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Religiously Transmitted Diseases: finding a cure when faith doesn't feel right
 
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Religiously Transmitted Diseases: finding a cure when faith doesn't feel right (Paperback)

by Ed Gungor (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (8 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Product Description
Do you feel like something is always wrong, that you can't seem to "get it right" in your relationship with God?  Then you probably have a diseased faith - thankfully, there is way back to the innocence and freshness of the hour you first believed.
There are only two ways to approach faith: a human-centered approach, or a God-centered one.  A human-centered approach rests on human effort and persistence-human "coulds" and "shoulds"  It seems noble to work hard to secure godly, fruitful living.  But a human-centered faith is fundamentally wrong and harmful.  It is about human PERFORMANCE, which ultimately leaves people tired, oppressed and feeling distant from God. A God-centered faith, on the other hand, is refreshing, surprising and nourishing to the human soul.  True freedom is found whenever we center our faith on the PERSON of God and not the PERFORMANCE of humankind. 


About the Author
Ed Gungor has been in ministry for over twenty-five years. Ed and his wife, Gail of thirty years, have four children and live in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Ed currently serves as Senior Pastor at Peoples Church in Tulsa and travels around the U.S. speaking in churches and universities and conducting seminars.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Thomas Nelson (May 10, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1599510014
  • ISBN-13: 978-1599510019
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.4 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #216,422 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Well Written, Humorous, Easy to Read, May 15, 2006
From the moment this book was delivered I was eager to begin reading. While the book cover did not tempt me, the title peaked my curiosity. The author's attempt to get the reader to examine their faith was a success. I found myself examining my faith and comparing it to the illnesses he discusses.

The author uses witty illustrations to connect with the reader. I felt as though I were having a discussion with him. His style is simple and clear.

Some of the many "diseases" Rev. Gungor discusses are Borg Disease, Pharisaic Disorder and Deadly O. Those with Borg disease want everyone to be just like them. They think all people should dress and think alike. They do not allow for individual ideas, personality or thinking. Those with Pharisaic Disorder are caught up in laws. "We've always done it this way" is one of their favorite phrases. They like to build fence laws to protect others and themselves from sinning. They end up placing restrictions on their and other's lives. Those with the Deadly O are striving to be good rather than accepting the Grace that God freely offers. The diseases are traps we allow ourselves to fall in. Rev. Gungor offers a prescription for prevention and a cure.

I'm glad I read "Religiously Transmitted Diseases." It is well written, humorous, easy to read and very interesting. I think Ed Gungor has written a winner. I intend to recommend it to my friends and don't be surprised if a quote or two doesn't end of in one of my sermons.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Reviewed by Jim Melcher, February 19, 2007
Upon observing Ed Gungor's new book Religiously Transmitted Diseases for the first time, the reader might be forgiven for thinking that the provocative title will deliver a stinging rejection of American organized religion from a hostile critic, such as the recent bestseller Letters to a Christian Nation. However, the reader quickly discovers that Religiously Transmitted Diseases is not an argument that religion has become a disease in American society, but rather a sympathetic call from within the Christian church to heal what has gone wrong within it. Gungor, the senior pastor at Peoples Church in Tulsa, Oklahoma, argues that every American Christian church and member suffers from time to time from one of a number of spiritual maladies. All of these maladies reflect a state in which something that was good has broken down in some way, as a disease affects the human body. Yet Gungor does not believe the patients are terminally ill-far from it. He believes that by recognizing these maladies, and by opening themselves up again to God's grace, Christians can get back to a healthier and, above all, more joyful state.

The target audience of Gungor's book is his fellow evangelicals, and in particular those who have lost the joy of their belief or who feel this has happened to their congregation. He speaks to the reader's yearning to return to the joy felt, in the words of the hymn "Amazing Grace", "the hour I first believed". He urges the readers to think back to the time when they chose to accept Jesus and what a joyful experience that was. However, even those Christians who haven't had a cataclysmic, born again experience will find much that is useful in this book. Many of the "diseases" Gungor notes are from over-seriousness or loss of joy, and his enthusiasm for his faith is (if you'll pardon the expression) infectious, even as he is very understanding of the problems people face in their faith. (One is not completely surprised to read in this book that Gungor was one of the "Jesus People" in the 1970s; he still reflects the fervor and the joyfulness in faith for which they were known). This is not to say that Gungor does not recognize the pain in so many places in the world, but he urges the reader to see how pain sometimes can be a gift from God. One would expect in this type of book that the author would have a strong command of the Bible, and Gungor does. Perhaps more noteworthy, however, is that his command of popular culture is outstanding as well as entertaining, and he is able to make most of his points in a way that readers will appreciate.

In addition to his agility to speak about popular culture and the state of America throughout his lifetime, another of the of the themes of this book is that Christians should be open to new ways of looking at things. In one chapter, he notes how as a Republican and an evangelical how disappointed he was in the election of President Clinton in 1992, but that a conversation with a woman in St. Louis after the election helped him understand a different perspective on the outcome. Similarly, in another of his briefer chapters, he notes the need to change attitudes toward the environment to one more protective of God's creation. However, his statement that he believes both the abortion and gay rights movements have "gone too far" is just one thing that helps to show that this is certainly not a theological liberal in the mold of controversial Bishops John Spong or Gene Robinson.

As an Episcopalian, I might not be in the target audience of Gungor's book. But even I can certainly grasp and relate to much of what he is saying about the church and its members, and his evangelical target audience will surely find that this book resonates well with them as well. A wide range of Christians will find much of value in this work. While Gungor's humor is a bit more understated than that of a Dr. Patch Adams, he is still, in this book, a joyful and an effective healer. Religiously Transmitted Diseases does much to show its readers both what needs healing in their lives and how to seek it.



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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The title snared me; the book thrilled me., August 15, 2006
By W. Self (Macon, GA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I was browsing in B&N when the title of this book caught my eye. I had never heard of it or the author, but I had to buy it, and I had to read it. It was thought-provoking, humorous and candid. I was born and raised a Southern Baptist; still am. But, I've grown weary over the fundamentalism and creedism of the leadership in the SBC. This book should be a "must read" for discussion groups pouring over why church and some Christians are more impediments to faith in Christ than evangelists spreading the good news.

I will read it again!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Loved it!
I have had most of the questions presented in the book, myself and yet could find no one who really addressed the possibility of answers. I was in St. Read more
Published 11 months ago by M. Brooks

4.0 out of 5 stars Religiously Transmitted Diseases
Religiously Transmitted Diseases is an entertaining work that uncovers some very real and very serious issues in regards to religious beliefs. Read more
Published 11 months ago by Tami Brady

1.0 out of 5 stars More pseudo-evangelicalism
The way Gungor goes on, any Christian who wants to live a life of separateness (Israel has always been called to separateness! Read more
Published 23 months ago

4.0 out of 5 stars Compelling and Timely
Religiously Transmitted Diseases is a compelling look at some of the doctrines, both spoken and unspoken, that threaten to distract believers from the purity of the gospel... Read more
Published on August 3, 2006 by K. McBride

5.0 out of 5 stars Helpful Book
Escellent practical analysis of some of the reasons why the society sees the church as irrelavent or downright damaging.
Published on July 10, 2006 by Prentice House

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