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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.”

To contact Philip,
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email Joannie: 
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531 thoughts on “About Philip”

  1. Having spent 33 days in a hospital was something I needed to be able to visit people in the hospital. There was a time when a 76 year old man told me the doctors told him he had a 25% chance of living. I visited him each day trying to listen and encourage him. I walked into the waiting room where he was just before surgery and spoke with him. Nobody was saying a word and looked hopeless. I spoke with him and he was very anxious. I told him to let the doctors do the surgery and to trust God for the outcome. He immediately calmed down. His family was shocked I said that. The nurses told me they were waiting for him to calm down. As I left they thanked me. The next time I saw him he cried. Before that time people saw him as grump but after that time he was a changed man. He became grateful. He lived for almost 15 years.

  2. I would be curious to know what (if anything) you make of the Jordan Peterson phenomenon. In some of your books you’ve written perceptively about the lingering impact of Christianity on our post-Christian culture through organizations like Amnesty International and Alcoholics Anonymous. Is Peterson something similar? I don’t know what to make of him myself. He’s obviously not a Christian (it’s not even clear he believes in God) but he clearly takes the Bible seriously, and it’s refreshing to see that from someone in the elite. Is he a ‘noble pagan’ like the Church Fathers viewed Plato and Aristotle?

    • I don’t know enough to comment very lucidly. I’ve seen interviews in which he broke down in tears speaking of Jesus, and another in which he paused quite some time before answering that, No, he did not believe in Jesus’ bodily resurrection. I liken him to one of the philosophers Paul addressed so wisely in Acts 17–only, of course, Peterson is already familiar with the Christian story. He builds on a wide Christian base, and I’m sure he knows that. Reminds me of Tom Holland’s book Dominion, which credits Christianity for most of the good things in Western Civilization, while not buying into the underlying story.

  3. Hello !
    I dont want to miss this opportunity to write to you to tell you how awesome it has been to read your writings. You intrigue me with your questions that I myself am too afraid to ask out loud. Your sheer honesty makes you human, therefore makes it feel okay for me to be also. The books I’ve read of yours are so thought provoking and inspiring I thank God for your gift. It’s so nice to see someone brave enough to be real. I look forward to reading more of your books (you have quite a few after all)
    Thank you for writing it has helped me immensely!!
    -Emily
    Ps Prince of Egypt movie was one of my fav movies growing up- did you actually write the script for it?!?

    • I didn’t write the script to Prince of Egypt. However, I wrote about it in a book published with the movie’s release, a chapter later adapted in The Bible Jesus Read.

  4. Philip,
    I’ve been a Christian all my life. I lead a small group Bible Study and have used your materials several times. I really enjoy your writing.
    I’ve never understood the difference between Evangelical Christians and ‘just plain Christians’. I read about Evangelical Christians on this web site but, to me, it just describes Christians. So, I guess I’m an Evangelical?? Can you help me by telling me the difference between Christians and Evangelical Christians?
    Thanks,
    Dave Kline

    • That’s a great question, and there are entire books written in answer. It’s refreshing to me that you don’t focus on the distinctions. Basically, evangelicals take the Bible more seriously than some other shades of Christians, and tend to emphasize a personal conversion experience and the importance of spreading the message to others. I prefer the term “Jesus followers,” keeping the focus on the one we follow.

  5. Good morning, Sir

    I have just read in Devotionals Daily your write up Do Yo Want To Know God?

    You asked at the end “Why doesn’t God do what we want Him to?” and “Why don’t we act the way God wants us to?”
    And I ask, as a parent do you do everything your child wants you to? Of course not. That kid throwing a tantrum
    at 8 PM because Mum/Dad would not give them the chocolate bar they believe they are entitled to does believe that their parents are just being mean and inconsiderate of their suffering. What the kid does not know is that the parent denying them the chocolate worries more about their wellbeing, the effect sugar has on their health right before bedtime, their teeth and all the chocolate they’ve already eaten that day.
    God is sovereign and knows what we need, the things that I have in my life are the things that I need. What God did not give me was not needed. What God has meant for me to have will never go to anyone else and even if I happen to lose something that was meant for me, I will get it back eventually because it was mine to begin with.
    God asks us to be obedient, and disobedience is our human trademark. When we learn to operate by faith, open up our hearts and our souls to the Holy Spirit for Him to take the lead and believe that Jesus died for me to pay the debt I owed by couldn’t pay, we open our lives to transformation beyond our wildest imagination.
    I lived the first 26 years of my life barely acknowledging God and praying sporadically whenever I wanted to, nothing I did back then ever went right. My life was in shambles and depression was looming at the horizon.
    Then I drastically switched during the following 26 years by opening my heart and soul to the Holy Spirit and praying on the daily. The difference in my life as I patiently built a relationship with God on the daily is like day and night.
    Yes, The Lord does what we want Him to do when we approach Him from a standpoint of selfless obedience and pray His promises daily. Just surrender onto Him and accept Jesus as your Lord and Saviour and you will see.

    Greetings
    Paula

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