Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Why I Left, Why I Stayed: Conversations on Christianity Between an Evangelical Father and His Humanist Son
Why I Left, Why I Stayed: Conversations on Christianity Between an Evangelical Father and His Humanist Son | Tony Campolo, Bart Campolo
5 posts | 3 read | 3 to read
Bestselling Christian author, activist, and scholar Tony Campolo and his son Bart, an avowed Humanist, debate their spiritual differences and explore similarities involving faith, belief, and hope that they share.Over a Thanksgiving dinner, fifty-year-old Bart Campolo announced to his Evangelical pastor father, Tony Campolo, that after a lifetime immersed in the Christian faith, he no longer believed in God. The revelation shook the Campolo family dynamic and forced father and son to each reconsider his own personal journey of faith--dual spiritual investigations into theology, faith, and Humanism that eventually led Bart and Tony back to one another. In Why I Left, Why I Stayed, the Campolos reflect on their individual spiritual odysseys and how they evolved when their paths diverged. Tony, a renowned Christian teacher and pastor, recounts his experience, from the initial heartbreak of discovering Bart's change in faith, to the subsequent healing he found in his own self-examination, to his embracing of his son's point of view. Bart, an author and Humanist chaplain at the University of Southern California, considers his faith journey from Progressive Christianity to Humanism, revealing how it affected his outlook and transformed his relationship with his father. As Why I Left, Why I Stayed makes clear, a painful schism between father and son that could have divided them irreparably became instead an opening that offered each an invaluable look not only at what separated them, but more importantly, what they shared.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
swynn
post image
Pickpick

(2017) This is an alternating series of essays by evangelist Tony Campolo and his son Bart, who "left Christianity" and became a humanist chaplain at USC. It's effectively a conversation about what each finds valuable in their chosen faiths, and what they find lacking in the other's. It's admirably respectful and there's a surprising amount of common ground-- the kind of conversation that I wish were happening everywhere always.

28 likes1 stack add
quote
MatchlessMarie
post image

70 likes1 stack add
blurb
MatchlessMarie
post image

Here‘s my TBR for #25inFive. Shout out to @LectricSheep for telling me about this #readathon! It will be nice to take it slow for this one.

LectricSheep Yesssss!! 🎉 6y
59 likes1 comment
blurb
MatchlessMarie
post image

1. You mean you guys don‘t screenshot the Goodreads loading screen? 🙃
2. The tagged book for my Theology book club and just jumped in with #thebelljarinas for a read-a-long for The Bell Jar which I read annually anyway 🤓
3. Groceries. Made 🥑 tacos last night.
4. Good question. Probably a salad of some sort.
5. My next Waitress pie 😋🥧 #humpdaypost

irksit No, but I‘m totally going to start doing that! 6y
Susanita I‘m never quick enough! 6y
BkClubCare I respect your answer to #5. I love pie 6y
68 likes3 comments
review
TN_Lane
Mehso-so

Welcome to the lukewarm. It‘s comforting to see a father and son work so hard to protect their love for one another after such a profound spiritual separation, but there is little passion beyond that. Tony Campolo has long been one of my favorite theologians, so it‘s possible I expected too much. Regardless, this was disappointing.