Have you ever wondered whether the angels have had second thoughts? Darien, the focus of the story, has come to wonder if God was truly just in exiling Lucifer and his followers, and is given a chance to investigate, to find out for himself. In the end, he finds his choice, and comes to know the true nature of evil as well as the source of all that is good.
Roger Elwood, once a well-known science fiction author, has made an interesting window into eternity for his readers. Try it!
Roger Elwood, once a well-known science fiction author, has made an interesting window into eternity for his readers. Try it!
Book 1 of Angelwalk series: Trouble in Paradise. The angel Darien believes Lucifer shouldn't have been thrown out of Heaven. God's answer is to let him go to earth and see for himself what Lucifer has been up to. What Darien finds both fascinates and repulses him. At last, like us, he must choose between good and evil--while Heaven and Hell hang in the balance.
Loved C.S. Lewis & Roger Elwood comes close in comparison to Lewis. This series can be enjoyed by older teens & adults alike. Held my attention!
Loved C.S. Lewis & Roger Elwood comes close in comparison to Lewis. This series can be enjoyed by older teens & adults alike. Held my attention!
I loved this book! It really makes you think. Can't wait to read book 2!
"Angelwalk" is probably one of the angriest books I've ever read. It tells the story of Darien, an angel who considered Lucifer a friend before the war in heaven, and who now believes that God may have been unjust in banishing the fallen angels from heaven. So, to assuage those doubts, God sends Darien into the world of men to see what Lucifer has been doing since his departure. When he finishes his journey, if Darien concludes that God was wrong, then the war will be over and God will allow not only Satan but all the fallen angels to return.
It's certainly an unusual setup, and I've got to give Elwood points for creativity in the concept. Still, if you thought the next 189 pages would deal with symptoms of humanity's brokenness, like our petty-mindedness, our indifference to the suffering of others, our sometimes open lust for power, or even some big sins like the exploitation of illegal immigrants, or human trafficking, you'd be mistaken.
"Angelwalk" was written for an evangelical or fundamentalist readership, and as such it is preoccupied with issues that offend those readers. Thus we're treated to a narration of an abortion from the perspective of one being aborted; we attend a funeral for a gay man and get to overhear attendees discussing having an orgy and possibly involving the corpse, and so on. (Elwood is vague on whether this scene occurs in Sodom or in California.)
There's no sense of moderation here, not even an aside that this particularly abhorrent sort of behavior is extremely deviant. There are two groups of people Darien encounters in his travels: the utterly depraved, and evangelical Christians. This sort of strident, circle-the-wagons sort of thinking, which views those outside the evangelical church as abhorrent and a threat to decent church-going sorts, is outrageous. I'd like to think he didn't mean for it to be taken seriously -- but given the content of later books in this series, and the warm reception I recall this book getting in the late 1980s, it's safe to say that he did.
Because it deals with angels and demons, and the effects of sin on our world, "Angelwalk" often gets classed with C.S. Lewis' "The Screwtape Letters" as a book about spiritual warfare. If only that were the case. Lewis' book, which purports to be a series of letters from a devil to a junior tempter, on how to lead a man away from faith in Christ, is at times witty and thought-provoking, and always thoroughly original. The difficulties faced by the unnamed human in the book are common enough to the human race, and easily related to.
"Angelwalk" pretends to raise questions about God's justice and mercy, but the examples are so extreme that its answers are meaningless; and the book is so full of anger at its oversize instances of sin that there's nothing to think about, nothing to remember, nothing to savor or comment on.
Ultimately, the book is rather like a hellhouse, that horrifying evangelical alternative to Halloween. If you're inclined to agree with the message of "Angelwalk," then you'll like it. If you don't, you're probably going to be revolted, feel a little sick after reading it, and never want to talk again to whoever convinced you it was a good idea to try it in the first place.
It's certainly an unusual setup, and I've got to give Elwood points for creativity in the concept. Still, if you thought the next 189 pages would deal with symptoms of humanity's brokenness, like our petty-mindedness, our indifference to the suffering of others, our sometimes open lust for power, or even some big sins like the exploitation of illegal immigrants, or human trafficking, you'd be mistaken.
"Angelwalk" was written for an evangelical or fundamentalist readership, and as such it is preoccupied with issues that offend those readers. Thus we're treated to a narration of an abortion from the perspective of one being aborted; we attend a funeral for a gay man and get to overhear attendees discussing having an orgy and possibly involving the corpse, and so on. (Elwood is vague on whether this scene occurs in Sodom or in California.)
There's no sense of moderation here, not even an aside that this particularly abhorrent sort of behavior is extremely deviant. There are two groups of people Darien encounters in his travels: the utterly depraved, and evangelical Christians. This sort of strident, circle-the-wagons sort of thinking, which views those outside the evangelical church as abhorrent and a threat to decent church-going sorts, is outrageous. I'd like to think he didn't mean for it to be taken seriously -- but given the content of later books in this series, and the warm reception I recall this book getting in the late 1980s, it's safe to say that he did.
Because it deals with angels and demons, and the effects of sin on our world, "Angelwalk" often gets classed with C.S. Lewis' "The Screwtape Letters" as a book about spiritual warfare. If only that were the case. Lewis' book, which purports to be a series of letters from a devil to a junior tempter, on how to lead a man away from faith in Christ, is at times witty and thought-provoking, and always thoroughly original. The difficulties faced by the unnamed human in the book are common enough to the human race, and easily related to.
"Angelwalk" pretends to raise questions about God's justice and mercy, but the examples are so extreme that its answers are meaningless; and the book is so full of anger at its oversize instances of sin that there's nothing to think about, nothing to remember, nothing to savor or comment on.
Ultimately, the book is rather like a hellhouse, that horrifying evangelical alternative to Halloween. If you're inclined to agree with the message of "Angelwalk," then you'll like it. If you don't, you're probably going to be revolted, feel a little sick after reading it, and never want to talk again to whoever convinced you it was a good idea to try it in the first place.
This is a fire and brimstone book and has fundamentalist views. An Angel who is uncertain of God's decision to force Lucifer from heaven is sent down to earth by God to make his final decision. The angel observes "atrocities" that include homosexuality, abortion, drugs, politics, animal testing, and so on. I enjoyed this book for what it was. I think Elwood did a tremendous job in gathering up things that Christians are against and making them appear heinous and sinful.