Oct

16

2009

Mike Pohlman|9:00 AM CT

Collin Hansen on "Counterfeit Gods"
Collin Hansen on "Counterfeit Gods" avatar

Christianity Today editor and author of Young, Restless and Reformed Collin Hansen has a helpful review of Tim Keller's Counterfeit Gods. Here's how Hansen begins:

There is nothing like a recession to put Americans in a reflective mood. Unemployment and a devalued stock market have led many to consider whether money is the pre-eminent form of American idolatry. New York Times columnist David Brooks has called for a new culture war, a “crusade for economic self-restraint” in a self-indulgent age. Adam Sternbergh wonders whether thrift is a virtue that can be developed or a trait that must be inherited. ABC’s Nightline invited Mark Driscoll to discuss the allure of celebrity and corporate idolatry. And Tim Keller has turned his attention to rooting out idolatry with his latest book, Counterfeit Gods: The Empty Promises of Money, Sex, and Power, and the Only Hope that Matters.

Hansen anticipates the question most people will be asking when they read the title to Keller's book, "What, exactly, does Keller have in mind when he considers the idols of our time?"

For Keller an idol is “anything more important to you than God, anything which absorbs your heart and imagination more than God, anything you seek to give you what only God can give.” Elaborating on the book’s title, Keller writes that a “counterfeit god is anything so central and essential to your life, that, should you lose it, your life would feel hardly worth living.” What does Keller have in mind? Well, everything: family, children, career, earning money, achievement, social status, relationships, beauty, brains, morality, political or social activism—even effective Christian ministry.

Read the whole thing. And for an excerpt from Counterfeit Gods, go here.

Mike Pohlman (Ph.D. Candidate, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary) is an editor with The Gospel Coalition and senior pastor of Immanuel Bible Church in Bellingham, WA.

Categories: Books and Reviews

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