I first heard about this book during the summer when Lee Strobel was on the podcast interview circuit. I heard him both on the Michael Knowles show and the Blurry Creatures podcast.
Strobel’s 2025 book is called “Seeing the Supernatural: Investigating Angels, Demons, Mystical Dreams, Near-Death Encounters, and Other Mysteries of the Unseen World.” According to Bookseriesinorder.com, this is the 32nd of 33 books he has written, dating back to 1993. This is the 2nd book of his I’ve read, as I read The Case for Faith earlier this year. His most well-known books are The Case for Christ (1998), The Case for Faith (2000), The Case for a Creator (2004), The Case for the Real Jesus (2008), The Case for Easter (2004), The Case for Christmas (1998), The Case for Grace (2013), The Case for Heaven (2021), and The Case for Miracles (2018).
He grew up Lutheran, and became an atheist with major alcohol and anger issues. Lee’s wife Leslie came to Christ and—being an investigative reporter (14 years at the Chicago Tribune)—he began to seriously investigate the claims of Christianity. After 2 years of study, he came to saving faith in Christ at age 29. He is a Christian apologist, and has served as teaching pastor at Willow Creek Community Church in South Barrington, IL and Saddleback Church in Lake Forest, CA.
“Seeing the Supernatural” goes beyond his 2018 book “The Case for Miracles,” and explores a lot of fascinating topics. In this book he writes about how we each have a soul, current-day miracles, spiritual encounters, mystical dreams (especially amongst the current-day Muslims), angelic appearances, Satan, demons, death-bed visions, near-death experiences (NDE’s), Heaven, hell and damnation, life after death, ghost stories, psychics, and the paranormal.
Overall, I enjoyed this book. It was a page-turner. The book has his usual format of seeking answers to important questions and finding an “expert” to interview about it. Each chapter has the dialogue from these sessions. He interviews J. Warner Wallace, Ron Rhodes, Douglas E. Potter, Craig S. Keener, and more.
This is a helpful book because it tackles things I’m intrigued with. I do wish he’d addressed aliens and UFOs/UAPs. That being said, I only found one point I disagree with and it was in Chapter Ten “The Logic of Damnation” … about hell. On pages 190-191, his “expert” explains how the flames of hell are metaphorical and symbolic imagery of God’s judgment. I don’t believe this but the college professor he interviewed (Dr. Paul Copan) certainly does.
This book makes you think through many important issues, and I give it a hearty 5 stars. He provides a good introduction to many areas that you can explore more deeply if you desire. You won’t regret reading this book.