Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Christ-Esteem: Where the Search for Self-Esteem Ends

 


                         *****

Christ-Esteem: Where the Search for Self-Esteem Ends
by Don Matzat
Harvest House, 1990. 102pp.

This review pertains to the online pdf version of this book, July,2007.

[Available online at: http://pastormattrichard.webs.com/ChristEsteem.pdf]

Here is an out-of-print book that is noteworthy for its rare perspective on the 'self-esteem' movement that has become commonplace thinking in western culture since the closing years of the 20th century.

Having often grappled with making sense of self-esteem from a Biblical viewpoint, I was delighted to read this author's counter-cultural perspective that "Biblical Christianity teaches us to know ourselves so that we might turn away from ourselves and discover our life and identity in Christ Jesus." (p.20)

His premise is well-supported from Scripture, from historical Christianity (often quoting Martin Luther), and from life experiences (his own and those he has counseled). Matzat contends that until 'we come to grips with the depth of sin within our hearts, our relationship with Jesus will remain superficial.' (p.19)

Regarding cultivating a positive self-image, he wisely points out that: "Contrary to popular opinion, how I think about myself will not change the situation nor adjust what I am. Embracing a positive image of self will not, in the long run, make any difference, because I am still wrapped up in myself. I simply become a self-centered sinner who is trying to like himself. Even if I feel bad about myself and [do]not like myself, I am still focusing upon myself, and "myself" is the problem. The corrupted condition of my human "self" is not a mere figment of imagination which can be adjusted by thinking differently." (p.34)

Instead, Matzat points out that God intends to free us from the tyranny of pre-occupation with ourselves and to give us instead the very life of Jesus, such as Paul speaks of in Gal.2:20—"I live, yet not I, but Christ lives in me, and the life I live here in the flesh, I live by faith in the Son of God."

Although the distinction between the self-life and the life of Christ lived through me is not a simple thing to fathom, and even less straightforward to put into practice, it is clearly called for in Scripture. This book offers practical counsel and guidance along these lines for anyone who is ready to trade self-esteem for 'Christ-esteem'. Sanctification is not about my self improving, but about learning to deny self and abide in Christ who is my righteousness…

Because it was first published in 1990, some of the references to current popular teachers are outdated. But the thoughtful reader will identify other modern teachers that have merely changed their labels but teach much the same things in the guise of preaching truth. It is sad to see how little positive self-talk teaching has really changed but how much more widely it is accepted among even believers with the passing of time.

One disclaimer I would make is that Matzat uses a couple of terms repeatedly which in my opinion are poorly chosen. He speaks of the necessity to 'accuse' oneself, and to 'detach from' oneself in order to be joined to Jesus. In light of the devil's job description as 'accuser of the brethren' this seems a less than ideal depiction of 'death to self'. Given their contexts however, I believe he has the right idea but has not expressed it as accurately as he might have. For this reason I still highly recommend his book for its courageous call to "turn away from 'self' and find our identity in Christ Jesus."

Only then will we "be HIS witnesses. We will no longer show forth what great, wonderful people we are. Rather, we will demonstrate what a great, wonderful Lord and Savior we have in Jesus Christ. To HIM be the glory....."

--LS

If you're not sure you have time for another book right now, do at least consider these valuable quotes…

"Contrary to popular opinion, how I think about myself will not change the situation nor adjust what I am. Embracing a positive image of self will not, in the long run, make any difference, because I am still wrapped up in myself.  I simply become a self‐centered sinner who is trying to like himself… The corrupted condition of my human "self" is not a mere figment of imagination which can be adjusted by thinking differently." (34)

"I would challenge anyone to demonstrate where the Bible teaches us to be consciously concerned with our self-image.   Urging Christians to become engrossed in self by seeking to develop self-esteem is not a part of the solution to the human dilemma.    Since I am the problem, focusing attention upon myself merely magnifies, activates and compounds the problem.  Jesus tells us to deny ourselves.  Such self-denial is not the giving up of ice cream for Lent but is the actual denial of "self" itself. "(34)

"Centering and focusing attention upon self is merely digging up the corpse, so to speak.  If you know that you have died with Christ, how can you feel good about yourself?  A funeral director may make‐up and neatly dress a corpse and the family may gather around the open casket and say, "Doesn't he look good," but the cold facts are, the corpse is dead no matter how good it may look. "(38)

