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Rob Green
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Barry Cooper

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Average rating: 4.09 · 454 ratings · 86 reviews · 14 distinct worksSimilar authors
Can I really trust the Bible?

4.15 avg rating — 294 ratings — published 2014 — 7 editions
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If You Could Ask God One Qu...

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4.02 avg rating — 97 ratings — published 2007 — 5 editions
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Christianity Explored

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3.88 avg rating — 68 ratings — published 2001 — 7 editions
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Christianity Explored - Han...

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4.20 avg rating — 40 ratings — published 2011 — 6 editions
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Christianity Explored - Lea...

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4.44 avg rating — 18 ratings — published 2001 — 9 editions
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Christianity Explored: Stud...

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4.29 avg rating — 7 ratings5 editions
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Discipleship Explored - Stu...

4.33 avg rating — 3 ratings — published 2005 — 4 editions
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Discipleship Explored Leade...

liked it 3.00 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 2012 — 3 editions
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Discipleship Explored - Lea...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 2010 — 2 editions
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Can I really trust the Bibl...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 1 rating
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More books by Barry Cooper…

Say Hello, Wave Goodbye

I haven’t posted for a while. I became lead pastor of Christ Community Church, Daytona Beach in January 2024, which is a testament to God’s undeserved tenderness towards me.

I’ve been facing some serious health challenges since then, and these are no less an undeserved kindness in their own way. You can find more information here. You may have to register to access the information, but it’s free.

My

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Published on September 07, 2025 11:08
Against the Machi...
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Barry’s Recent Updates

Barry is currently reading
Against the Machine by Paul Kingsnorth
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Against the Machine by Paul Kingsnorth
“For now, the useful work seems to be that outlined by Joseph Campbell: ‘to conquer death by birth’. Simone Weil concluded her study of the rootless West by suggesting that the best response for we who find ourselves living in it is ‘the growing of roots’—the name she gave to the final section of her work. Pull up some of the exhausted old plants if you need to—carefully, now—but if you don’t have some new seed to grow in the bare soil, if you don’t tend it and weed it with love, if you don’t fertilise it and water it and help it grow: well, then your ground will not produce anything good for you. It will choke up with a chaos of thistles and weeds. This, in practical terms is, the slow, necessary, sometimes boring work to which I suspect people in our place and time are being called: to build new things, out on the margins. Not to exhaust our souls engaging in a daily war for or against a ‘West’ that is already gone, but to prepare the seedbed for what might, one day long after us, be ...more Paul Kingsnorth
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Against the Machine by Paul Kingsnorth
“every culture, whether it knows it or not, is built around a sacred order. This does not, of course, need to be a Christian order. It could be Islamic, Hindu or Daoist. It could be based around the veneration of ancestors or the worship of Odin. But there is a throne at the heart of every culture, and whoever sits on it will be the force you take your instruction from. The modern experiment has been the act of dethroning both literal human sovereigns and the representatives of the sacred order, and replacing them with purely human, and purely abstract, notions—‘the people’ or ‘liberty’ or ‘democracy’ or ‘progress’. I’m all for liberty, and it would be nice to give democracy a try one day too; but the dethroning of the sovereign—Christ—who sat at the heart of the Western sacred order has not led to universal equality and justice. It has led, via a bloody shortcut through Robespierre, Stalin and Hitler, to the complete triumph of the power of money, which has splintered our culture and ...more Paul Kingsnorth
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The Dying Thoughts of Richard Baxter by Richard Baxter
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Time of the Child by Niall Williams
Time of the Child
by Niall Williams (Goodreads Author)
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Newton on the Christian Life by Tony Reinke
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The Dying Thoughts of Richard Baxter by Richard Baxter
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Forgive by Timothy J. Keller
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More of Barry's books…
R.D. Laing
“I am not fond of the word psychological.
There is no such thing as the psychological.
Let us say that one can improve the biography of
the person.
JEAN-PAUL SARTRE”
R.D. Laing, The Divided Self: An Existential Study in Sanity and Madness

Randy     Newman
“People do not reject the gospel primarily because they’re too thickheaded to get it. Unbelief grows out of other soils besides intellectual confusion. Instead, people reject the good news because they’re enslaved to other kinds of news. They’re in love with something unworthy of such devotion, and it won’t let them go.”
Randy Newman, Questioning Evangelism

Douglas Murray
“As one of the consequences of the death of God, Friedrich Nietzsche foresaw that people could find themselves stuck in cycles of Christian theology with no way out. Specifically that people would inherit the concepts of guilt, sin and shame but would be without the means of redemption which the Christian religion also offered.”
Douglas Murray, The Madness of Crowds: Gender, Race and Identity

“That is why our Churches are half empty and also why millions never darken a Church door. People are not fed. They are hungering and thirsting for the pure Gospel and they get pulpit essays and discussions of questions. They go away empty and disgusted and then they stay away.’ Time proved Moody right. Had clergy been in less of a hurry to trot out the latest undigested critical theory, the churches of America and Britain would not have sunk into the trough of the 1920s and 1930s.”
John Charles Pollock, D. L. Moody: Moody without Sankey

“You will never make yourself feel that you are a sinner, because there is a mechanism in you as a result of sin that will always be defending you against every accusation. We are all on very good terms with ourselves, and we can always put up a good case for ourselves. Even if we try to make ourselves feel that we are sinners, we will never do it. There is only one way to know that we are sinners, and that is to have some dim, glimmering conception of God.1”
Dane C. Ortlund, Gentle and Lowly: The Heart of Christ for Sinners and Sufferers

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