Sound arrogant? Sound like another "name it and claim it" type book? Sound irreverent and manipulative?
I have to admit, I thought all those things before I read this book. I thought it would be a lot of hype and not a lot of substance. I thought it would be a lot of hope, without much real talk of faith.
Boy was I wrong!
"Faith isn't just a 'Get Out of Hell Free' Card." This quote is from chapter one. This quote had my bias quavering.
"It's not about thinking you can get God in your back pocket so that you can manipulate Him for your own purposes." I read this in chapter two. Okay, I'm setting aside my bias and getting very interested.
Right from chapter one the emphasis was more on serving God, rather than "what can God do for me."
The core passage Steven Furtick uses throughout the book is Joshua 10. This is an awesome story of Joshua leading the Israelites into the Promised Land. This chapter details the third battle they had to fight, in Gibeon. The detail that makes this story so great is found in verses 12 and 13. Joshua commanded the sun to stand still in the sky, so his army could keep on fighting. Subsequently, they won the battle. What an audacious (a word Furtick uses often) thing to do!
Furtick explains that we, too, can pray "Sun Stand Still" prayers.
"The same power that stopped the sun and raised Christ from the grave lives in every believer." Amen!
He explains it starts with having a vision--a plan or goal. "If the dream in your heart isn't biblically based, focused on Jesus, affirmed by the key people in your life, and tethered to your passions, gifts, and life experiences, chances are, you're way off prompt." People perish for lack of vision. Proverbs 29:18 KJV
God has a purpose for each one of us. "Seizing His big purpose for your life is not just about figuring out what God wants from you and getting down to business. It's also about becoming intimately acquainted with who Jesus is. It's about mining the depths of who you are in Him. And out of that revelation, you will fulfill the purpose that He put you on the earth to fulfill." Amen and amen!!!
He emphasizes this is not something you do in your own strength. And I love that, because John 15:5 says without Jesus we can do nothing.
And this isn't just for pastors and leaders. "There are certain phrases I'd like to see permanently banned from our Christian vocabulary. The one that sets me off the most is 'full-time ministry'."
He connects real-life experiences, like playing with his son in the ocean, and his wife delivering one of their babies, to foundational concepts of God's kingdom, making this book very easy to read and understand.
But what about being arrogant with God? "Confidence without humility is arrogance. Humility without confidence is weakness." Furtick explains how we can come boldly before God and ask for things that are according to His will. See Hebrews 4:16 and I John 5:14.
"Audacious faith is more than an attitude. It's much more than simply believing in yourself and what you are capable of. True faith is founded on what you believe about God and what he is capable of."
Furtick definitely has a very different personality than me, and it comes through in his writing, but the core message is the same as I preach on my blog. Dig into God's Word, find out what His will is for your life, without faith it's impossible to please God, and faith without works is dead! His theology is practically spot-on, with one exception. In chapter 13 he implies that healing may not be God's will for everyone. I have to disagree with this point.
Check this book out, you won't be sorry you did. You can buy it on Amazon.com and Walmart.com.
I received this book for free from WaterBrook Multnomah Publishing Group for this review.
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