Member Reviews

I wanted more. More truth of whole biblical text without holding back on agenda, politics and worldly struggles. The truths that are biblical that we need brought to our attention. Simple truth, the whole truth of The Word, both testaments, don’t hold back. David Platt is insightful and does make me dig deeper, yet I was looking for more in this book of not holding back.

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Platt emphasizes how we as Christians need to be living the gospel and not the American Dream. This book is a refreshing look into why we should do that and some practical ways of how to do that.

He decrys the homogeneity that marks many churches, the self-centeredness of Christians who focus on our own minor problems and not the suffering of others, and the lack of emphasis on justice and kindness.

He challenges us to consider if 'God is the end - the gift, the goal, the prize of our lives - or simply a means to a host of other highly desirable outcomes.'

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I am not finished with this book yet. It is strange a part of me wants to stop reading and another part wants to keep reading to see where the author goes.

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Far From Radical. This is a book that should be widely read because it does have some interesting and important things to say - and yet it was also far from a radical adherence to the teachings of Jesus Christ that the description would lead one to believe. Even among the first three chapters, Chapter 2 openly counters the claims and arguments of Chapters 1 and 3, with Chapter 2 being a hyper-progressive/ leftist screed one would hardly expect from someone affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention, and whose arguments are never actually found in the words or actions of Jesus Christ of Nazareth. The ubiquitous-but-heavier-later defense of the American government and American military is, again, far from radical and completely unBiblical, but will feed right into those very conservative SBC churches Platt has long been associated with. Thus showing that Platt doesn't mind crossing current political boundaries - and yet, again, Platt never in this text does the truly radical thing of embracing a full-throated embrace of YAHWEH as declared in 1 Samuel 8 (which would require a full rejection of all earthly kings).

But on all of the above, ultimately your mileage will vary and there will be some points you agree with no matter your own political slants and others you disagree with, which is actually (to my own mind at least) the mark of a Christian preacher actually doing his job - because in Christ, there *are* no politics, and the things Christ does speak of and do do *not* align neatly with 21st century American politics.

No, ultimately the two star deductions come from two more basic and more technical errors here:

1) Prooftexting, which is citing Bible verses out of context. Platt is far from alone in this practice - most *every* Christian author does it, and even some non-Christian ones - and yet it is *wrong* on so many levels. Thus, I wage a one-man war against the practice any time I encounter it, and the only "weapon" I have in that war as a book reviewer is a star deduction.

2) Lack of Bibliography. Coming in at barely 15% of the overall text here, this is lighter than the 20-30% that is more typical in my experience, and far from the particularly-well-documented level of near 50%. For the amount of non-Biblical claims Platt makes and in particular how controversial at least some of them can be, there really needs to be *far* better documentation of them.

Ultimately this *is* a book that will challenge you to some degree or another virtually no matter what your thinking is on religion and/ or politics, and that alone makes it a worthy read for everyone. Very much recommended.

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