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Relief Recommends I Sold My Soul on eBay
Written by Travis Griffith   
Wednesday, 02 July 2008

Travis GriffithRelief Blogger Travis Griffith reviews I Sold My Soul on eBay: Viewing Faith through an Atheist’s Eyes, the story of the much-publicized eBay auction where Hemant Mehta sold the right to send an atheist (himself) to church.

 

Hemant Mehta’s Journey:

Raised in the Indian religion Jainism, Hemant Mehta rejected his religion and became an atheist as a teenager. In his early twenties, he realized he didn’t know very much about American’s main religion: Christianity.

And what’s the best way to learn about Christianity? Go to church. The twist that Mehta put on that though was to let someone else decide what church he’d attend and how many times he’d go. Hence the auction.

The winning bid of $504 placed by Seattle minister Jim Henderson sent Mehta on a cross country tour of churches and interviews (The Wall Street Journal, The Seattle Times, The Chicago Sun-Times, to name a few).  Eventually an editor at Waterbrook Press asked Mehta to visit even more churches for the purposes of a book. And Mehta jumped on the opportunity to continue learning about Christianity while at the same time spreading the word of atheism and proving that atheists are not the angry God-haters they’ve been branded as by some Christians.

The Book:

The book begins with an explanation of how and why Mehta became an atheist, and then continues into his journey to churches across four states: Illinois, Michigan, Colorado and Texas. Mehta begins by reviewing small churches, followed by medium-sized churches and finally mega-churches including New Life Church (before the whole Ted Haggard controversy), Mars Hill Bible Church and Joel Osteen’s Lakewood Church. Along the way, Mehta details his thoughts during each service, questions certain traditions and, at the end of the book, offers suggestions for improving services and ways for drawing non-Christians to church. 

His writing style is simple and clear, and it only took a few pages before I found myself identifying with him, his emotions, and his questions regarding faith.

What really surprised me is that Mehta is completely open to belief. As a former atheist myself, I can’t say I ever had the same amount of openness. And it’s his willingness to be open that makes this book so intriguing.

Another aspect of the book I was impressed with was Mehta’s proposal to bring atheists and Christians together for discussion, which he does at his website The Friendly Atheist. After all, he says he knows atheists who are actually following Jesus’ example more closely than many Christians. Many atheists have a strong commitment to Christian values, just without the belief in Christ.

Honestly, the logic and reason with which Mehta speaks about atheism is powerful, yet never condescending towards Christians.

This book is simply about finding the truth which, perhaps, is why some Christians feel so threatened by atheism. Are Christians afraid that atheists will bring up too many good points in a debate? Do Christian teachings not stand up to reason? Can Christianity continue to survive on faith alone? If these are your fears, then you really need this book.

Mehta says it would take a miracle to convert him from atheism—some undeniable proof about the existence of God or spirituality. This book reveals whether or not he received that proof.

On a More Personal Note:

I’m in the unique position to view this topic from both sides: I was an atheist and am someone who’s seen the undeniable proof that Mehta is open for. However, one person’s proof is another person’s fiction, which I suppose is what makes faith… faith.

Read this book and you’ll gain an insight into the truth about atheism. For Christians reading this book, you’ll come away with knowledge about how your religion is viewed by outsiders, and what can be done to bridge the gap between believers and non-believers.

Relief recommends this book because it takes two polar opposite beliefs and challenges each to consider the other. In the end, I would guess that Christians who are exposed to atheism won’t become atheists, but will become more passionate about growing into their Christianity.


 Travis Griffith, who recently left behind the corporate marketing world choosing family and writing in lieu of “a comfortable life” financially, is a former atheist trying to define what leading a spiritual life really means.  His children’s book, Your Father Forever, published in 2005 by Illumination Arts Publishing Company, Inc. captures only a fraction of his passion for fatherhood.  We’re glad to have him aboard.

 
Relief News Tuesday
Written by Coach Culbertson   
Tuesday, 01 July 2008

ImageIssue 2.2 Shipped!

Issue 2.2 orders and subscriptions have all been shipped! They should be arriving on your doorstep this week!

Raygun Revival's 2 Year Anniversary! 

In other news, we congratulate our friends over at RayGun Revival on their official 2 year anniversary! Raygun Revival is a fantastic electronic magazine dedicated to reviving the old pulp space opera genre. Congrats, Raygunners! 

Issue 2.3 Progress

We're kicking serious tail on Issue 2.3!  Stay tuned for our Authors announcement to see who you'll be reading! 

New Store in the Works

I'm working on building a new, easier-to-use web store that will be integrated directly in this site, making it even easier to get some Relief!That's CNEI, baby! (And for those not initiated into corporate lingo, that's short for Continous Never-Ending Improvement.) 

That's all for now, gang! 

Your friendly neighborhood tech guy,
Coach Culbertson
Technical Editor

 
Another FAQ: What Is Your Average Response Time?
Written by Heather von Doehren   
Monday, 30 June 2008

Heather von DoehrenHeather von Doehren answers a frequently asked question here at Relief: A Quarterly Christian Expression about how long it usually takes for us to respond to submissions.

The Short Answer:

3-4 months.

The Long Answer:

We hope it only takes 3-4 months! It’s just that submissions keep coming in and they’re so inventive and great and it’s so hard to decide and sometimes we get this one piece in and we really like it and then we get another one that sounds kind of like the first one so we decide to give it to another editor for a second opinion/third opinion/fourth opinion and then we just decide, what the heck, we’ll take BOTH pieces and then we have to do the layout and can’t find room for ALL the great pieces so we stop reading them for awhile so we can get to print and then we write blogs with really long sentences which takes a really long TIME and then we realize that there are so many submissions in the database that when we try to access it it just starts groaning at us, all like GROANNNNN and we’re like, what the heck was that? And Coach says, dude, that’s the corpuscle analog that’s discombobulating; it’s all out of kimbo and needs to refuel.  And we’re like, dude, we don’t know what you’re saying just fix it and then he has to fix it and when that happens it sometimes takes five months to respond and then we have to rework the production schedule because we’re so behind and dude look at it:

Relief Production Schedule

 

Do you see that?! I mean everything overlaps! Everything! Overlaps! And that’s just the production schedule! That’s doesn’t account for the website, the blog, the RWN, conferences, the Relief Writer’s Database, budgeting, grant writing, marketing, no! The schedule begins when we start reading and ends when we go to print and being quarterly it all overlaps—it has to—so when we get behind we’re always behind and then we hyperventilate and take turns breathing into a brown paper bag because everyone I’ve ever known says that’s supposed to calm you down but we only have like one paper bag to share between all the editors because we’re too poor to buy more than one brown paper bag and it’s almost July and I haven’t read but a handful of poems for the next reading period and it just never seems to end!

But then we get a nice email from a reader or writer who thanks us for what we do and we’re like “Oh, it’s no problem. We love what we do.” And then everything is okay again.

So, yes, on average it takes about 3-4 months to respond to submissions.

 
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