Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Changing Faith: Questions, Doubts and Choices About an Unchanging God

Rate this book
Many of us are grappling with How much can we know about God? Who is right and who is wrong and who gets to determine that? Do I need God to live a life that matters? We ask these questions not because we have rejected faith in God but because

192 pages, Paperback

First published April 10, 2015

6 people are currently reading
32 people want to read

About the author

Michael Hidalgo

5 books13 followers
Michael Hidalgo is the lead pastor of Denver Community Church, which under his leadership has grown from 40 people to over 2,000. With the ONE Campaign and Malaria No More, Michael has addressed thousands nationally. He is the author of Unlost: Being Found by the One We Are Looking For and Changing Faith: Questions, Doubts and Choices About An Unchanging GOD. He writes regularly for Relevant Magazine. Michael, his wife and three children live in Denver, Colorado.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
8 (33%)
4 stars
5 (20%)
3 stars
10 (41%)
2 stars
1 (4%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for James.
1,569 reviews117 followers
June 15, 2015
Easy faith, simply believing, doesn't last. Our faith looks different in different seasons of our spiritual life. Often our confrontation with different theologies and worldviews may cause us to rethink some things. Or at least give us more understanding for others. We may grow from a budding apologist with sure answers for every Bible difficulty to someone with less certainty who still trusts. Our faith was made to change. We were made to move from where we were (or where we are) to somewhere deeper. The world is also changing, and that brings new challenges on how to live out our faith in ways that connect with the wider world.

Michael Hidalgo is the lead pastor of Denver Community Church and the author of Unlost. He writes regularly for Relevant Magazine. He wrote Changing Faith: Questions, Doubts & Choices About an Unchanging God to help us move beyond easy answers, certainty and static faith. His hope is that his readers will wrestle with their difficult questions and press on. Hidalgo doesn't tell his readers what to think, but he hints at the movements we will make if we will continue to be people of faith.

Hidalgo identifies a dozen such movements (these are also chapter titles): From Closed to Open, From Certainty to Probability, From Definition to Description, From Words to Experience, From Knowing to Unknowing, From Being Right to Being Faithful, From Power to Truth, From Legalism to Wholeness, From Toil to Work, From Nowhere to Everywhere, From Bad News to Good News, From Fear to Love, From Small Stories to a Big Story.

It was the subtitle of the book that caught my eye: Questions, Doubts & Choices about an Unchanging God. I have read books about 'changing faith' (notably Kathy Esbocar's Faithshift), wrestling with doubt and apologetic type books designed to help readers grapple with the culture they find themselves in. Hidalgo describes some 'faith shifts' (i.e. the movement from closed to open, certainty to probability, knowing to unknowing, right to faithful). Likewise Hidalgo writes about some questions that will be of apologetic interest. Fundamentally, however this a book about spiritual growth. If Hidalgo is clear on any point, it is that 'knowing the right answers' is not a prerequisite for growth. If anything he commends intellectual humility and trust in our unchanging God, even when nothing seems certain.

I liked this book. I think other authors do a better job of addressing the issue of doubt, but I found myself nodding my head as I read. I appreciate that Hidalgo did not write a book to help us change or to become more honest thinkers. He is writing this book to help us remain faithful in the midst of change and uncertainty. I give this book three-and-a-half stars.

Notice of material connection, I received this book from InterVarsity Press in exchange for my honest review.


Profile Image for Nathan.
341 reviews11 followers
August 7, 2017
I read this book with the summer staff at church. And it was excellent for productive dialogue and practical ways to grow in faith intellectually. In each of the 13 chapters Hidalgo provides tangible movements in how faith can change for the better. His ideas are helpful, perhaps foundational in thinking through a changing faith for today and anticipating challenges of today's culture. Highly recommended as a book study for high schoolers or college students, or anyone newer to faith. Great discussions guaranteed - there are also discussion questions in the back for each chapter! Read with a group!

But if you have read much theology, you probably won't find much here you haven't heard.
Profile Image for Joel Wentz.
1,377 reviews214 followers
December 17, 2015
An honest, straightforward, and refreshing take on how "rigid" faith doesn't work in our context anymore. I really appreciate Hidalgo's voice, and this book (his 2nd) read very easily. My only gripe is that I wanted more from him here. He touches on really intriguing issues (the chapter that relates our knowledge to the progression of physics and science was quite interesting), but there isn't much depth in any of the individual chapters.

Overall, it's really refreshing to hear an Evangelical pastor who is well-acquainted with what causes people to doubt today. If you are one of those people, or don't read much theology, you will probably really enjoy this book. If, however, you are well-versed in that type of writing, there probably isn't much new here.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews