Philip Yancey's featured book Where The Light Fell: A Memoir is available here: See purchase options!

About Philip

Growing up in a strict, fundamentalist church in the southern USA, a young Philip Yancey tended to view God as “a scowling Supercop, searching for anyone who might be having a good time—in order to squash them.” Yancey jokes today about being in recovery from a toxic church. “Of course, there were good qualities too. If a neighbor’s house burned down, the congregation would rally around and show charity—if, that is, the house belonged to a white person. I grew up confused by the contradictions. We heard about love and grace, but I didn’t experience much. And we were taught that God answers prayers, miraculously, but my father died of polio just after my first birthday, despite many prayers for his healing.”

For Yancey, reading offered a window to a different world. So, he devoured books that opened his mind, challenged his upbringing, and went against what he had been taught. A sense of betrayal engulfed him. “I felt I had been lied to. For instance, what I learned from a book like To Kill a Mockingbird or Black Like Me contradicted the racism I encountered in church. I went through a period of reacting against everything I was taught, and even discarding my faith. I began my journey back mainly by encountering a world very different than I had been taught, an expansive world of beauty and goodness. Along the way I realized that God had been misrepresented to me. Cautiously, warily, I returned, circling around the faith to see if it might be true.”

Ever since, Yancey has explored the most basic questions and deepest mysteries of the Christian faith, guiding millions of readers with him. Early on he crafted best-selling books such as Disappointment with God and Where is God When it Hurts? while also editing The Student Bible. He coauthored three books with the renowned surgeon Dr. Paul Brand. “No one has influenced me more,” he says. “We had quite a trade: I gave words to his faith, and in the process he gave faith to my words.” In time, he has explored central matters of the Christian faith, penning award-winning titles such as The Jesus I Never KnewWhat’s So Amazing About Grace? and Prayer: Does It Make Any Difference? His books have garnered 13 Gold Medallion Awards from Christian publishers and booksellers. He currently has more than 17 million books in print, published in over 50 languages worldwide. In his memoir, Where the Light Fell, Yancey recalls his lifelong journey from strict fundamentalism to a life dedicated to a search for grace and meaning, thus providing a type of prequel to all his other books.

Yancey worked as a journalist in Chicago for some twenty years, editing the youth magazine Campus Life while also writing for a wide variety of magazines. In the process he interviewed diverse people enriched by their personal faith, such as President Jimmy Carter, Habitat for Humanity founder Millard Fuller, and Dame Cicely Saunders, founder of the modern hospice movement. In 1992 he and his wife Janet, a social worker and hospice chaplain, moved to the foothills of Colorado, and his writing took a more personal, introspective turn.

“I write books for myself,” he says. “I’m a pilgrim, recovering from a bad church upbringing, searching for a faith that makes its followers larger and not smaller. Writing became for me a way of deconstructing and reconstructing faith. I feel overwhelming gratitude that I can make a living exploring the issues that most interest me.

“I tend to go back to the Bible as a model, because I don’t know a more honest book. I can’t think of any argument against God that isn’t already included in the Bible. To those who struggle with my books, I reply, ‘Then maybe you shouldn’t be reading them.’ Yet some people do need the kinds of books I write. They’ve been burned by the church, or they’re upset about certain aspects of Christianity. I understand that feeling of disappointment, even betrayal. I feel called to speak to those living in the borderlands of faith.”

531 thoughts on “About Philip”

  1. Brett, I’m in the midst of a memoir that revisits those days, with circumstances we share in common. This came at a good time to encourage me. Thank you for taking the time to write, and remember that brokenness seems almost a prerequisite for God to use us. –Philip

  2. Thank you so much for your reply and your help! This is such a difficult topic, but I believe our group will be blessed immeasurably by your book and the additional questions!
    Heather

  3. I am not thanking you for the books you have written and that I have liked so much, but I am thanking God for you and the books.

    Neither did I want to read the other peoples messages left to you, so that my opinion would be my own and not colored with other peoples classes.

    I wanted to comment some text of the latest I have been reading (not finished yet), the Soul adventure. There you agree, that Christians have been killing a lot of other humans. I am not against the info, but I am not accepting the numbers. FYIO, I’ll give here one good source for checking the numbers. Both are from the same web site, just different pages:

    http://necrometrics.com/gunsorxp.htm#XP
    http://necrometrics.com/pre1700b.htm#Martyrs

    Maybe you have know that already, so I am sorry for stepping in. Now I will go back lurking…

  4. I have always admired your books. In one of them, you write about your relationship with Mel Wright. As a gay Christian, how should I “read” you concerning same sex relationships? So many of our more progressive evangelical friends (i.e. Tony Compalo) are on our side. How about you?

Comments are closed.