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The God Hater: A Novel [Paperback]

Bill Myers (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (33 customer reviews)

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Book Description

September 28, 2010
A cranky, atheistic philosophy professor loves to shred the faith of incoming freshmen. He is chosen by a group of scientists to create a philosophy for a computer-generated world exactly like ours. Much to his frustration every model he introduces—from Darwinism, to Existentialism, to Relativism, to Buddhism—fails. The only way to preserve the computer world is to introduce laws from outside their system through a Law Giver. Of course this goes against everything he's ever believed, and he hates it. But even that doesn't completely work because the citizens of that world become legalists and completely miss the spirit behind the Law. The only way to save them is to create a computer character like himself to personally live and explain it. He does. So now there are two of him—the one in our world and the one in the computer world. Unfortunately a rival has introduced a virus into the computer world. Things grow worse until our computer-world professor sees the only way to save his world is to personally absorb the virus and the penalty for breaking the Law. Of course, it's clear to all, including our real-world professor, that this act of selfless love has become a reenactment of the Gospel. It is the only possible choice to save their computer world and, as he finally understands, our own.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"This one will be talked about for a long time."—Jerry B. Jenkins, New York Times bestselling author

"When one of the most creative minds I know gets the best idea he’s ever had and turns it into a novel, it’s fasten-your-seat-belt time. This one will be talked about for a long time."

—Jerry B. Jenkins, author of Left Behind

"A most fascinating story! Full of heart, suspense and intelligence, The God Hater engagingly illustrates the futility of man-made beliefs, as well as the world’s desperate need for a God who offers hope, guidance, and help."

—Tim LaHaye, author of Left Behind

"Bill has written another heartwrenching, mind-gripping novel that delivers on so many levels. Like the Gospel, The God Hater is more than just a great read. I highly recommend it!"

—Doug Fields, Teaching Pastor of Saddleback Community Church, bestselling author of Refuel and Fresh Start

"An original masterpiece. The God Hater re-opens our eyes to God's absolute justice and His unfathomable love."

—Dr. Kevin Leman, bestselling author of Have a New Kid by Friday

"If you enjoy white-knuckle, page-turning suspense, with a brilliant blend of cutting-edge apologetics, The God Hater will grab you for a long, long time."

—Beverly Lewis, New York Times bestselling author

"I've never seen a more powerful and timely illustration of the incarnation. Bill Myers has a way of making the Gospel accessible and relevant to readers of all ages. I highly recommend this book."

—Terri Blackstock, New York Times bestselling author

"Once again, Myers takes us into imaginative and intriguing depths, making us feel, think, and ponder all at the same time. Relevant and entertaining, The God Hater is not to be missed."

—James Scott Bell, bestselling author of Deceived and Try Fear

"A brilliant novel that feeds the mind and heart, The God Hater belongs at the top of your reading list."

—Angela Hunt, New York Times bestselling author

The God Hater is a rare combination of Christian fiction that is both entertaining and spiritually provocative. It has the ability to challenge your mind, as well as move your heart. It has a message of deep spiritual significance that is highly relevant for these times.”

