The Shack
Foreword
Summary Notes:
·
Mack’s
father: Irish-American, farmer,
externally religious, strict, church-elder, closet drinker, physically abusive to family, believes in
God (asks for forgiveness).
·
Mack as a child: Farm
kid, feels guilty about not defending mom, vengeful (poison, p8).
·
Mack as an adolescent: Hurt, bold,
running (left home at 13, p8).
·
Mack as a young adult: Explorer (world traveler, p9), soldier, hates
war, searching for answers in
seminary, tired of theology, speaks his mind freely as a survival mechanism to
cover his hurts, points out other people’s faults and humiliates them.
·
Mack as a grown man before The Great
Sadness: Wants peace, thinks more than
talks, is a doer (farm work ethic), ordinary, unremarkable, smart in his career
field, loves talking about God and
creation and beliefs, not very religious, views God as brooding,
distant, aloof, uses sarcasm, sees the world in many shades of gray.
·
Mack’s wife (Nan): Views the world as black and white, has a lot
of common sense, wanted to be a doctor but had kids instead, is a nurse, works with terminal patients,
has a deep relationship with God,
·
Mack after The Great Sadness: Polite, shallow, evasive, protective, hurting.
Splinters from “Shaq:”
1.
Do you have anything
in your closet that you keep from “church” people?
2.
Are you searching
for answers about anything in life?
3.
What kind of
people do you surround yourself with?
4.
What topic do you
protect yourself from most of the time?
5.
How would you rank
your relationship with God at this time?