Logo

 

Banner Image:   Baptist-Times-banner-2000x370-
Template Mode:   Baptist Times
Icon
    Post     Tweet

Heresy Unlocked, Faith Rebounds

One time BBC journalist and co-founder of a cancer charity Roger Wilson is right in stating that Christians will find his views heretical  

Heresy UnlockedHeresy Unlocked, Faith Rebounds
By Roger Wilson
ISBN: 978 1 910 864 54 8
The Choir Press
Reviewed by Moira Kleissner

This book sounded intriguing and interesting; faith being examined from the viewpoint of heresy. One time BBC journalist, Roger Wilson, outlines his the battle with cancer, co-setting up the Sarcoma UK charity and gaining the CBE. This introduction, expanded in the final section of the book, describes his journey from a nominal Christianity, “stripping away dogma,” to develop a “Gnostic Christian” faith which does away an external God, believing that real Christianity is seeking the “god-within-me” through our own “innate goodness and compassion.” The book is self-published by The Choir Press.
 
The main section is Wilson’s journey through a somewhat truncated and selective church history. He is no historian, leaving huge gaps (no mention of Baptists!) There is a lack of bibliography, so it is unclear where his “facts” came from. I found his presentation of the first 500 years of Christianity lacking in historical rigour and confusing, conflating later developments of church leadership into a far earlier period. Stating that the early Roman Emperors had were not regarded as gods until after Jesus, he later contradicts himself stating Emperors were deified from the first Roman Emperor. Apparently the book of Acts tells us that Thomas travelled to India. This comes from the Gnostic Gospel of Thomas, not from Acts.
 
Rather than being “unemotional and detached…” this book is a tirade against Christianity, the Nicene Creed, Religious Education, church schools and what Wilson calls “Catholicism.” I found this apparent hatred distasteful, as he claims that the most important thing Christ taught was showing love.

There is much conjecture rather than “facts:” the resurrection becomes “swoon theory,” (first posed by Bahrdt nearly 200 years ago, and now been discounted by all perhaps except Dan Brown); acceptance of the resurrection is the result of “stress, self-induced hysteria and mass hallucination;” the writers of the New Testament “backdated” Jesus' birth and status as Son of God; the church “hierarchy” changed the original teaching of Christ which are found in the Gnostic gospels, which he gives a pre-Christian date to, although most scholars today date them as 2nd century. Wilson says that theology is not central to his investigation but launches into the Trinity, which he says Christians believe as a “trio of divinities.” He bemoans that books about belief are only published by “minority” publishers, not easily available, and all written by theologians and academics. Considering that Random House, one of the biggest publishers in the world, has a very large catalogue of popular books on Christian and other beliefs, this seemed a strange conclusion.
 
Self-classified as a courageous, modern iconoclast, Wilson is tilting at theological windmills using outdated theories and unsubstantiated “facts.” Yes he is right in stating that Christians will find his views heretical. But the book would have been much more interesting and informative, had it been edited assiduously, historical facts checked and not been so vehemently anti-Christian, bitter and rambling.
 

Moira Kleissner is an ex-primary school deputy head, a primary school librarian, a minister's wife and a storyteller


 
Baptist Times, 10/02/2017
    Post     Tweet
365 Truths for Every Woman's Heart, by Holley Gerth
'A really useful resource that when everything gets too much in the day (or night), can provide a calming reminder of how God never leaves us or forsakes us'
Dwell, by Anne Le Tissier
'A good and helpful book encouraging readers to dwell consciously and without hurry in God’s Word'
The Art of Giving by Matthew Porter
Unpacks how practising the art of giving brings us closer to God in an accessible and practical way
Wild Bright Hope: The Big Church Read Lent Book 2025
Twelve voices each contribute a chapter on hope, to create a 'thought-provoking anthology... a good read across Lent and beyond for anyone seeking to deepen their faith and find hope in a complex world'
The Desert Shall Blossom, by Janet Killeen
​'A beautiful collection of poems for Lent and Eastertide that will actually far outlast the season'
Lower Than The Angels by Diarmaid McCulloch
'Readers with time and stamina will be rewarded with a comprehensive view of the history of sex and Christianity, but the book could have been shorter'
    Posted: 21/03/2025
    Posted: 04/10/2024
     
    Text Size:  
    Small (Default)
    Medium
    Large
    Contrast:  
    Normal
    High Contrast