"Because of this failure to identify "self" with Christ Jesus in his ascension, many today boast of their new identity here on this earth.  They strive to build their self‐image upon what God has done for them.  They talk about "their spiritual gifts" and their victorious Christian lives. They seek to build and defend their great ministries and so that they might be known as "great men of God."  Nothing has changed! They are still become wrapped up and indulged in 'self' ". (44)

"This is a very important principle. When you look at yourself, you must see your sin.  When you look away from yourself to Christ Jesus, you see your new identity, your perfect righteousness, your glorious position with God in the heavenly places." (44)

"The person of Jesus Christ IS OUR SPIRITUALITY.  Rather than speaking of "becoming more spiritual," we should rather think in terms of growing in our daily faith relationship with our Lord Jesus.  This is as spiritual as we can get." (52)

"Our human pride would like to have spiritual benefits and experiences in order to enlarge ourselves and be identified as "deeply spiritual people."  God does not offer to us forgiveness, righteousness, love, peace, joy, gifts, ministries, wealth and prosperity as separate entities. Since our identity is in the heavenly places, we can not claim anything that comes from God as belonging to us. God has only given to us one thing: His Son Jesus Christ who is our life." (53)

"This separation of the content of the Christian life and experience from the person of Jesus Christ is no small matter!  It will inevitably lead to numerous distortions such as humanism, mysticism, occultism, or legalism." (54)

"We don't talk about the 'great men of God' on this earth, for there are none.  No matter how high and lofty a position a person attains in the Church of Jesus Christ or how much influence he is able to exert upon a large number of people, he remains a little, sinful man in whom is being manifested a great God and Savior, Jesus Christ!" (56)

"We do not pull ourselves up by our boot straps by declaring how good, wonderful, and talented we are. Instead when we look at ourselves we declare, "I am the problem. I am a sinner. Nothing good dwells within my sinful nature."   But we don't stop there, we look up to the throne where Jesus is seated at the right hand of God and confess, "my God has redeemed me in Christ Jesus. He has granted to me the very righteousness of Christ and has already lifted me up and seated me in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus.   My God is able to do far more abundantly above all that I ask or think."   (74)

"We do not speak forth the Word and promises of God in order that they might be brought into reality. We declare God's Word, because it is reality. … Whether I declare the truth or deny the truth does not change the truth. "(75)

"Depending upon Jesus as our life means that we are no longer depending upon ourselves, and this is not easy. It is very difficult to give up on ourselves and to arrive at the conclusion that Jesus is the only source of our peace and joy. We always want to hang on to our own lives and maintain the hope that somewhere, somehow, just around the next corner, we will discover the key to happiness, contentment and peace of mind in ourselves, but nothing ever changes. We become trapped in a way of life. It is in giving up on ourselves and turning to Jesus that we discover his life in us." (90-91)

"Of course, it is impossible to totally put away the personal emphasis upon "self," the defense of "self," or the desires of "self." If this were the case, we would experience heaven on earth. But this is the goal that needs to be clearly expressed "up front" within the life of the Christian community." (102)

The Other Side of the River—Reeves

The Other Side of the River
By Kevin Reeves
Lighthouse Trails Publ.,2007. 222pp.

'There's no quicker way to start a fight with a friend than to tell him that some of his most fervent beliefs are wrong.' But a true friend will take the risk when it comes to things that matter. And this is what Kevin Reeves attempts in this auto-biographical account of his own charismatic church's move away from 'the primacy of the Word of God into the nebulous, self-defining atmosphere of experience.'

He writes as an encouragement to those who have begun to recognize the errors creeping into the hyper-charismatic arm of the Church, and as an eye-opening warning to others. Based on careful research, in-depth Bible study, and his own involvement, he candidly demonstrates the lure, the pitfalls, and the misguided teaching involved in the River Revival movement and other tributary 'moves of God'. His assessment, though pointed, is not bitter, vindictive or mocking, but politely objective, challenging the reader to evaluate everything by the Word of God. His perceptions are especially relevant because he himself was an enthusiastic participant and leader in the practices and teachings he now warns against.

Topics considered include: the "Word-Faith" movement, 'spiritual warfare', modern 'revivals', prophetic 'words', 'holy laughter', being 'slain in the Spirit' and the use of manipulative music in worship, among many others. But beyond cross-examining actual practices and teachings Reeves offers keen insights explaining the strong appeal of these teachings even to well-intentioned, passionate believers.
'River' life is not all it seems to be at the first dip of the big toe. This author has straggled out on the far shore with a wealth of wisdom. I applaud his diligence and courage in presenting his findings for the sake of the Body of Christ. And I commend his book to the reader willing to "test all things" and "hold fast what is good" (I Th.5:21) even when it runs contrary to personal experience and cherished beliefs that just may be in error.

--LS

And now for a wealth of quotes which capture the book's essence…
(Bold lettering is not in original text)

"Many today have gone the way of Esau and for the sake of a fleeting sensuality are in the process of exchanging their incomparable inheritance in Christ for a bellyful of fleshly experiences."(12)

"…but there was an underlying factor, a premise woven throughout the fabric of our church…elitism. We were the fortunate ones, called to walk in the authority that the church was so bereft of in these last days…it was up to us at New Covenant [Church] to demonstrate that God's kingdom power was real and available to every Christian in our town. This prideful mindset was a recipe for disaster…"(18)

"Names like hypocrites, Sanhedrin, and God mockers are merely a sampling of the invective aimed at Christians who are concerned about doctrinal error.Nobody wants to be labeled a Pharisee or heresy hunter. But that is often the penalty for daring to step out and ask for a public, biblical accounting of doctrine and practice." (21)

"A current river is flowing, which many believe to be of God…but overstepping the sanctity of scriptural boundaries, this passage [Ezekiel 47] has been reshaped into the comfortable doctrines of the easy believism and sensual manifestations that mark a massive shift in the church. As believer,we have taken a hairpin turn from the preeminence of the Word of God to a relative, experiential, and terribly apostate faith." (22)

"We examined virtually nothing. We didn’t' need to, remember? We were in church, and only good things happen in church. We held fast, not only to that which we knew to be good, but to that which appeared good. And what seemed good often appealed to our quest for power and wisdom." (59)

"As much as we spoke about personal holiness, power was still a key goal in our congregation. Power to heal, cast out demons…and war against principalities and powers. But that's what happens when people detour from clear biblical teaching to follow what they believe is the Holy Spirit, Who, in truth, always confirms the Scriptures. The voice, impression, leading—whatever—becomes the final arbiter. Scripture is put on the back burner, or made to fit the experience via a set of proof texts." (71)

"While the Bible does refer to an anointing (I Jn.2:27), it has in these days of sensual faith been contorted almost beyond recognition….it has been placed in the realm of something that needs to be reached for, pursued, or worked up in order to be obtained." (80)

"To say,…'the anointing is now present for healing,' or prophecy, or whatever, is to replace the indwelling Spirit with a physical feeling, emotion, or experience, and to separate Him from His ministry….What this kind of thinking promotes is…the idea that we need something more than we already possess as believers in Christ. This is precisely the original temptation in the Garden of Eden….The fact is, if the Holy Spirit resides in us…, then His power is there as well, to enable us to do what He wants us to do. Anything added to what God has already provided is a counterfeit."(83)

"But I have yet to know of anyone, myself included, who, because of being slain experienced a changed life characterized by a love for the truth and a knowledge of God in agreement with the Scriptures. In my experience, the exact opposite has happened. When folks get touched with this kind of power, they routinely become almost unteachable, preferring the experience to the Word of God. I can't relate how many times I've heard, "Well, maybe I can't find it in the Scriptures, but it happened to me, so it's real!"(84)

"Why does God take false prophecy so seriously? Because it always dishonors His name and leads the people to worship a false image rather than the true God." (89)

"In Scripture, the validity of any prophetic office was directly proportional to its exposure of false teaching."(89)

"Without firm adherence to objective truth—the Bible—we have no scale on which to weigh doctrine at all. One man's guess becomes another's rigid belief."(112)

"This is a very common notion these days, that Christians are actually preventing the Second Coming by our refusal to lower doctrinal walls…But tearing down of denominational boundaries straight across the board has been a most successful tactic utilized these days to introduce heretical doctrines into church fellowship. This kind of contrived unity short-circuits honest discussion and refutation."(115)

"If I can't speak about what I believe for fear of offending you and neither can you, and neither of us can break company with the other no matter how false our personal doctrines, then this unity is not what Jesus prayed for."(115)

"Feasting on the fantastic, our appetites were never quite sated. We were always left craving just one more spiritual high brought about by the newest teachings, tales of the miraculous, and face-to-face encounters with God, angels, and demons. No claim was too wild for us to believe. From the prophetic to the power signs, this religious wild goose chase made certain we always had our running shoes on, ever ready to sprint in whichever direction the spiritual wind happened to be blowing at the moment….(Eph.4:14)" (125)

"I mostly spoke of power, not the Gospel that saves men from eternal death. I guess I felt that the average guy on the street wouldn't listen to solid spiritual truth without seeing a demonstration of signs and wonders. Funny, we had forgotten the words of our Lord: "An evil and adulterous generation seeketh after a sign." (Mt.12:39) (131)

"Although it is an extremely unpopular message these days, fleshly abandon in the name of the Most High God cannot be sanctified or made contextually holy. ‘Because the carnal mind is enmity against God.’”(Romans 8:7)" (139)

"We can judge without being judgmental. Peripheral issues we can overlook, knowing full well the sole reservoir of truth does not rest with us.

