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Can God Intervene? How Religion Explains Natural Disasters
Book Code: C8958
ISBN: 0-275-98958-5
ISBN-13: 978-0-275-98958-3
240 pages, no art
Praeger Publishers
Publication: 4/30/2007
List Price: $39.95 (UK Sterling Price: £22.95)
Availability: In Stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Also Available: Ebook
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects: Reviews:
  • [C]an serve as an introductory narrative and engaging read for those interested in what leading figures from the major traditions make of natural disasters. Recommended for public and theological libraries.
    —Library Journal
    October 1, 2007
  • A work that probes and challenges real people's beliefs about a subject that, unfortunately, touches everyone's life.
    —ebooksdigest.blogspot.com
    May 25, 2008
  • Taking the December 2004 tsunami in southern Asia, and several famous floods of the past as case studies, Stern, a religions journalist in New York State, explores the perspective on why God lets such things happen. He questions Jews; Catholic, mainstream Protestant, evangelical, and African American Christians; Muslims; Hindus; Buddhists; and non-believers. Among his surprises is how radically differently the traditions understand the question itself.
    —Reference & Research Book News
    August 2007
  • [S]hould be required for every college world religions course. "This book addresses a question that lurks deep in every human heart about God's role in tragedies; and it does so in a way that introduces the reader to what other people of faith are thinking."
    —Graymoor Today
    Summer 2007
Description: To explore various religious explanations of the tragedies inflicted by nature, author Gary Stern has interviewed 43 prominent religious leaders across the religious spectrum, among them Rabbi Harold Kushner, author of When Bad Things Happen to Good People; Father Benedict Groeschel, author of Arise from Darkness; The Rev. James Rowe Adams, founder of the Center for Progressive Christianity; Kenneth R. Samples, vice president of Reason to Believe; Dr. James Cone, the legendary African American theologian; Tony Campolo, founder of the Evangelical Association for the Promotion of Education; Dr. Sayyid Syeed, general secretary of the Islamic Society of North America; Imam Yahya Hendi, the first Muslim chaplain at Georgetown University; Dr. Arvind Sharma, one of the world's leading Hindu scholars; Robert A. F. Thurman, the first American to be ordained a Tibetan Buddhist monk; David Silverman, the national spokesman for American Atheists; and others--rabbis, priests, imams, monks, storefront ministers, itinerant holy people, professors, and chaplains--Jews, Roman Catholics, mainline Protestants, evangelical Christians, Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, and Atheists-people of belief, and people of nonbelief, too. Stern asked each of them probing questions about what their religion teaches and what their faith professes regarding the presence of tragedy. Some feel that the forces of nature are simply impersonal, and some believe that God is omniscient but not omnipotent. Some claim that nature is ultimately destructive because of Original Sin, some assert that the victims of natural disasters are sinners who deserve to die, and some explain that natural disasters are the result of individual and collective karma. Still others profess that God causes suffering in order to test and purify the victims. Stern, an award-winning religion journalist, has extensive experience in this type of analytical journalism. The result is a work that probes and challenges real people's beliefs about a subject that, unfortunately, touches everyone's life.
LC Card Number: 2007000067
LCC Class: BL65
Dewey Class: 202
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