnert fühlt (und natürlich an Ex-POTUS D.T.) Ein Beispiel: Die scheußlichen Massaker der Landnahme haben in Wirklichkeit nicht stattgefunden, sagen die Akademiker, (Gott seis gedankt) und Peter Enns fügt hinzu: Das haben die Autoren der Bibel nur erfunden, um dem verwundeten Selbstbewusstsein der Verschleppten ein Pflaster aufzukleben. ("Mann, damals waren wir wer! Da rannten alle vor uns davon!")
    Spätestens an dem Punkt hat es mir die Haare aufgestellt. Die Bibel als ein Sammelsurium von Kriegspropaganda und Selbst-Bauchpinselei? "So spricht der Herr" - eine Marionette in den Händen irgendeines Zebulon oder Habakuk, dem man (wie später Jesus) in den Mund legt, was gerade passt? Andererseits: Was in der Bibel steht, ist nicht gerade eine Ode hemmungsloser Bewunderung an die alten Hebräer. Welches andere Volk hat so penibel seine Fehler und Schwächen publiziert? Steckt also doch etwas anderes hinter dem mehr als lockeren Umgang auch mit der konkreten Geschichte (Israel hatte ja eine ganz konkrete Geschichte, die - teilweise - wissenschaftlich fassbar ist!)
    Ich habe mich durch dieses Buch und das noch spannendere "The Evolution of Adam" durchgewühlt, bis mir die Augen brannten. Dass die Bibel wortwörtlich Gottes Wort und Seine Meinung sei, habe ich zwar nur in sehr zartem Alter geglaubt - dafür steht zu viel Gemeines, Scheußliches und einfach Falsches darin - aber wenn Peter Enns recht hat, dann kommt das doch sehr nahe an "den größten Hoax aller Zeiten" heran. Was für das AT gilt, gilt schließlich auch für das NT.
    Jedenfalls ist mir schon lange kein Buch mehr untergekommen, das mich so erleichtert, fasziniert, befriedigt und verärgert hat wie dieses.
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  • T Chier
    5.0 out of 5 stars Every Christian should read this!
    Reviewed in Australia on March 5, 2022
    This is the second book I’ve read by Pete Enns and I found it an eye opener. While I don’t agree with every proposition he puts forward, what he says on the whole makes a lot of sense. If you are a Christian who wants to witness to well read atheists and skeptics, this book is a must read. I found the author’s take on OT books such as Joshua truly enlightening and it has definitely given me a new perspective on the Bible in general.

    I intend to read it again in a month or so as there is a lot to digest even though the author does his best to write in a light-hearted and entertaining style. Well done Pete Enns - I’ll definitely be reading more of your books.
  • Kenneth
    5.0 out of 5 stars Eye opening and essential for the common Christian
    Reviewed in Canada on October 28, 2014
    Format: KindleVerified Purchase
    This book is amazing at exposing without shaming. It does this to the Bible and also to theologians that would disagree with it. Peter Enns clearly knows how to have a good debate and knows exactly where to poke to get people going, yet he does it with grace and clarity that it's hard to be mad at him. I've found myself mad at myself more that him when reading this book.

    This book is for the common Christian. It isn't heady theology or hard to understand. It doesn't talk over you (in fact it talks under you most likely). This book doesn't make me want to go out and correct all the people that I know are wrong. Instead it makes me want to go to church, read my Bible, and converse with my friends with more grace and freedom. It has helped me in my journey by challenging assumptions but not criticizing me for having them.

    Amazing read and 99% recommended.

    I'm sure Peter will understand that 1% ;)

    Thank you Peter.

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