But in the presentation of Christ, there can be no leeway. A false image of the Savior—His character, words or deeds—will lead us away from the truth, and consequently, away from God. And eventually, that is what every fraudulent vision will do—take away from the person of Christ and demand our attention and adherence to its personalized message." (151,2)

"The Bible offers no precedent for gathering a collection of spiritual experiences and allowing them to determine personal or corporate direction for a body of believers. The only volume we have need of has already been given to us, and it has ably resisted the systematic onslaught from the kingdom of darkness for millennia."(152)

"My spiritual legs became heavy from running after every "wind of doctrine" that blew through our ranks. There was never a place of satisfaction, that Sabbath rest spoken of in Hebrews 4. While the anointing we pursued promised to be refreshing, all it did was hone, razor-sharp, the craving for another spiritual high." (200)

"Pitting the Word against the Holy Spirit is the easiest way in the world to get a Christian to believe that he is missing out. Since there are no reference points in Scripture from which to validate these manifestations, visions, dreams, and experiences, the best way to get around the issue is to declare the Bible relatively obsolete, or somehow detached from the Spirit's present leading." (205)

"It is a simple fact that right doctrine cannot be divorced from right practice. To admit to a whole new assembly line of manifestations and what-have-you because of eagerness to enter some new frontier of spirituality is to remove oneself from the only objective measuring rod in the church's possession." (205)

"Given a Christian twist, the foundations of elitism, religious sensuality, ingratiating personal prophecy, and false signs and wonders all made sense at the time, despite the inner promptings that consistently pointed me to the Scriptures that bade me examine everything carefully; hold fast to that which is good (I Thessalonians 5:21)." (213)

"We have to come to grips with reality. As believers, we have never lacked anything that could give us a deep and satisfying walk with Christ. We have always, since the moment of our salvation, been complete in Him (Colossians 2:10). We have been made partakers of the divine nature through the magnificent promises of God (II Peter 1:3-4), and He is able to make all grace wonderfully abound toward us so that we have all sufficiency in every area of our lives (II Corinthians 9:8). We have the assurance of Scripture." (207)

---------------------------

The Other Side of the River by Kevin Reeves is available from Lighthouse Trails Publishing. Eureka, Montana. www.lighthousetrails.com or via the author's own website: http://theothersideoftheriver.com/index.shtml

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Growing Up Amish—Wagler

Growing Up Amish
by Ira Wagler
Tyndale: 2011, 271pp.


Down through time many a teen has packed his bags and run away from home. Not often has running away proven to be the idyllic solution envisioned.  And so it was with Ira Wagler, only his story is compounded by the complexities of growing up in an old-order Amish community where one’s unquestioned destiny is to remain Amish and damnation is the sure fate of any who leave the shelter of their Amish upbringing. Ira does run away, not once, not twice, but four times before he can escape the tentacles of obligation and guilt that seem always to insure his reluctant return.

This is his home-spun tale of what it is like to be Amish—the good, the tough, and the stifling aspects of such a ‘world’. And it is his testimony of overcoming the impossible expectation and burden of ‘just decide what’s right and then do it!’ It is a story of struggle and dogged determination and finally of relief coming from an unexpected source.

The story is an easy rambling read, with moments of suspense but mostly of the commonplace details of life in a community where horse and buggy are standard transportation, and courtship is a strictly structured affair. Gossip takes the place of telephones and hymnsings the place of radios. Although not an especially riveting read it is an unusual insider’s view of what it means to be Amish. There is always a sense that the story is building to something, but only in the final two chapters is the angst resolved, this angst of longing for freedom and something more but always returning to the disappointingly tried and true. Then suddenly with Ira’s discovery of the real key to freedom from the oppressive guilt and obligation that have dogged his life for ten years, the story is over and the reader is left wondering how successfully Ira found his way in the big wide world outside his Amish heritage. This abrupt two chapter finish after thirty-two chapters of lead-up leaves the book feeling unbalanced and dissatisfying. But its rare glimpse into the world of the little known Amish makes the read worthwhile, and news is there’s a sequel in the works.

