The Existence and Attributes of God, Volumes 1 and 2 by Stephen Charnock
Let me introduce you to your new spiritual autodidact companion: Stephen Charnock, a Puritan pastor with a mind like a locomotive. The Existence and Attributes of God is two hefty books that aren't trying to put you to sleep. They want to wake you up.
The Story
Charnock argues for a basic plotline: God exists, and He's colossal. But instead of just saying that, he walks us through each of God's major attributes as if revealing shocking twists.
First, evidence that God must exist—not from blind faith alone, it’s logical and rational. Then a deep dive into His attributes: things like His Holiness (which isn’t boring sincerity, but scorching, dangerous perfection), His Goodness, His Mercy, His Justice. Each chapter turns over a table of misunderstandings. But the story looks like life so much—joy, guilt, questions: ‘Does God care?’ ‘How can a good God let suffering happen?’ He never leaves you in a simplistic answer. Instead he races into doctrine but exits with awe.
Why You Should Read It
To be honest, at first glance 500-year-old theology looks intimidating. What stopped me was sheer vulnerability: So that question about suffering? He takes it absolutely seriously. Charnock doesn't stammer or cliche into 'God’s ways are higher.' Instead he builds that humility out of 90 careful pages. I halfway felt like we were watching a master carpenter dissect a faultless creation.
But we do feel personal conflict reading this; we see we cannot ever wrap words completely round a Being so much higher. And reading it, certain phrases hijacked my heart for weeks: ‘God is His own happy object’ brought me an actual wave of joy. This book made me argument-smarter and solitude-richer. You can take snippets: ‘God’s essence is infinite, but His grace is even greater’. Already became wallpaper over parts of private skeptic days. It climbs delightfully close to thrill reading, but maybe too sedate for someone who demands explosive battles on every page.
Final Verdict
This belongs in every thinking reader’s season. Its best place is around by 8 p.m. with coffee, having a dictionary and an adult willingness to have spiritual sensibilities rearranged and thoroughly cut. Not for young beginners? Possibly not if you want start-point simple. But seasoned Christians ready to kneel deeper, or open-yet-cautious philosophy lovers, or a world-weary doubter willing—even looking to crack open the the strong question: Am I missing genuine wonders here? — You. Are. You.
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David Johnson
1 year agoI was particularly interested in the case studies mentioned here, the structural organization allows for quick referencing of key points. An excellent example of how quality digital books should be formatted.
Ashley Hernandez
8 months agoInitially, I was looking for a specific answer, but the critical analysis of current industry standards is very timely. A mandatory read for anyone in this industry.