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                    		|  Adam
 (Thomas Nelson) |  
                    		|  |  |  BOOK REVIEWTed Dekker’s 'Adam' Sheds Light On Spiritual RealitiesBy Ann Vande ZandeGuest Writer
 CBN.com  I vividly remember  a sleepover in the ‘70’s. Six vulnerable 11-year-olds huddled together to view  the creepy “soap opera” Dark Shadows, a  show that included ghosts, vampires, warlocks, and werewolves. The story stuck,  and I spent the night with my sleeping bag pulled over my head, praying. The  power of evil practically suffocated me because the show didn’t truthfully tell  the whole story – the power of light over darkness. Supreme storyteller  Ted Dekker, however, does paint the true picture by exposing darkness to demonstrate  the essentialness of the One True Light – Jesus Christ. With his recent  release, Adam, Dekker stretches the  imagination while challenging some of the simple ways that we’re blind to the  bigger picture of spiritual warfare.  In Adam, protagonist Daniel Clark, an analytical,  FBI Special Agent is forced into the realities of the spirit world while  stalking a serial killer known as Eve.  Before the case, Clark reasoned away evil as  something residing within the disturbed psyche of individuals. With his own death  experience, Clark fights to not only end the  killing spree but to silence his personal torment. Adam proves to be vintage Dekker with complex characters, plot twists, and a  love story that runs throughout the story. I found myself thinking deeper, loving  harder, and challenged into questions of genuine faith and comfort  Christianity. No doubt Ted Dekker fans won’t be disappointed, and if you’re new  to his work, Adam will have you  hooked.    The gifted author  took time from his writing schedule to discuss Adam, his persistent spiritual themes, and message for the  Christian community. I thoroughly enjoy your work, but sometimes  your books spook me. Obsession comes to mind as do others, and I think  the most intense so far would be your recent release, Adam. You take  readers to some seriously dark, tormenting places. What’s your reason?   It is  critical that writers who embrace the light of Christ’s redemptive love  characterize the darkness arrayed against us in a way that is consistent with  its true nature. Darkness and evil are no less comforting than a wolf is a  sheep. So when I write about the wolf, I give him fangs and a thirst for blood,  not a lap dog who we feel nice about cuddling. In the church’s need to be  socially accepted, leaders tend to use far too much gray in their pallets, but  this only plays into the wolf’s hand. He already lives amongst us without  hardly being recognized – if in illuminating such an enemy disturbs the reader,  we should all be grateful.  How would believers’ lives change if they  grasped the significance of living in duo-realities? Most  believers struggle to really believe in the supernatural as a meaningful,  deterministic reality except during moments when they are drawn to it, perhaps  during a worship service or while reading a novel like Adam. Being drawn to this truth is the  first step to living a life in accordance to this truth. It’s clear that you researched both FBI  procedures and cases of demon possession for Adam. Were you personally  affected by what you learned? My research  for Adam affected me  profoundly, particularly the research into evil’s underbelly. We tend not to  think about evil until it pokes its head out of the air about us and then it  tends to scare us silly. As well it should. This is what the Word means when it  urges us to “work out our salvation with fear and trembling.” You read cases  like the case in Adam,  and you whisper prayers of protection, but that only protects us from evil,  it’s doesn’t change the fact that evil stalks and kills through the night. Evil  was enough to make Christ sweat blood in the garden, and it should be enough to  make us at least think twice in our very comfortable world, two thousand years  after his death. The good news is  that even though we walk through this valley of death, we don’t have to fear,  at least not for ourselves! Unfortunately, there is no way to skip over the  valley altogether, we must face death and the evidence of evil all around us.  But there will come a day… And what a day that will be! You consistently call the Christian  community to wake up, as demonstrated in your books (Slumber of Christianity, Heaven’s Wager, and Adam, etc.) what do we need to wake up to? What’s got us  pacified or in a state of sleeping. Wow, now  that’s a can of worms. The sleeping hate to be woken, you know. I would say  read Slumber of  Christianity for my thoughts on this, but if I were forced to say something  now I would simply say that most Christians are like mice who are obsessed with  finding more grain to munch on without much thought of their impending death.  Christians use faith to better their lives; agnostics use other devices – both  are asleep to the greater context of life after life. Ecclesiastes says that it’s better to be at  a house of mourning than one of feasting (7:2). That reminds me of Heather  Clark’s (Adam) spiritual awakening while reading a book on demon  possession. She’s in an airplane and realizes that life continues as usual,  seemingly denying the truth that’s blowing open her mind. Isn’t that what  facing death or a house of mourning does for us, by forcing us to grapple with  the challenges of heaven and hell?  Solomon’s  point is that it’s dangerous to feast away as if all is okay when in truth there  are wolves at the door, so to speak. When the darkness, be it death or evil,  comes like a thief in the night, we’d best not be caught ignoring it or it will  rob us blind. But Adam isn’t all about the darkness. It’s  about the light! It’s about hope, something Daniel finally comes to embrace  when all hope is dashed. Hope comes only in a time of need, and the more acute  the need, the more urgent the hope. How does one characterize the true value of  hope in Christ without first understanding and portraying the terrible pit from  which we all need hope of rescue? Some say my  novels are dark. I would say they are bright with hope! It’s just that the  contrast between the dark and the light is so black and white compared to many  other grayer novels. I’ve noticed that in two of your novels  there’s a similar scene. In Showdown, evil personified Marsuvees Black  gouges out the eyes of an elderly, mute man, killing him. In Adam, it’s  a demented demon digging the eyes out of a baby doll. Since I doubt the  similarity is coincidence, what’s the point you’re making? The thief  comes to steal and to destroy, and he does it best when he has blinded us first.  In fact, deception is the primary objective of evil. Blind them to the truth and they will eat out of your hand. Both Marsuvees and Eve understand  this all too well. I’d make the argument that God has  called some prophet-like authors who, through story, sound an alarm to modern  day saints. You definitely fall into that category of writer. Care to  comment?    Well,  my writing tends to lay things bare and as such some might call me a prophet of  sorts. Really I’m just a man who’s interested in exploring the nature of life  within the context of villains and heroes. The greatest villain is most  certainly Lucifer and to a more pervasive degree, the evil nature which resides  in all of us, the old man, as Paul put it. Us. And the greatest hero is undoubtedly Christ, who offers to  rescue us from both ourselves and Lucifer. Anyone who trumpets this message is  by definition a prophet.   Purchase your copy of Adam  Read more book excerpts and author interviews on CBN.com. 
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