And what was the other book that both Thomas and wil liked...?
"The Experience of God" by David Bentley Hart. I'm reading it now. It's philosophy, not theology, but it's got a fantastic critique of the contemporary atheist position.
The God of the Deists is founded on the idea that God can, and can only, be determined by the reasoned observation of the natural world. So we end up with a notion of God, cast in the shadow of the 17th century's scientific insight.
Approached this way, with God seen as standing at the apex of the world, it's understandable that one ends up with God as some kind of celestial architect or artificer.
Such a God is actually closer to the Demiurge of antiquity, its an anthropomorphic projection that bears little resemblance to the God of the Christian or Hindu Traditions, it's the God that Greek philosophy had consigned to the Cave when Logos superseded mythos.
This timeless idea reprises itself in every age, in Pelagianism, in the Medieval esoteric schools, in Freemasonry, in the 'New Thought' Christianity of the 18th and 19th centuries, the God of the Romance Movement and its theological notions evident in HPB's Theosophy and Steiner's Anthroposophy, the neo-gnosticism in the New Age and The Matrix ('the architect').
It's the God that the 'new atheism' rails against, in their ill-informed assumptions about what they believe the great theist Traditions actually declare, which is why they so consistently miss the mark.
The Age of Reason assumed — for reasons it itself cannot reasonably affirm — that the Cosmos is essentially reasonable, and therefore God must be reasonable, and that whatever one considers unreasonable can be dismissed. So away with Revelation. Away with miracles. Away with Scripture beyond a few moral and ethical aphorisms, away with all the supposed superstition of religious practice, and mystical insight ...
Sadly, it's convenient today to assume this position is still viable, when so much scientific discovery has moved on some considerable distance from the Age of Enlightenment and consigned most of its beliefs to the wastebasket of history, it's just a shame people still cling to their outworn notions because of their superficial populist appeal.
Take Benjamin Franklin:
... In the beginning of the contest with G. Britain, when we were sensible of danger we had daily prayer in this room for the Divine Protection. – Our prayers, Sir, were heard, and they were graciously answered. All of us who were engaged in the struggle must have observed frequent instances of a Superintending providence in our favor. ... I have lived, Sir, a long time and the longer I live, the more convincing proofs I see of this truth – that God governs in the affairs of men... Said at the Constitutional Convention in June 1787. Emphasis mine.)
It's riddled with inconsistency and metaphysical abstractions that occur when science abandons its foundational axioms in favour of a frankly superstitious speculation, as the above quote from Franklin evidences.
Philosophy has moved on (on the European continent, at least. The Anglo-American 'analytic school' still has its feed stuck firmly in the mud of empiricism, hence philosophical relativism with all its moral dilemmas). Science has moved on. Theology has moved on. But popular opinion always lags somewhere behind, and the appeal of the image of God as the exemplar of nature (human nature in particular) endures ...