In addition to giving insight into Amish culture, this book offers any parent an opportunity to look at life through a coming-of-age child’s perspective and to consider: how are values best passed on? Ira is quite candid in reflecting on his parents’ virtues and vices and on the values that stuck despite his chafing to be free. So if you’re looking to slow the pace of life for a bit, try Growing Up Amish.

--DW

Sunday, February 5, 2012

Unshaken—Woolley

Unshaken *****
by Dan Woolley with Jennifer Schuchmann
Zondervan, 2011, 238pp including mid-section color photographs

Unshaken is the personal narrative of Dan Woolley’s 65 hour entrapment in pitch blackness under the rubble of a collapsed hotel after the Haiti earthquake. Although it details his survival methods in gripping detail this is much more than a Reader’s Digest survival drama. With life threatening injuries and little hope of being rescued, Dan learned what it was to really have to trust God, to serve Him even here, and to worship. When he was nearly losing his grip out of physical and mental exhaustion, he felt compelled to sing songs of confidence in God. Having heard Dan speak in person, this part of his testimony still resonates as the apex of his story—finding God worthy of praise in the midst of destruction and before his rescue was executed. But this is no tale of trite and easy faith. Dan’s transparency lets the reader really enter into his struggles and face the hard questions with him. Could God really bring anything good out of this?

The story’s suspense is not spoiled by foreknowing the outcome but is actually drawn out by the interwoven narrative of Dan and his wife’s courtship and early years of marriage. Persevering with his wife through years of clinical depression is a story all its own of faith tested and triumphant. The telling of the stories in tandem is very effectively and realistically done and will be an encouragement to anyone who has faced onslaughts of discouragement or depression. The latter chapters include the earthquake disaster as seen from his wife’s perspective, not knowing whether her husband was dead or alive. The outcome for Dan and his wife is more than a mere physical rescue. Their faith and marriage have been reignited. Likewise, the reader is given a fresh appreciation for life and the God who can be trusted, when all else is shaken, to work for the good of those who love him.

--DW

Monday, January 16, 2012

The Grace Effect--Taunton

The Grace Effect: How the Power of One Life Can Reverse the Corruption of Unbelief

by Larry Alex Taunton

(Thomas Nelson, 2011, 254pp. including Discussion Guide)

***

Larry Taunton, a seasoned Christian apologist, uses the story of his 10-yr. old daughter’s adoption from the Ukraine to underline his conviction that Christianity not only creates a different and better society but is essential to the maintenance of such a society.  Drawing on specific encounters with heartless officials and corruption in the adoption process he draws a contrast to ‘the grace effect’, the tangible benefits granted to a society that is shaped by Christian beliefs.  Personal narrative alternates with didactic sections on the religious history of Ukraine and the Soviet policies underlying its orphanages.  The objective throughout is to challenge the premise of New Atheism that society would be better off without Christianity.

The book is a unique intermingling of Christian apologetics with corroborating personal experience.  I enjoyed the storyline and Taunton makes many valid conclusions about a grace-based vs. a godless society.  However, I found his own impatience and disgust with corrupt bureaucracy to be lacking in ‘the grace effect’.  How would he expect the pawns of such a harsh and corrupt society to act otherwise?  His chapter titled: “Atheists don’t do Benevolence” is a needlessly offensive generalization, as is his ‘write-off’ of Greek Orthodoxy as ‘not very Christian’. 

While his story serves to expose the plight of orphans in the Ukraine, his accusation of exploitation and ‘selling children’ may reflect an oversimplification of the complex problem the Ukranian government faces.  If it was easy and cheap to acquire a child from such an orphanage, these children would most certainly be exploited for evil gain.

One of my favorite aspects of the book are the author’s conversations with one of new atheism’s leading proponents, Christopher Hitchens.  Their amiable relationship is an impressive expression of the grace effect, and makes me willing to overlook some of my other objections to the book.  I would recommend it to those interested in apologetics, foreign adoption, or just a good solid case of Christianity in action.  I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher for review purposes via their Booksneeze program.

 --DW

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Housekeeping—Robinson

Housekeeping
by Marilynne Robinson (author of Gilead and
Home)
(Farrar Straus Giroux, 1980, 219pp.)