—Paul Cedar, chairman of Mission America Coalition

About the Author

Bill Myers holds a degree in Theater Arts from the University of Washington and an honorary doctorate from the Theological Institute of Nimes, France, where he taught. As author/screenwriter/director his work has won over 50 national and international awards, including the C.S. Lewis Honor Award. His DVDs and books have sold 8 million copies. His children’s DVD and book series, McGee and Me, has sold 4.5 million copies, has won 40 Gold and Platinum awards, and has been aired on ABC as well as in 80 countries. His My Life As… series has sold 2.1 million copies. He has written, directed, and done voice work for Focus on the Family’s Adventures in Odyssey radio series and is the voice of Jesus in Zondervan’s NIV Audio Bible. As an author, nearly all of his children's series have made the bestseller list, as well as 7 of his adult novels. He has been interviewed for Good Morning America and ABC Nightly News. Several of his novels are currently under option for motion pictures, including Blood of Heaven, Threshold, Eli, Fire of Heaven, When the Last Leaf Falls, and Forbidden Doors. The motion picture, The Wager, starring Randy Travis and based on Myers’s novel by the same name, was released in 2009.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Howard Books; Original edition (September 28, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1439153264
  • ISBN-13: 978-1439153260
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.5 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (33 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #790,355 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Hi.
Thanks for checking up on me. Probably best to go over to my web site: www.Billmyers.com for biography information. And if you're really bored, there's my fan site over on Facebook:
www.facebook.com/pages/Bill-Myers/44983396181 Oh, and one last thing. If you're a student and your class reads one of my books, I'll do a 'meet the author' 30 min question and answer session by speakerphone with your class from my office here in California. If you're a reader's group, the same thing goes...in which case I'd recommend ELI to really get the discussion juices flowing - at least until THE GOD HATER comes out in 2010. Thanks for stopping by!
bill
www.Billmyers.com
and
www.facebook.com/pages/Bill-Myers/44983396181


 

Customer Reviews

33 Reviews
5 star:
 (18)
4 star:
 (12)
3 star:
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2 star:    (0)
1 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (33 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Genius, Idiot, or Lunatic, This Will Stick With You, March 16, 2011
By 
Wolfe Moffat (Franklinville, NY) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The God Hater: A Novel (Paperback)
For the longest time ever, Bill Myers was never at the top of my list. I mean, let's admit it, and come right out and say it. If you were to compare Bill Myers to the likes of Frank Peretti, Ted DeKker, or even Steven James, he probably doesn't match up. But he's been out there, and he's made waves every time he emerges. And this times, he really puts everything out there, and "The God Hater" is what we have waiting for us this time! Number one, what kind of title is that? It does kind of grab your attention, doesn't it? With praise from greats such as Jerry Jenkins and James Scott Bell, it is obvious that Myers didn't bother holding back. And by not holding back, gives us something unforgettable!

Dr. Nicholas Mackensie is an atheist of the worst kind, with a cruel word for everything daring to prove there is a God. Yet it is he who is chosen and challenged to come up with something that just might make sense for a computer programmed world. So how exactly would a man like Nicholas go about something like that? By becoming a Law-Giver, of course, which Nicholas despises the very thought of. But how exactly do you get through THAT world while living in THIS world? By becoming one of THEM! Is this exactly ideal? Never. And when a virus is introduced, things get more complicated, and somebody will pay! Is a man like Nicholas really ready to embrace such a thing?

Is this going to be a story that brings about the perfect theology everybody expects? That's never going to happen, until you know what God's Word says and you read your Bible. Yet Bill Myers has the right idea, just like Lewis had the right idea with Narnia. This isn't even close to Narnia, and was never supposed to be. But it will be met with a vengeance by some, while some will just love it, and others will think it is plain nuts. But so what? Whether you consider Bill Myers a genius, idiot, or just an altogether lunatic is irrelevant. Because he's done his work once again. And whether you like it or not, "The God Hater" will stick with people and have people thinking long after that final page. I loved it!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing Allegory About Jesus' Sacrifice for Us, February 23, 2011
This review is from: The God Hater: A Novel (Paperback)
I enjoy being transported to a different time and place when I read a novel. I was transported to a real and a `virtual' place in `The God Hater' by Bill Myers.

Here is the synopsis of this riveting novel:

A cranky, atheistic philosophy professor loves to shred the faith of incoming freshmen. He is chosen by a group of scientists to create a philosophy for a computer-generated world exactly like ours. Much to his frustration every model he introduces--from Darwinism, to Existentialism, to Relativism, to Buddhism--fails. The only way to preserve the computer world is to introduce laws from outside their system through a Law Giver. Of course this goes against everything he's ever believed, and he hates it. But even that doesn't completely work because the citizens of that world become legalists and completely miss the spirit behind the Law. The only way to save them is to create a computer character like himself to personally live and explain it. He does. So now there are two of him--the one in our world and the one in the computer world. Unfortunately a rival has introduced a virus into the computer world. Things grow worse until our computer-world professor sees the only way to save his world is to personally absorb the virus and the penalty for breaking the Law. Of course, it's clear to all, including our real-world professor, that this act of selfless love has become a reenactment of the Gospel. It is the only possible choice to save their computer world and, as he finally understands, our own.

