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Curveball: When Your Faith Takes Turns You Never Saw Coming

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"Peter Enns is brilliant at taking the big topics, those Christian ideas that usually scare us or intimidate us or worry us, and then make those very places a meeting place with a God who is bigger and wilder and more wonderful and trustworthy than we ever could have guessed."--Sarah Bessey, author of Out of Sorts and Jesus Feminist The author of How the Bible Actually Works and The Bible Tells Me So explains how our model of God and faith must evolve as our understanding of the world deepens--just as the Bible describes it should. Life throws us "curve balls"--from devastating personal losses to world tragedies. These events often leave us doubting God, the Bible, and our faith. But instead of pushing away our reservations, we should embrace them, Peter Enns argues. A leading biblical scholar and Christian mentor, Enns has never been afraid to question the Bible or Christian beliefs. Such thoughtful inquisitiveness, he argues, is part of God's plan. He wants us to question, because doing so actually leads to a stronger, lasting faith. By reframing how we see these events, we allow ourselves to see how the Bible itself showcases this very process and that "treating curve balls as the enemy" is not only counterproductive but thwarts God's goal of helping us become mature and wise. Enns shares a number of curve balls he's encountered in his own life and the questions he has pondered. Does God care about the millions of people who never heard the gospel? Could I relate to a God who has created a universe this big? If God is so relatable, constant, and caring, how do we explain quantum physics? He reveals how particular biblical passages have helped him find wisdom, and how they can do the same for us. As Curveball persuasively shows, God is bigger and more mysterious than anyone's expectations. We need a faith that can grow just as deeply. 

240 pages, Hardcover

First published February 7, 2023

185 people are currently reading
1727 people want to read

About the author

Peter Enns

74 books735 followers
Peter Enns is Abram S. Clemens Professor of Biblical Studies at Eastern University, St. Davids, Pennsylvania. He has taught courses at several other institutions including Harvard University, Fuller Theological Seminary, and Princeton Theological Seminary. Enns is a frequent contributor to journals and encyclopedias and is the author of several books, including Inspiration and Incarnation, The Evolution of Adam, and The Bible Tells Me So.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 150 reviews
Profile Image for Rachel | All the RAD Reads.
1,248 reviews1,321 followers
January 10, 2024
an essential deconstruction/evolving faith read ↩️

i was introduced to @peteenns at @evolvfaith but this was the first book of his i’ve read, and it resonated SO MUCH (see ALL THE FLAGS for evidence). i deeply appreciate his incredibly thorough, rational, intellectual, and expansive thoughts on faith, on the bible, on god, and on how he’s navigated his own journey along the way.

i learned so many new things in this one, found myself thinking about my own faith and experiences and beliefs from new angles, appreciated how he wove his own story in humbly and frankly, and how his privilege was laid bare throughout. connecting dots between history and science and faith, between blown elbows in baseball and moments in taxis and changes in plans to faith, all to help expand our view of god? yes. so beautifully done, and so compelling to me. i have a lot i’m still thinking about from this one, and i love that! i want to keep ruminating on it for a while.

a fantastic read, and one i highly recommend!
Profile Image for Michael Cuevas.
24 reviews13 followers
October 5, 2023
This book offers a lot to think about and helps you grant yourself the grace to do so.

Some notable quotes:

"The goal of christian faith is the experience of God. Not the comprehension of God."

"Working out challenging issues in real time is part of the life of faith, not a prelude to the life of faith"

4.5/5
Profile Image for Richard Propes.
Author 2 books187 followers
December 11, 2022
If there's a key gift that Peter Enns has, it's in taking the really complex issues of faith and turning them into something that feels accessible and relatable.

This gift manifests in abundance in "Curveball: When Your Faith Takes Turns You Never Saw Coming (or How I stumbled and Tripped My Way to Finding a Bigger God)," Enns's latest exploration of how our faith must evolve as our understanding of the world deepens.

It's likely obvious from the title, but "Curveball" looks at exactly that - life's curveballs and how they impact our faith. Enns explores a world of devastating personal losses and world tragedies that can, and probably should, impact our faith. These curveballs can leave us doubting God, doubting the Bible, and questioning our faith. In a surprisingly simple manner, Enns encourages us to embrace these doubts and reservations. He provides us a myriad of examples of his own questioning the Bible and his own beliefs, however, he argues that these are vital processes within the journey of faith as they lead us toward a stronger, lasting faith. With "Curveball," Enns essentially argues that God is bigger and more mysterious than anyone's expectations and we need a faith that strives to become bigger and willing to dig into those mysteries.