Where do the homeless come from? Are they born so? Or does their destiny evolve? In this her first novel, Marilynne Robinson melds words into a dreamlike revelation of the makings of a transient mindset. Through the eyes of a little girl Ruth, speaking for herself and her sister, we follow the effects of loss of family and isolation on individuals in the larger context of a whole community haunted by the same. The place is Fingerbone, an isolated western town on the shores of a deep lake crossed by a railroad trestle bridge. The story begins with the retelling of the tragic derailing of the train that buried its occupants in this lake, including the grandfather of the storyteller. Here the dysfunction begins with the solitary upbringing of Ruth’s own mother and sisters… Following the subsequent drowning of her own mother in this same lake, Ruth is mothered in succession by her aging grandmother, two spinster great-aunts, and finally an unstable aunt whose idea of housekeeping shapes the rest of the book.

The author is a magician with words and evokes not only a somber dreamlike mood but recreates the very mental distortions of the lonely. Losing touch with reality, denying need, welcoming transience all become part of the reader’s experience vicariously. It is not a read that will brighten your day but it will give you a new way of seeing the next wanderer that crosses your path.

Having read Gilead and Home and loved Marilynne’s capacity to capture mood with words, I thought I knew what I was getting into when I found Housekeeping, her first novel, on the library shelf. I was disappointed. Not because she does not evoke mood with deftly used language and a dream-like point-of-view—a first person omniscient narrative. My disappointment lay in not fully comprehending the mental states painted with words. Her skill in getting into a character’s mind and tracing its workings in words is a wonder! I felt barred from going there by my own want of experience. A large part of the delight of reading for me is reading about myself or my experience, resonating with ‘Yes, that’s how it really is’, seeing in words what I could never have written… This novel was too utterly strange and ‘other’ for me to enter.

But I don’t regret the reading of it. It is like I have seen the evolution of a homeless person, traced their origins, felt to a small extent their loss and metamorphosis. I have seen, if not understood, their values—the disdain for ‘housekeeping’ as I picture it, the denial of want, of hunger, of cold, of pain, the inability to relish comfort. I was struck by the possibility of learning not to feel.

“I learned an important thing in the orchard that night, which was that if you do not resist the cold, but simply relax and accept it, you no longer feel the cold as discomfort.”

“I was hungry enough to begin to learn that hunger has its pleasures, and I was happily at ease in the dark, and in general, I could feel that I was breaking the tethers of need, one by one.”

Loss, loneliness, aloneness, solitariness—these are the breeding grounds for insanity. This novel is haunted by the ghosts borderlining this state. It is sad, lonely, like a bad dream, blurring reality with imagined reality. At once I want to shut it and put it on a far away shelf and yet the glimpses it has given me into another world cannot be so easily re-shelved.

--DW

Friday, August 19, 2011

God’s Love Letters to You—Crabb

God’s Love Letters to You
By Larry Crabb
(Thomas Nelson, 2010)

This compact devotional is a condensed-Crabb sampler. For the reader who hasn’t been challenged with Crabb’s perspectives this is an ideal starter. Each of 40 brief devotions is loosely based on a book of the Bible. After a key verse each ‘love letter’ begins with “God says…” These are not emotional, feel-good letters but bracing truths that cut through the blind spots and sloppy theology of a hedonistic culture. They reflect the idea that God is more concerned with our holiness than our immediate happiness. A sampling from the “Daniel” devotional represents the flavor of these letters: “The greatest danger My people face today is prosperity, blessings that reinforce the false hope that nothing serious will ever go wrong in their lives if they just keep believing, expecting, trusting, and smiling…” Following each single-page devotional are three of four penetrating application questions, well worth taking time to think through, and a prayer written in the first-person. The ‘letters’ are designed to be read over the span of 40 days.

I have long appreciated Crabb’s writing and very much enjoyed this latest devotional, marking lines to re-read on most pages. There is much food for thought here. One potentially disconcerting factor is the way words that are not directly traceable to Scripture are put in God’s mouth. Scripture has been filtered through Crabb’s own spiritual walk and life experience as a counselor giving it a distinctive ‘Crabb’ flavor. While I happen to believe his emphasis is a timely corrective for a Christian culture addicted to self-fulfillment, still it would be good if the devotionals were more directly referenced to the Word. I would still highly recommend this book. Even if you don’t agree with every word Crabb speaks for God you will be challenged to face potential blindspots and misconceptions about what the Christian life is really all about.

I received a complimentary copy of this book from Thomas Nelson Publishers for review purposes.

--DW