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Reviving Old Scratch [electronic resource] :demons and the devil for doubters and the disenchanted / Richard Beck.

By: Beck, Richard Allan, 1967- [author.].
Contributor(s): Project Muse [distributor.] | Project Muse.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Baltimore, Maryland : Project Muse, 2016 2015); Minneapolis [Minnesota] : Fortress Press, [2016] 2015)Description: 1 online resource (1 PDF (xx, 192 pages)).Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781506401362; 1506401368.Subject(s): Spiritual warfare | Devil -- ChristianityGenre/Form: Electronic books. | Electronic books. DDC classification: 235/.4 Online resources: Full text available:
Contents:
Introduction : Old Scratch -- part 1. Wickedness in high places : spiritual warfare as social justice. Still prowling the world -- Scooby-Doo, where are you! -- part 2. To destroy the devil's work : spiritual warfare beyond social justice. Jesus the Exorcist -- The White Witch -- Holy Ghost conga lines -- The Wizard of Oz -- I love humanity. It's people I can't stand! -- God at war -- part 3. A great campaign of sabotage : spiritual warfare for doubters and the disenchanted. "Get behind me, Satan!" -- The War of the Lamb -- Angels and demons -- Resist the devil -- The Lucifer effect -- The one who holds the power of death -- Turning the world upside down -- Satan interrupted -- Epilogue : a prison story.
Summary: The devil has fallen on hard times. Surveys say that even the majority of Christians doubt Satan's existence. Burdened by doubts, skeptical believers find themselves divorced from Jesus' dramatic confrontation with Satan in the Gospels and from the struggle that galvanized the early church. In Reviving Old Scratch, popular blogger and theologian Richard Beck reintroduces the devil to the modern world with a biblical, bold, and urgent vision of spiritual warfare: we must resist the devil by joining the kingdom of God's subversive campaign to interrupt the world with love. Beck shows how conservative Christians too often overspiritualize the devil and demons, and progressive Christians reduce these forces to social justice issues. By understanding evil as a very real force in the world, we are better able to name it for what it is and thus to combat it as Jesus did. Beck's own work in a prison Bible study and at a church for recovering addicts convinced him to take Satan more seriously, and they provide compelling illustrations as he challenges the contemporary versions of evil forces. Because if Jesus took Satan seriously, then so should we.
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Issued as part of UPCC book collections on Project MUSE.

Includes bibliographical references.

Introduction : Old Scratch -- part 1. Wickedness in high places : spiritual warfare as social justice. Still prowling the world -- Scooby-Doo, where are you! -- part 2. To destroy the devil's work : spiritual warfare beyond social justice. Jesus the Exorcist -- The White Witch -- Holy Ghost conga lines -- The Wizard of Oz -- I love humanity. It's people I can't stand! -- God at war -- part 3. A great campaign of sabotage : spiritual warfare for doubters and the disenchanted. "Get behind me, Satan!" -- The War of the Lamb -- Angels and demons -- Resist the devil -- The Lucifer effect -- The one who holds the power of death -- Turning the world upside down -- Satan interrupted -- Epilogue : a prison story.

The devil has fallen on hard times. Surveys say that even the majority of Christians doubt Satan's existence. Burdened by doubts, skeptical believers find themselves divorced from Jesus' dramatic confrontation with Satan in the Gospels and from the struggle that galvanized the early church. In Reviving Old Scratch, popular blogger and theologian Richard Beck reintroduces the devil to the modern world with a biblical, bold, and urgent vision of spiritual warfare: we must resist the devil by joining the kingdom of God's subversive campaign to interrupt the world with love. Beck shows how conservative Christians too often overspiritualize the devil and demons, and progressive Christians reduce these forces to social justice issues. By understanding evil as a very real force in the world, we are better able to name it for what it is and thus to combat it as Jesus did. Beck's own work in a prison Bible study and at a church for recovering addicts convinced him to take Satan more seriously, and they provide compelling illustrations as he challenges the contemporary versions of evil forces. Because if Jesus took Satan seriously, then so should we.

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