I will confess that I didn't have quite the "Aha!" moments that I expected from "Curveball," a book that felt extraordinarily familiar to my own faith journey. "Curveball," for me, has been an easygoing, comfortable read that didn't quite challenge me on the level that I hoped even if it did, in fact, affirm many aspects of my own faith journey and my own willingness to question, challenge, and even criticize aspects of the faith journey.

In some ways, I think this is because Enns tends to go more universal than personal. As someone who has experienced a great amount of trauma in my life journey, I kept hoping that Enns would somehow dig into these types of life-changing experiences and how they impact faith. Instead, Enns tended to lean into broader curveballs with one chapter even delving into quantum physics.

That's about as universal as it gets.

However, for those who've experienced Enns through "How the Bible Actually Works" and "The Bible Tells Me So," "Curveball" is going to be a richening of these discussions and a valuable companion to them as Enns takes conversations that Christians far too often aren't having and makes them safe for honest, authentic dialogue.

If you've ever been scared or intimidated to explore all the questions about faith that you've had, "Curveball" will be both coach and mentor as you learn to open yourself up to the fullness of a God who longs to be in a deeper and more meaningful relationship with you that meets you exactly where you're at.

51 reviews2 followers
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September 23, 2024
Not sure how to review this, but definitely an interesting read! A year ago I would not have been open to his arguments at all, but after some amount of deconstruction before reading this book, I was much more receptive to his message now. Still need to process a lot, particularly how his view fits within the historical narrative of the Christian church (if at all). I did appreciate his "peaceful-hopeful model of faith" which seems much more in line than the faith filled with fear and anxiety I grew up in. But I also have a lot of questions about what to do with the problem of evil and the Bible's many warnings about being deceived and led astray. Also made me wonder why follow the Bible or Christianity at all if it's all so nebulous. But Enns has written a book about that, so I should probably read that before complaining.
Profile Image for Jared McNeill.
61 reviews1 follower
July 14, 2025
In this time of my deconstruction/disentangling, I'm not seeking to leave my faith in light of the world around me. I want to understand it better and go deeper with God.

This is a book that helps me.

Peter Enns, a biblical scholar, comes from an evangelical background and discusses the various curveballs of life that threw him for a loop, whether they be changes in what he thought he was going to do with his life, what an academic study of the Bible revealed to him, or what science has revealed about the world around us, and more.

I find his honesty and his journey refreshing and helpful. I like how even in the midst of what he learned, he sought to go deeper with God and not leave the faith altogether.

Experiencing the world around him caused a more profound faith, and that's precisely what I'm seeking.

I recommend this book to those on a similar journey.
Profile Image for Evan Lasseter.
35 reviews2 followers
May 28, 2023
Although Pete's scholarship always points to the life of Faith, this work bears witness to him working through that life rather than being a pointed work of Theology. I think he ends up modeling the book's central thesis within its pages, which I also believe was the point. The execution was solid, but I was ultimately just awe-struck by the new insights this work opens us up to.

I really appreciated this excerpt from the epilogue, which I think aptly sums up what we're getting to with all this:

"At the end of the day, I think all this believing, praying, studying, and the rest is all about wanting to know God and be known by God."
44 reviews1 follower
November 25, 2023
This book is an autobiographical reflection on coming to terms with the limitations of a theological tradition that both assumed and promised too much. For those who might be stuck not knowing how to navigate their escape from conservative evangelicalism that's rooted in the absolute certainty of its convictions. I also recommend reading Enns's books The Bible Tells Me So and How the Bible Actually Works. Those books offer more practical help with revising one view of the Bible toward a more hopeful and transformative way of reading.
Profile Image for Emily Malone.
59 reviews2 followers
April 3, 2024
A classic deconstruction/evolving faith type of read. I really enjoyed it, and could generally read/listen to Pete Enns to no end, but didn’t necessarily deliver groundbreaking revelations while reading. I don’t have anything specifically negative to say, but would likely recommend others from the author before this one.
Profile Image for Harley.
271 reviews2 followers
February 22, 2023
I’ve read two or three books by Enns before, and “Curveball” will be the last. This book is banal, uninspired, unintelligent, and inconsequential. My advice is to just read his “Inspiration and Incarnation” and stop there.
Profile Image for Nathan Harden.
28 reviews1 follower
February 17, 2023
Boom POW