Here is the biography of this author:

Bill Myers ([...]) holds a degree in Theater Arts from the University of Washington and an honorary doctorate from the Theological Institute of Nimes, France, where he taught. As author/screenwriter/director his work has won over 50 national and international awards, including the C.S. Lewis Honor Award. His DVDs and books have sold 8 million copies. His children's DVD and book series, McGee and Me, has sold 4.5 million copies, has won 40 Gold and Platinum awards, and has been aired on ABC as well as in 80 countries. His My Life As... series has sold 2.1 million copies. He has written, directed, and done voice work for Focus on the Family's Adventures in Odyssey radio series and is the voice of Jesus in Zondervan's NIV Audio Bible. As an author, nearly all of his children's series have made the bestseller list, as well as 7 of his adult novels. He has been interviewed for Good Morning America and ABC Nightly News. Several of his novels are currently under option for motion pictures, including Blood of Heaven, Threshold, Eli, Fire of Heaven, When the Last Leaf Falls, and Forbidden Doors. The motion picture, The Wager, starring Randy Travis and based on Myers's novel by the same name, was released in 2009.

The Author's Note prepares his readers for this story:

The following is fiction.

I've tried to make the science and theology reasonably accurate. But just as I'm sure I've made scientific blunders in the writing, I'm equally positive I've stepped on theological land mines. Then there's that whole pesky issue of allegories. They only capture pieces of truth, and are way too slippery to do much more. So, just as I would encourage you not to base your science upon this science, the same should go for your theology. As I said in my novel Eli, which in many ways is the flip side of this project, if something doesn't sound right or sticks in your throat, don't waste your time reading this. Go to the original Source and see what it says. (p. IX)

The main characters in this interesting novel are Dr. Nicholas Mackenzie, a philosophy professor at The University of California - Santa Barbara, and his colleague, Dr. Annie Brooks. Another main character is Dr. Mackenzie's brother, Travis, who is a genius in the field of Computer Science.

Annie is a woman of faith; she has difficulty with the strident atheism of her colleague. Here are her thoughts on a debate that Dr. Mackenzie engaged in on a TV program called God Talk:

He'd done it again. Her colleague and friend - if Dr. Nicholas Mackenzie could be said to have any friends - had shredded another person of faith. This time a Christian, some megachurch pastor hawking his latest book. Next time it could just as easily be a Jew or Muslim or Buddhist. The point was that Nicholas hated religion. And heaven help anyone who tried to defend it. (p. 6)

That sounds like the description of many professors in our public universities.

Dr. Mackenzie shares the reason why he likes to appear on that program:

...Nicholas was a frequent guest on God Talk. Despite his reclusive lifestyle, not to mention his general disdain for people, he always accepted the producer's invitation. Few things gave him more pleasure than exposing toxic nature of religion. Besides, these outings provided a nice change of pace. Instead of the usual stripping away of naïve college students' faith in his classroom, the TV guests occasionally provided a challenge.

Occasionally. (p. 7)

We also get a glimpse into his world view:

He had abandoned society long ago. Or rather, it had abandoned him. Not that there was any love lost. Today's culture was an intellectual wasteland - a world of prechewed ideas, politically correct causes, sound-bite news coverage, and novels that were nothing more than comic books. (He'd given up on movies and television long ago.) Why waste his time on such pabulum when he could surround himself with Sartre, Hegel, Kierkegaard, Nietzsche - men whose work would provide more meaningful companionship in one evening than most people could in a lifetime? (p. 8)

Dr. Brooks, a biology professor, shared a revelation with her Molecular Biology 201 students that surprised them:

"Now, for nearly fifty years, origin-of-life experts have pretty much rejected the concept of life forming in our planet by random chance."

