Not to mention it’s my first written review on Amazon. I had sent the reviewer my book some time ago because he does reviews, and like others I had approached, he agreed to have me send him a book, but made no promises. That was a while ago, and when he finally got to it, he really seemed to like it, as you can see. I was very pleasantly surprised and gratified that someone I don’t know assessed its value just on the merits as they saw it. And he sees a lot of merits!

I am looking for more reviews, and would love them to be 5 stars, but any reviews will do, in case you might be so inclined to help out a poor struggling author. Hopefully, as more new people read it, they will see fit to share their thoughts on the book with others on Amazon, and if you’ve already read it, sharing yours would be very much appreciated as well. Here it is.

Snyder’s Soapbox

This is a great tool for strengthening a believer’s faith in the trustworthiness of the Bible.

Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on March 15, 2023

 

As many of you know, I determine a book’s value in the individual’s home library primarily on a few factors. First of course, it must be doctrinally sound. Second, its message must be one that is valuable for rereading. Third, it must be an asset to lend out to others to read. I recently read a book titled, “Uninvented” by Mike D’Virgilio. I have several people send me titles they’d like reviewed, but most of them are self-published, poorly edited, and ill thought out. Their theology is usually a hot-soup-sandwich. I was pleasantly surprised by this book. It was none of those things. As a bonus, I can actually recommend it according to the criteria I previously discussed.

 

The book is an apologetic work in which D’Virgilio argues for the authority, and trustworthiness of the Bible as the actual word of God. He argues that its verisimilitude is potent evidence. Some might call that a circular argument, or an appeal to authority, but those arguments are null if the Bible is actually true. I’ve read other works with some of the same arguments for the trustworthiness of the Bible, but few with as many of them compiled together, and organized in such a way as to lend them to the work of strengthening the believer. If you are a Christian who has run into some arguments that have shaken your faith in the trustworthiness of God’s word, this book is for you. I highly recommend it. It is a brief work, but in its brevity lacks nothing significant for the intended work at hand.

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