The Unlikely Disciple: A Sinner's Semester at America's Holiest University Review
After recently wondering aloud what book I should read next, my sister (we're both agnostic) recommended, yet again, that I read The Unlikely Disciple. I basically know nothing about the Bible or Christianity (I groan and can't even begin to guess at the correct answers when "The Bible" is a category on Jeopardy), so I thought this book might be mildly interesting and entertaining, but worried it would be a long, slow read. Boy, was I wrong. I found this book fascinating and finished it in two days. I had no idea what evangelical Christianity was about, knew the name Jerry Falwell and had heard of Liberty, but beyond that, nothing.
The book details how Kevin Roose, a not really practicing Quaker, leaves liberal Brown University in Rhode Island to attend a semester, undercover, at evangelical Liberty University in Virginia in an attempt to bridge, as he puts it, the God Divide (though I'm sure the book deal at 19 didn't hurt either).
Roose gives us an inside look at what goes on at Liberty, from classes and church services to extracurricular activities and dorm life. But it's more than that. We find out about some of the people that are fundamental Christians (or are on the path to becoming one); people most of us might never meet unless they were trying to witness (aka convert) us. I really liked the fact that Roose threw himself into his semester at Liberty wholeheartedly, despite the fact that he disagreed with many of things he heard and saw, and that he kept an open mind about everything.
There was plenty about Liberty that annoyed me and, at times, boggled my mind from the intolerance, the way students weren't supposed to question anything in the Bible, the almost obsessive compulsive praying over anything and everything and don't get me started on the classes (yes, Dr. Dekker, I'm talking about yours). However, I really found myself liking and feeling for some of the students there (Though I think a few of them are working on ulcers worrying about how all of us heathens are going to try and corrupt them as soon as they enter the real world). Speaking of intolerance, I found myself kind of ticked off with the reactions of a good deal of Roose's secular, liberal friends and family. **Minor spoiler** When he finally fessed up to his friends and former mentors and classmates at Liberty, they still liked and accepted him, while it was obvious that his supposedly open-minded friends and family would have derided him if he'd told them how he really felt about his time at Liberty.
Overall, this is a great read, with lots of humor and insight. Roose did a fantastic, balanced job of telling us what life at Liberty is like, without turning it into a farce or a bashing of evangelical Christianity. Highly recommended.
The Unlikely Disciple: A Sinner's Semester at America's Holiest University Feature
- ISBN13: 9780446178433
- Condition: New
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The Unlikely Disciple: A Sinner's Semester at America's Holiest University Overview
No drinking.
No smoking.
No cursing.
No dancing.
No R-rated movies.
Kevin Roose wasn't used to rules like these. As a sophomore at
His journey takes him from an evangelical hip-hop concert to choir practice at Falwell's legendary
Hilarious and heartwarming, respectful and thought-provoking, THE UNLIKELY DISCIPLE will inspire and entertain believers and nonbelievers alike.
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