For an entire generation, "God" has become an embarrassing word. We wear "spiritual but not religious" as a badge of intellectual maturity. We saw the corruption of the institution, and in our righteous recoil, we burned down the whole cathedral. But what did we lose in the ashes?
In God Is a Dirty Word, licensed therapist Lacey K. Kelly offers a profound cultural reckoning with the secular age. Humans do not stop worshiping; when we reject God, we simply find new altars. We worship the self, authenticity, political movements, and the therapy couch. But as rates of anxiety, depression, and loneliness climb relentlessly, we have to ask: is what we built in the absence of God actually working?
This book is not an altar call, and it is not asking you to return to anything that hurt you. It is an intellectually honest, deeply personal invitation to get curious about the flinch we feel at the word "God."
In this book, you will explore:
- The "god-shaped hole" and the exhausting burden of making the self the ultimate authority
- How therapy and political identity have become our new religions
- The difference between the broken container of the Church and the contents it carried
- Why the universe, source energy, and self-regulation are sometimes not enough
If you are exhausted by the modern pressure to be your own savior, this book is an invitation to sift through the ruins. You don't have to agree by the end. You just have to be willing to ask the question.