Kreeft's latest book is profound yet chatty, brilliant yet warm and humorous. It is studded with new perspectives. A great gift for atheists but also for sceptics and doubters.
My friend Peter Kreeft has done it again. Especially for those who have enjoyed his dialogues, these fictional but quite realistic letters were written to discuss briefly a wide range of issues, chiefly those involved at the crossroads of atheism, theism, and Christianity. Vintage Kreeft from the outset, the reader is invited to follow from Aristotle to Buddha to Chesterton to Da Vinci and on to Freud, Flew, Hinduism, Lewis, and Jimmy Stewart. What a trip, all moving quickly but thoughtfully. You don’t enjoy philosophy? It’s helpful but not strictly required here. You sometimes disagree with the conclusions in these sorts of discussions? That’s fine—you may join the conversation, too, for we are all free to think for ourselves. But this is a delightful trip, one that may well serve as its own conversation-starter.
More than a decade ago, as I was working on another work of Catholic apologetics, a friend remarked that while my efforts in regard to Fundamentalist Christians was useful, a new apologetics was needed, not dealing with classical "in-house" Christian theological differences but to advance a conversation with atheists and agnostics, whose influence (if not numbers) was on the rise. That an erudite philosopher like Peter Kreeft should respond to that challenge with gusto and competence is most encouraging. Indeed, philosophy (the use of unaided human reason with no recourse to theological categories) is the ideal ground on which to engage a dialogue with non-theists. Professor Kreeft here brings all his usual talents of precision, readability, and affability to the fore, as we have come to expect. We are all in his debt for this most needed and most welcome contribution.
Rev. Peter M. J. Stravinskas
Many young people today find it very difficult to believe in God, and evangelists for the atheist position are thick on the ground in our culture. This is why this book is so needed and so useful. In the course of these “letters” to a smart young atheist, Dr. Kreeft addresses most of the principal philosophical objections to God’s existence. His communiques are witty, friendly, deeply intelligent, and appropriately challenging. I would warmly recommend this book to anyone struggling to believe in God.
Letters to an Atheistspeaks the vernacular of the too-smart-for-the-room atheist who’s never been invited to encounter the hard diamond of Truth himself. As ever, Peter Kreeft models the very best of Christian apologetics: he wants to win the atheist not the argument. Believers will learn a ton from this book; atheists, even more.
Kreeft’s letters demonstrate how to hold charitable, fruitful dialogue with unbelievers. Kreeft covers all the famous arguments for God’s existence, including Aquinas’ Five Ways and the arguments from desire, morality, fine tuning, and Big Bang cosmology. But he does so with a refreshing friendliness. The letters lack the polemical and turgid prose seen in many books on atheism. Instead, his book is sharp, witty, and warm, and one of the first I’d recommend to anyone wrestling with faith.
Peter Kreeft’s Letters to an Atheist is a perfect example of John Paul II’s insistence that the Church proposes rather than imposes. This gem of a book is brim full of divine signposts and suggestions which we find all around us and within. The many distinctions and proofs are clear and powerful, presented always in a most delicate and sensitive appreciation for the inviolability of conscience. The book ends where every good book on the Faith must—with an invitation, an invitation to Michael the young atheist (and to the reader) to follow his 'own pointing fingers.' There can be no faith without a further question, for creation and salvation are deep mysteries. And a question, of course, means a quest. A most delightful read!
Peter Kreeft reminds me of C. S. Lewis. He has an astonishing ability to communicate complex and complicated philosophical concepts simply and succinctly. These letters to a young atheist will convince all but the most proud and prejudiced that faith is rational and that reason leads to faith.
There are lots of books about atheism. This one is different. Kreeft knows that logical arguments do not exist in a vacuum, because reasoning takes place among living minds. His book invites a real human dialogue between writer and reader, as friends and partners in seeking the truth. Just one caveat: You must really want to find it.
Peter Kreeft's Letters to an Atheist may well convince the open minded non-believer of the reasonableness of belief in God. Kreeft's style is both engaging and accessible. Letters to an Atheist is engaging because the literary form of letter draws in the reader. Who doesn't like to receive thoughtful letters? Letters to an Atheist is accessible because Kreeft makes philosophy not merely an abstract head game but a matter of real engagement with living issues. Kreeft draws on insights from a wide range of important figures in the history of philosophy, on both sides of the theistic question, including Thomas Aquinas and Bertrand Russell, Pascal and Nietzsche. Kreeft covers all the major reasons for rejecting as well as for accepting God's existence. If you or someone who love has doubts, questions, and difficulties with God's existence, this is the book to get.
Kreeft’s compassionate and passionate arguments for the existence of God are peppered with pointed insights, flashes of light that turn the tables with a turn of phrase. Sharp. Witty. Wise. Clear. Eye-opening. Compelling. A joy to read. I often found a smile on my face from the simple delight of truth-seeking.
The book makes amazing and convincing points on possibly the most important topic of all time: Does God exist?. .. . I really did like this book and learned a tremendous amount from Kreeft on how to dialogue with an atheist. Formatting the book in written letters was brilliant; the book is short to begin with and the conversational tone made it not only a quick read, but it really got me invested in the relationship between Kreeft and Michael and Michael’s progress from atheism.
I’ve known Peter Kreeft for almost fifty years. And apart from a deepening of wisdom, he is now as he was when I first met him: supremely clever at dialectical argument, single-minded in the pursuit of truth, disarming in the sincerity of his simple and joyful love of Christ. All of these virtues are on full display in Letters to a Young Atheist, making it a uniquely powerful tool for evangelization. Of the many books out there taking aim against the so-called New Atheism, this is surely one of the very best.
The book makes amazing and convincing points on possibly the most important topic of all time: Does God exist? . . . . I really did like this book and learned a tremendous amount from Kreeft on how to dialogue with an atheist. Formatting the book in written letters was brilliant; the book is short to begin with and the conversational tone made it not only a quick read, but it really got me invested in the relationship between Kreeft and Michael and Michael’s progress from atheism.
More than a decade ago, as I was working on another work of Catholic apologetics, a friend remarked that while my efforts in regard to Fundamentalist Christians was useful, a new apologetics was needed, not dealing with classical "in-house" Christian theological differences but to advance a conversation with atheists and agnostics, whose influence (if not numbers) was on the rise. That an erudite philosopher like Peter Kreeft should respond to that challenge with gusto and competence is most encouraging. Indeed, philosophy (the use of unaided human reason with no recourse to theological categories) is the ideal ground on which to engage a dialogue with non-theists. Professor Kreeft here brings all his usual talents of precision, readability, and affability to the fore, as we have come to expect. We are all in his debt for this most needed and most welcome contribution.