Ebook
However you define it, deconstruction is impossible to deny.
"I'm deconstructing my faith." As any pastor can tell you, hearing these words is simply a regular feature of ministry these days. How we respond to those who are deconstructing will reveal the kind of church—and the kinds of Christians—we really are.
Ian Harber knows the fear and grief of deconstruction firsthand. In Walking Through Deconstruction, he tells the story of his own process of deconstruction and reconstruction over more than ten years and explores what is actually happening, both culturally and spiritually, when someone deconstructs their faith.
Deconstruction doesn't happen in a vacuum; it is catalyzed by a comfortable society, cultural Christianity, compromised churches, and the compounding anxieties of life. But the Christian faith has better to offer. Harber lays out a vision for the kind of faith environment that can foster genuine reconstruction through healthy relationships, robust doctrine, healthy institutions, a better theology of suffering, and the peace of God.
Walking Through Deconstruction
We desperately need healthy models of ministry to those who are deconstructing. Whether you're a pastor, parent, or friend of someone on this path, Walking Through Deconstruction offers hope for a renewed faith—stronger than it was before.
Foreword by Gavin Ortlund
Introduction
Part 1: Deconstruct
1. Defining Deconstruction
2. Deconstructing The Wall
3. Deconstructing the Crisis
4. Deconstructing Belief
5. Deconstructing Church
6. Deconstructing Self
7. The Ends of Deconstruction
Part 2: Reconstruct
8. Reconstructing Relationships
9. Reconstructing Suffering
10. Reconstructing Belief
11. Reconstructing Discipleship
12. Reconstructing Church
13. Reconstructing God
Conclusion
Notes
"After growing up in the church, I deconstructed Christianity in college, as the apparatus of my youth group was removed and questions I'd never dealt with began to bear down on my fragile faith. I wish I'd had Ian Harber's Walking Through Deconstruction then, but I am immensely grateful that with we have it now. With both compassion and conviction, equal parts comfort and confrontation, this book will help those deconstructing see a path toward reconstruction, guiding us toward a faith more rich, robust, and dynamic in discipleship to Jesus."
"Ian Harber neither valorizes deconstruction nor dismisses this painful experience. As a result, he's written a book that can help anyone undergoing this process as well as everyone who loves them. Walking Through Deconstruction deserves a wide audience and careful reading."
"I picked up this book in hope of finding a resource to help me walk alongside those who are deconstructing. I found not only that, but also a powerful reminder of why the Christian faith drew my own heart back from the brink of unbelief. What a gift!"
"For too long we've treated deconstruction as an intellectual problem. We think that if we can correct someone's bad ideas, then we can argue them back into the faith. But people aren't brains on sticks. They're people. Each has a story, emotions, hurts, joys, and unfathomable complexity. Ian Harber's Walking Through Deconstruction is the first book I've encountered that cuts to the heart of deconstruction: a painful, confusing, heartbreaking crisis of faith. And Harber goes one step further, gently walking readers through the process of reconstruction. Not with modernist apologetics, but with ancient wisdom—the very beauty that pulled him out of his own crisis. Whether you're deconstructing or someone you love is, Walking Through Deconstruction is a generous, hopeful invitation back to Jesus."
"The conversation around deconstruction has too often turned into an abstract online battleground. Ian Harber reminds us what deconstruction is actually about: the people going through it. Wise, measured, and thoughtful, this is a book that meets this moment with grace and hope."
"Having gone through it himself, Ian Harber is well-positioned to tackle the delicate topic of faith deconstruction in a way that is both loving and truth telling. This book will make those in the deconstruction process feel seen but also challenged. And it will help loved ones be better equipped to walk with the deconstructing in compassionate and constructive ways."
Ian Harber is a writer and Christian media producer. He has written for The Gospel Coalition, Mere Orthodoxy, and RELEVANT. He writes about reconstructing faith in his newsletter Back Again, and about faith, media, and technology at Endeavor. He lives in Denton, Texas, with his wife and sons.