I probably should not have read this as fast as I did considering I have a billion other things I need to be reading, but it’s just phenomenal. Enns writes about adjusting our perception of God in light of our everyday experiences which is an incredibly freeing concept. An infinitely other, divine being is, well, exactly that: infinitely other and divine. Who are we to say we can type and categorize God according to our logically oriented minds? God simply is not logical (at least in the way we perceive logic to be).
Profile Image for Carolyn Harper.
315 reviews5 followers
June 22, 2024
Wow. This book resonated deeply with me. I don’t necessarily agree with Enns 100%, but so much of what he writes makes sense to me. Although he is highly educated, his language is conversational and engaging. His discussion helps me see God even more vastly and intimately.
Profile Image for Natalie.
9 reviews
July 12, 2023
I am really grateful I picked up this book, which gave me permission to step away from some of the troubling scripts I’ve held from Christian religion, and the guilt that I’ve carried for questioning them. It helped me realize that it is okay to adopt different perspectives on important parts of the Christian faith, and has ignited a spark for more reflection and adjustment in my journey through spiritual questioning and doubt. Peter Enns tackles some really deep stuff in a way that is still very accessible and playful, with great examples, and a light, likable tone. I appreciate his openness, curiosity, and humbleness. My only wish is that the book was a little better organized. Sometimes I felt unclear on the overarching theme of certain chapters and the transitions were either sharp or fuzzy. There were also some parts that felt a bit redundant. With that aside, this book will definitely be influential for me in my spiritual journey and I’m sure will make a lasting impact.
Profile Image for Josiah.
60 reviews
February 16, 2024
Let me save you a few hours that you will never get back. Using novel arguments such as "If Bible true why Bible confusing," and "If Bible True why evolution," Enns concludes that the God of 2,000 years of historical Christian orthodoxy does not exist (Or at least the characture of Him that Enns conjured up). He's not sure what kind of God exists, but surely it's a vaguely nice and super chill sort of person. I've read a lot of blasphemous heresies before, but never so many that were based on no evidence or sources. I would give it zero stars if I could. This book is can be summed up in Romans 1:22, "Claiming to be wise, they became fools."
August 16, 2023
if you've been raised fundamentalist/evangelical Christian and ended up disconnecting w/ your faith over the years (like myself) this book is really impactful.

what this book is is the author offering ideas as to how God can exist outside of biblical literalism - and that taking the bible at face value may not be the intended purpose by God. i had only heard of the concept of biblical literalism maybe once in my life before this book - given that it's the default in the Christian faith i didn't know there was an alternative or a word for it.

enns comes off as very humble but qualified to talk about this subject given that he's gone to seminary school, and there was a lot of ideas that will resonate with any Christian - even those not questioning their faith or place within the religion/church: why do bad things happen to Christians who do good? why doesn't God heal everyone who prays for him? how does modern science factor into the Christian cosmology?

this book has opened a lot of new inquiries for me where i previously thought i didn't have a place in Christianity. :)
Profile Image for Eric Schlipf.
57 reviews1 follower
December 27, 2023
This is Enns’ most vulnerable book and also (in my opinion) most readable. It gave a lot of language to a lot of my thoughts while recognizing that language will always be insufficient. I wasn’t massively interested in his conversation on quantum physics, but perhaps others will find that compelling. I will undoubtedly recommend it to others.

One thing I’ve been reflecting on this year is how to interpret our experiences and our reality, which Enns places a high emphasis on. The problem with this, in my eyes, is that he’s not actually referring to his experiences, but rather his *interpretation* of his experiences, and our interpretation of our experiences changes as we age. This makes it, in my opinion, perhaps a less reliable source of spiritual formation then scripture or tradition.

Profile Image for Caroline Rex.
6 reviews1 follower
February 24, 2023
This book had so many “aha” moments for me. Realizing I was shoving round pegs into a square hole all of this time & seeing how the science of today can shape our faith into something bigger & more beautiful & mysterious. I actually opened my Bible because of this book, and that’s saying something for me in recent years. To learn more about his takes in a deeper & more personal way was truly a blessing.

I hope Enns keeps up this sort of writing. While I love his other works as well, his more practical approaches to this faith he typically writes about in academic ways (but for normal people) really hits home.

I read the book way too fast and will be re-visiting it with my husband. I think it had that many good things in it.
Profile Image for Jack Wilhelm.
1 review1 follower
May 1, 2023
Felt like someone put to paper the same experiences/anxieties I’ve had in life about faith. Love how Peter has grace for the faith practices we’re sometimes grandfathered into (instead of overly critical or bitter as it’s so easy to do).

