What if the crisis of Christian faith is not a crisis of truth, but a crisis of presentation?The Order of Being proposes a return to the foundation from which Christian faith can be understood without reduction and without fear of reason. Rather than beginning with pragmatic effects-experience, promises, or results-this book starts from a prior recognition: reality itself is intelligible and ordered.From this point of departure, the essay explores fundamental distinctions that shape how faith is understood and lived: the contingent and the necessary, the visible and the invisible, action and the being that grounds it. These distinctions allow suffering, illness, and death to be reconsidered-not as objections against God, but as realities proper to a world that is ordered, though not yet consummated.Far from opposing faith and reason, The Order of Being seeks to recover a great faith: not one that is more emotional or utilitarian, but one that is better grounded. A faith capable of enduring suffering, engaging thought without fear, and trusting God not for what He does, but for who He is.This book is not a devotional manual nor an academic treatise. It is a reflective essay for readers who sense that Christian faith is deeper, broader, and more stable than it is often presented-and who are willing to think seriously about its foundations.
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