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Stephen H. Provost

    Stephen H. Provost is an author, editor, and columnist with extensive experience as a journalist. His writing spans diverse subjects including history, religion, politics, and language, demonstrating a keen ability to engage with a wide range of topics. Provost's work often delves into history and culture, with a particular focus on California and its unique narratives. Leveraging his journalistic background, he crafts compelling and informative prose that resonates with readers interested in deep cultural and historical exploration.

    Identity Break
    Requiem for a Phantom God
    The Gospel of the Phoenix
    • Requiem for a Phantom God

      • 198 pages
      • 7 hours of reading

      The debate between the theist and the atheist dates back millennia. Yet the crucial question involves not the existence of deity, but what kind of deity might exist. Can we eliminate certain options and leave ourselves free to explore others? In "Requiem for a Phantom God," the author argues that we can. Any consideration of the divine should rule out what C.S. Lewis termed "nonsense." Self-contradictory portraits of God are not only meaningless, but they have the potential to do great harm - and they have over the course of human history. "Requiem for a Phantom God" serves as an epitaph for just such a god of nonsense. It identifies the core philosophical problem: the desire of humanity to believe in an all-powerful deity who is at, at the same time, entirely "good." This desire, however, is destined to remain unfulfilled, because these two concepts simply cannot be reconciled. Once humanity realizes this, we can choose the kind of god we wish to believe in: immanent or transcendent ... if, indeed, we wish to put our faith in a god at all. "Requiem" discusses the abuses and pitfalls of faith, and whether it is possible to speak of a faith that is not blind. It addresses modern and historical examples of religious abuse and suggests they tell us about the doctrines that support them. Written in the tradition of Christopher Hitchens.

      Requiem for a Phantom God
    • Identity Break

      • 356 pages
      • 13 hours of reading

      How far would you go to find yourself? Imagine everything you thought you knew about yourself turned out to be a lie, and you didn¿t know who was telling the truth. Imagine you possessed a secret so dangerous that, if it were exposed, it would reshape the entire world. What would you do if that secret were your very identity? In almost every way, Palo Vista seems like a typical California city, with office buildings, schools, and homes sprawled out across suburbia, filled with families making a life for themselves at the dawn of the new millennium. But two seniors at Mt. MacMurray High are about to find out that nothing is as it seems...

      Identity Break