While this book mainly tackles faith change and evolution, I think a lot of the takeaways can be universal for our lives in general. When life throws curveballs and our systems aren’t flexible enough to help us adjust, it’s easy to feel alone and distraught.

Really sells the importance of having robust, but also flexible systems (whether it’s faith or other traditions/practices) to help us navigate these seasons of life. Furthermore, it helps paint a more beautiful picture of faith in our lives if we’re willing to see where those curveballs take us.
Profile Image for Brady Kronmiller .
45 reviews
November 22, 2023
“How we understand God has consequences for how we treat others. If we see God as drawing thick lines between groups of people, we will feel justified in doing so ourselves…[we should] never mistake our limited understanding of God for God…God is more than any of our thoughts of God allow for. God, who is Mystery, is also Love, and ANY ATTEMPT ON OUR PART TO LIMIT THAT LOVE IS, I BELIEVE, NOT OF GOD.”


“Since orthodoxy is the primary value of a religious community, treating others harshly for failing to be orthodox is not only tolerated, but valued because doing so is in the service of protecting orthodoxy”

“The Orthodox Church sees its role as that of a spiritual hospital rather than a system set up to manage a legal system of retribution. The role of the church is to be a doctor and nurse, not judge and jury.”
Profile Image for Kendra Andrus.
Author 5 books17 followers
March 21, 2023
Oh Pete, you have been such a gift to me and to Christianity. I was so excited to hear your pastor's heart in this book. You unpacked the faith crisis that can come along with the academic and intellectual journey that has been your career. I didn't know there was going to be so much science, but it was glorious! The last chapter left me in tears and then the epilogue is the stuff that excellent liturgies are made of. I was listening while taking a walk, crying and clapping at the end. Thank you enormously. This is a must-read.
Profile Image for Michael Donahoe.
233 reviews15 followers
April 22, 2023
Such an interesting and informative book. Reading through this book brought up so many questions and gave me so many interesting views to think about. I have to say there are several ideas that I had never thought about and the author's way of bringing views out really sparked my interest. I have a whole new way of looking at certain things, and it really made sense in what was said. Read this book with an open mind and see what you think. The author makes clear we certainly have a much bigger God than many of us realize.
Profile Image for Savannah.
9 reviews
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March 26, 2023
I wouldn’t recommend this book to everyone, but I do believe the the conversation is extremely important. Concepts are explained beautifully as to why they were a curveball for Pete’s faith and how he has adjusted his model to be more inclusive of his experiences. I also love the idea of reframing our thoughts around a faith crisis; rather than seeing it as crisis and something to fear, we instead have events in our lives that push us towards God with curiosity and hope.
Profile Image for Emily Petersen.
194 reviews5 followers
September 10, 2023
Pete's new book is very aptly named, and really helpful for anyone that's in the dark when it comes to their faith and how it should look in practice.

I deeply appreciate his honesty and humility about the things he doesn't know, and those that he's willing to be wrong about.

This book leaves alot of room for reflection, questions and prayer. It took me a long time to finish as I tried to process my own inner life and grief.
Profile Image for Austin Dooley.
20 reviews1 follower
June 15, 2023
I really enjoyed it. My favorite thing about Enns is he doesn’t make you feel like an idiot or evil from coming away from the Bible confused, or for coming away from the Bible wanting to follow Jesus. He casts a warm vision for coming out from faith as primarily fear and boundary based, more love and relationship based. His last chapter on comparing AA and the church was particularly strong.
Profile Image for Catrina Berka.
522 reviews7 followers
April 16, 2025
As always, Enns is thoughtful and well-sourced with biblical and scientific research to suggest a broader, more expansive Christian faith. Having read several of his other books, I found this one especially hopeful.
Profile Image for ashley .
25 reviews1 follower
July 6, 2024
Complex, thoughtful, hopeful words. I needed some time to sit with the words, so I read it twice.
Profile Image for Peter.
396 reviews4 followers
March 10, 2023
Another great book by Pete Enns! In this book he examines what he calls curveballs, experiences in his life which have caused to reflect on what is God really like. Experiences like having to abandon his baseball career dream, the masses of humanity seen from a taxi, most who think very differently about God, the unfathomable vastness of space and the mind boggling nature of quantum physics. He includes a discussion of near death experiences.