She turned back to the class. Those who were awake frowned as if they'd misheard. Good, she'd finally gotten their attention. In fact, a young Asian near the center of the auditorium actually raised her hand.

"Yes?" Annie nodded.

"Is that true?"

"Absolutely. And it's been true since the 1960s. Every origin-of-life expert worth his or her salt has rejected the concept that life formed by random chance."

The girl's frown deepened and Annie answered the unasked question.

"You didn't learn this in your high school biology class because it's an inconvenient truth." With a smile she added, "One of our dirty little secrets. But if you plan to pursue biology and want to play with the big kids, it's a paradox you'll have to accept." (p.22)

She then went on to share scientific evidence to explain and support her assertions.

Annie had a precocious young son named Russell, nicknamed Rusty. We learn what brought her and Dr. Mackenzie together. We learn she became pregnant outside of marriage, and was abandoned by most:

And who helped her through those next months? Certainly not her friends, not from either side of the moral aisle. After all, she was a college professor, an advocate of the faith, a role model to young women. So, while her nonreligious friends secretly gloated, her religious ones subtly evaporated. It was only Dr. Nicholas Mackenzie, the curmudgeon she publicly debated on campus, who stayed at her side. Never once did he point out her hypocrisy. Never once did he do anything but offer help. A surprising paradox, for the crank that both faculty and students went out of their way to avoid. (p. 29)

This book is full of interesting computing and scientific data - but nothing that is too hard for the amateur to understand. Here is a fascinating section on how they created the virtual community that is based on our society:

"What's in here?" she [Annie] asked.

"Nanobots."

"Miniature robots," Annie said, looking at the cylinder. "People have been hypothesizing about their use for years."

"Yes. Each is the size of a single human blood cell. When injected into the circulatory system, they perform whatever task we design them for. They can track down and destroy disease, repair tissue---"

"But in the future," Annie corrected. "Sometime in the future."

Agapoff shook her head. "As early as 2003 a researcher from the University of Illinois designed a batch he injected into rats to cure their type one diabetes." (p. 107)

They used that technology to create a virtual person in their new computer community.

In the virtual community, the individuals - who had free will, just as we do - fell victim to the same temptations found in our world, included unlimited knowledge for any and all takers, aka the Internet:

Nicholas turned to Travis. "The rest of the community was drawn to this?"

"Like moths to a flame."

He pushed up his glasses and scowled. "Our instructions weren't good enough for them."

Travis shook his head. "Now everybody wants to know why. Why they have to follow authority, why they have to treat each other as sacred, why not this way, why not that way. Now they all want to experiment on their own, to do it their own way."

Annie softly quoted, "Each doing whatever is right in their own eyes."

"Regardless of the long-term consequences?" Nicholas asked.

"That's right."

"So, we've come full circle."

"Short-term gratification equals selfish ambition equals self-destruction," Travis said. "Just like old times." (pp. 136-137)

This book uses the life of Jesus Christ and many of its elements in an allegorical fashion. Included in different variations are the Sermon on the... Read more ›
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Creative and Fascinating Read, October 28, 2010
This review is from: The God Hater: A Novel (Paperback)
The God Hater paints a picture within a picture and spins a fascinating story.

Professor Nicholas MacKenzie, a famously arrogant atheist, finds himself sucked into a cyberworld drama by his techie brother, Travis.

Travis has discovered the secret to Artificial Intelligence and cut throat spies will do what it takes to steal that secret. And there is another problem in Travis's newly created world. Seems the people have a tendency to kill each other off. Nicholas is the only one with the philosophical expertise to provide the missing piece of the puzzle. Surely, his knowledge will give the programmers the key to the human psyche.

Reality, created and otherwise, do not follow carefully crafted plans and Nicholas finds his whole world and belief system twisting and turning madly as he tries to keep the computer world alive and flourishing.

This is a whip-fast read and one that is both enlightening and challenging. There are a couple of rough patches that paused the pace a bit, but overall this is a keeper. Fascinating look at the human mind, spirituality and faith.
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