I know the cover says it is by William P. Young but it's really by Jurgen Moltmann. I'll explain.
Someone recently lent me a copy of
The Shack. I've read several negative reviews of the book but thought it would be beneficial to review the book myself. As a piece of literature it was mediocre--it reminded me of several other books I've read in the "Christian book" genre. There isn't much character development. The literary devices used are kind of interesting but the characters themselves are not.
The book has a lot more with theology than the average Christian fiction book. When I read some of the negative reviews I thought that they were perhaps making too much of some of the passages in the book. After reading the book, I'm not sure that the judgments of the reviewers were always correct but it is clear that The Shack definitely has a theological agenda.
At its core the book is about God and the problem of evil. On this particular topic it does a reasonably good job. There are many books on this topic but this is the only work of fiction that I've read that deals with it directly. I did not necessarily agree with everything the author said about God and evil but the author seems to follow
St. Augustine's line of reasoning and is operating within the bounds of historic Christianity.
I wish the same were true for the rest of the book and all the other issues that are addressed. God the Father is revealed is portrayed in the book as an African-American woman because the main character has too much baggage with his own earthly father to deal with God as Father. It is true that God is neither male nor female but He has chosen to reveal Himself as Father. There are passages in Scripture where God is said to comfort us a mother comforts her child but God never speaks of Himself as mother. He compares certain activities which He performs as being like something a mother would do but never says, "I am your mother." The author of the book seems to be addressing some of the debates that come up when women have had very negative experiences with their fathers and it is asked if it is appropriate for them to call God "mother." Later on in the book, God the Father does reveal Himself as a Father when the main character is ready.
It's hard to imagine falling before the god in The Shack in compete and utter terror in they way we often see people in Scripture react when they come in contact with God. The author is rightly critical of the modern evangelical concept of God as just some abstract being but substitutes it with another false picture of God as my buddy.
Some of the reviews accused the book of teaching modalism--the idea that God is one person who expresses Himself in three different modes of operation. When I first started reading the book I was surprised because the book really seemed to be teaching an opposite error--Tritheism. Tritheism denies the oneness of the essence of God. The book presents us with a Trinity without order and without unity--it's all about relationship.
As I read on, I did find some modalism. Papa (God the Father) is often said in the book to have scars on his wrists from the crucifixion. This is an old heresy associated with modalism known as Patripassianism in which it is taught that God the Father suffered on the cross. The book makes several statements supporting patripassianism.
As I mulled this over in my head, I started thinking how very odd it was that somebody would try to teach both Tritheism and modalism at the same time. Then it hit me--that's exactly what
Jurgen Moltmann did.
Moltmann's Trinity was all about relationship. Moltmann also taught that the Father suffered on the cross. Moltmann taught a form of
panentheism which is less explicit in
The Shack but can still be found there. Far more explicit in The Shack is Moltmann's transexual god--a motherly Father and fatherly Mother. Just like Moltmann,
The Shack is also opposed to order in marital relationships. Moltmann and
The Shack both have deep-seated problems with authority. It's hard to imagine how Moltmann's god or the god of
The Shack would cause some of the reactions to God that we find in Scripture. In Scripture we find people falling in terror before God because of a knowledge of their own sinfulness. We find Moses being told that no man can see God and live. We find the Apostles describing themselves as slaves of God. It's hard to imagine any of this happening of the god found in the
The Shack is the true God.
The Shack portrays God as an egalitarian and even a feminist who thinks we would all be better off if women ruled the world (although we would still have problems just not so many wars). The Scriptures are pretty clear that God has given men and women different and complimentary roles and placed them in a certain order. This cannot be explained as God giving in to the culture. Jesus was not afraid to go against the culture of His day and God certainly was not.
I've seen some reviews that accuse the book of teaching universalism. I don't think that's true. The book does speak of Jesus saving people who were Muslims, Buddhists, Republicans, Democrats, etc. but denies that there are many paths to God. Jesus says that He goes down many paths to get people. What is unclear is what happens to those people once they are in relationship to Him. The book never really answers the question. The book does say that Jesus has no interest in making them Christians.
I'm not clear on whether or not some of these people know they are in relationship with Christ according to the book. I'm not sure if they remain Jews, Buddhists, Muslims, etc. according to the book. It seems irresponsible for the author not to flesh out what is meant in the book. The statement shocks and make people think, but doesn't really give any answers. My guess is that the author believes that there are some who are united to Christ but do not know it.
The god in The Shack is also very anti-institutional. Jesus has no use for the church according to The Shack. I do not deny that institution does become bad when it becomes the goal but it is not evil in and of itself. Anytime two or more people get together for anything, some type of institution will develop. In the book of Acts we find that the church met and decided to appoint deacons--this was an institutional act. The Apostle Paul says that God has appointed some to be teachers and some to be pastors and some to function in other capacities in the church which tells us that people in union with Christ are not to live in isolation but to serve one another in the body of Christ. According to what Jesus said in Matthew 28, the church is called to make disciples of all nations. They do this by baptizing and teaching. Being brought into communion with the Triune God is not just based on some feeling, it is based on objective acts. If it were all based on feeling and we were honest with ourselves we would all be in despair. Jesus never says that He makes disciples through the teachings of Muslims and Buddhists.
And this brings us to another similarity between The Shack and Moltmann. Both make assertions without any real Scriptural support. They don't take the time to address opposing viewpoints. What we end up with is a god who looks an awful lot like the person writing about him.
Anyhow, I could go on forever but others have written plenty and I just wanted to offer my own observation about
The Shack/Moltmann connection. For a good critique of Moltmann, other theologies of the Trinity, and great suggestions for developing a doctrine of the Trinity, I highly recommend
The Holy Trinity by Robert Letham.
Given the book's popularity, I think pastors should read this book so they know what some in their congregation are probably reading. It is also interesting to see what Moltmann's concept of the Trinity would look like if you ran into Him/Her. Perhaps someone should write a book showing what all the various models of the Trinity would look like if you ran into them. I do think that pastors should also be careful in how they address those who are reading the book. Many have been recommended this book after suffering a great loss and shouldn't be attacked for reading the book.
I hope this review was helpful in understanding the theology of
The Shack. I tried to deal with the book as charitably as possible. There is a forum which is dedicated to the discussion of the book. I posted
some comments there but received no response, so I assume that my interpretation of the book is correct. If you read the threads, you will find that the author does not seem open at all to anyone who disagrees with him. In his biography he says that he is no longer a member of any church body because he doesn't think any would have him. I think the real problem is that he will not have the church.