Könyv A Call Back To Reality Steven Wong

A Call Back To Reality

Before Christianity Became a Religion

Szerző: Steven Wong
Nyelv: Angol
Kötés: Puha kötésű
Elérhetőség: Beszállítói készleten
Küldés 14-21 napon belül
3 824 Ft
Why does the world feel increasingly unstable-despite more information, more rules, and more control...

Információk a könyvről

Szerző
Nyelv
Angol
Kötés
Könyv - Puha kötésű
Kiadva
2026
oldal
152
EAN
9798242015470
Enbook ID
52987472
Súly
144
Méretek
127 x 203 x 10

Teljes leírás

Why does the world feel increasingly unstable-despite more information, more rules, and more control than ever before?

We are more connected than any generation in history, yet more anxious, divided, and distrustful. Institutions meant to protect us now feel oppressive. Power concentrates. Violence escalates. Truth feels negotiable. And many people sense that something is deeply wrong-but struggle to name it.

A Call Back to Reality explores a simple but unsettling idea:
what if the problem is not a lack of morality, intelligence, or effort-but a growing disconnection from how reality actually works?

This book does not argue for religion.
It does not demand belief.
It does not start with doctrine.

Instead, it approaches the biblical story as a diagnostic framework-one that treats human breakdown the way medicine treats illness: by identifying causes, patterns, and consequences.

Using clear, non-religious language, the book explores:

  • Why systems built on control inevitably decay
  • Why fear spreads faster than trust
  • Why violence escalates when meaning collapses
  • Why rules cannot heal what mistrust has damaged
  • And why genuine restoration must work with reality, not against it

The biblical narrative is presented not as mythology or moral instruction, but as a long-form case study of what happens when human beings fall out of alignment with the principles that sustain life.

At the centre of the story is Jesus-not presented as a religious figure demanding allegiance, but as a demonstration of reality itself. His life exposes how power, fear, and coercion distort human systems, and what restoration actually looks like.

Whether you are sceptical, curious, disillusioned with religion, or simply trying to make sense of the world we are living in, this book offers a different lens-one that is thoughtful, humane, and unexpectedly relevant.

This is not a call to religion.
It is a call back to reality.