I found
this book in a rather odd place – the LSU campus bookstore in Baton Rouge. Like
most campus bookstores these days, it’s much easier to find the brand apparel –
the gods of our alma mater – than it is to find the books. But it was prominently
displayed on a longish table, part of which was devoted to religious books.
The book was Counterfeit
Gods: The Empty Promises of Money, Sex, and Power, and the Only Hope That
Matters by Timothy Keller.
Keller, a pastor in the Presbyterian Church in America denomination, is well
known in Christian faith circles. He’s the founder of Redeemer Presbyterian
Church in Manhattan, with a congregation of 5,000+ and numerous daughter
churches. He’s also actively involved in planting churches internationally.
Keller
became widely known in much broader circles last year, when Princeton Seminary
announced that he would receive the Kuyper theology prize. Seminarians
exploded in outrage – Keller is known for his conservative, Biblical views
on marriage and women’s ordination – and the seminary then rescinded the prize
(but they still wanted him to give a lecture). Keller handled the controversy
with far more grace than the seminary did.
This book
(Keller’s written many books) called Counterfeit
Gods was published in 2009, almost a decade ago. In a culture that travels
at the speed of the internet, a book published a decade ago would be, or should
be, rather dated. Counterfeit Gods is not. It could have been published
yesterday. Its message is even more applicable in this era of fake news, issues
of sexuality and personal freedom, and the increasingly vicious fights for political
power.
He dispassionately
considers the things in our lives and culture that we turn into idols – love,
money, success, power, attention, patriotism, and more. Each discussion centers
on a story from the Bible. It’s no surprise that none of these things are new;
people have been making idols of the same things for thousands of years.
Solomon was right: there is indeed nothing new under the sun, at least as it
concerns the human condition.
Timothy Keller |
Keller is
the author of numerous
books on faith, including works on family, marriage, prayer, justice, books
of the Bible, and other subjects. In 2017, he stepped
down as Redeemer’s senior pastor and is doing full-time teaching in a partner
program with Reformed Theological Seminary.
I can pick
up the newspaper today, and I can look at my own life, and I see why a book
like Counterfeit Gods is timeless.
That’s how wisdom works. Everything else passes away.
Top photograph by Nilton Oliviera
via Unsplash. Used with
permission.
4 comments:
"...Princeton Seminary announced that he would receive the Kuyper theology prize. Seminarians exploded in outrage – Keller is known for his conservative, Biblical views on marriage and women’s ordination – and the seminary then rescinded the prize..."
I should click on the link to understand this better, but why would a Seminary be opposed to these things?
Sandi, Princeton's seminary is not a conservative or traditional one. It's an old one, but it has changed from its roots.
Tim Keller is such a good thinker, and I always appreciate his work.
Great post, thanks. I've read his book on marriage which was very good but not this one.
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