He reflects on what God could be like given all these observations. He concludes that this God must be vastly bigger than previously imagined. He states that this God is one of love at the core. He states all this makes him constantly say …. Thank you. Amen!
3 reviews
October 27, 2023
This book is a memoir of sorts of Peter Enns' many curveballs and then him adjusting his view of God based on the experiences to those curveballs. Sadly it seems he's only a couple curveballs away from adjusting completely out of Christianity, that is, if he's not there already. Enns will state he still is a Christian but after reading this book it's not the follower of Jesus type Christian, it's the follower of this cosmic universal Christ made "famous" by Richard Rohr type Christian. If you aren't familiar with this New Age type concept, it's where they separate Jesus from the Christ. Christ to them is some cosmic spirit that at one time dwelt in Jesus and also dwells in everything (yeah, crazy). Rohr is a spiritual father to many in the progressive circles and you can see Rohr's influence in Enns' thinking throughout the book. Enns even considers himself as a panentheist which Rohr says he is as well. In order to support that panentheist view, they basically take a couple verses out of context to make it say all things are in God. Where does this universal Christ and panentheist view lead? You guessed it, universalism and all roads lead to God.

All of Enns's adjustments are experience driven. Once his experience goes against what his view of God is, he adjusts his view on God and doesn't go to a standard of truth that has been given to us, namely the Scriptures. The latter is heresy in Enns' eyes because as Enns states the Bible wasn't written with us in mind. It was only written in a certain way due to the experiences the writers of the Scriptures had at the time it was written. Basically, what the writers of the Old and New Testament wrote down was only from their limited experiences of God with no divine help/inspiration at all. Viewing the Scriptures this way lowers its relevance in your life and makes it a human book, as Enns believes. This is what Enns wants you to believe as well. Then you can come up with your own "scriptures" and build views on God that make sense to you based on your own experiences. You then can ultimately take what was written down in Scripture and change them to make them fit to your liking and culture or throw out what you don't like.

Enns writes about many curveballs like not believing there was a real Abraham and having blind faith in macro-evolution. I say blind faith because if you look for any observable evidence of macro-evolution you will find none. So you have to go on blind faith to believe it. Evolutionist will say look at the finches and bone structures. Those things are more pointing to adaptation and intelligent design and not to macro-evolution. Bottom line fish don't become humans and there is no observable evidence for it. Of course, because of Enns' blind faith in macro-evolution, he writes that he doesn't believe that Adam and Eve existed. Jesus certainly believed they existed and I adopted a personal policy, if somebody predicts and accomplishes his own resurrection from the dead I just trust whatever the guy says.

Enns does use some Scripture verses in this book but mostly uses them out of context when it fits the topic at hand. The same thing he shames "fundamentalist" Christians for. For example when talking about John 14:6 where Jesus says "I am the way, and the truth, and the life". Enns says it's not "beliefs about me are the way the truth and the life". However then in the same paragraph he mentions John 3:16 but "forgets" to add the belief part mentioned in v18.

Enns also writes that Christian's idea of God being omnipotent, omniscient, and omnipresent came from Greek influence. Now I grant, omni means "all" in Greek but I couldn't find one greek god that was even close to the "omnis" of the God of the Bible. However Enns writes as if those "omnis" came straight from the Greeks. It would have been nice if he could point to where he gets the data for bold statements like these because I searched for a while and can't find any.

Enns states in many places he made God bigger but it seems to me he's made God so big he's no longer personal to him. In my opinion, this leaves him in a very sad state. You can read the result of this non-personal God of his at the end of the book, where he says, to him, church is dull and prayer is mundane. That's the one experience and needed adjustment that Enns lacks, the personal relationship to Jesus, the only one and true Christ. Not the cosmic/universal one, but in God who came to live among us for a time, was killed, raised on the third day, and ascended back to Heaven, and will be back one day (something Enns mocks). Jesus, the only one worthy of our worship, the second person of the Trinity. I would assume Enns no longer worships Jesus, who is the curveball of all curveballs. The one curveball that truly matters and continues to be alive and real today. Once you have that real relationship with Jesus it will truly transform your life including prayer and church.

After reading this book it seems Enns has adjusted himself, with every curveball thrown at him, away from Jesus and Christianity into some New Age spiritual religion. Which he says puts him "in a much better place". However, this is a place that is built on sand with no architectural drawings and decorated in experience.
Profile Image for Ben.
2,734 reviews231 followers
December 7, 2023
Puts the ology in Theology

This was a truly great book. I enjoyed reading this.

I did find the book very advanced.
It got very scientific very quickly.

Probably the most scientific and advanced theology book I've ever read!

Still a great book! Check it out!

3.9/5
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