![]() But it means the Pharisees are my people. Those are my roots, and they are good roots. ![]() I grew up fundamentalist, evangelical, Protestant. I want to bring to light the process of transformation, what that looks like. The nature of the character of God as relational, as a love that pursues us relentlessly and wants to burn out of everything that keeps us from being free. What are you fundamentally trying to address in your writing? Christianity Today editor Mark Galli decided to find out. Given the genre of writing, it's understandable that some readers are left confused about what Young really believes. It's teaching that many Christians have found liberating, and many other Christians have rejected. Like his sleeper best-selling novel, The Shack, his new book, Cross Roads (FaithWords), covers God, the human condition, and the process of transformation-though a fair amount of teaching finds its way into the story. ![]() ![]() William Paul Young has touched a nerve-if sales of millions of books is any sign. ![]()
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