A very ill 10 year old grandson, a father approaching his 90th
birthday and the upcoming Good Friday and Easter Holidays made me eager to gaze
upon the mystery and meaning of Christ’s death. In that readiness, I was not
disappointed as I read through Pastor Anyabwile’s new book.
I am a frequent listener of sermons, so I felt quite comfortable
reading this collection of sermons reworked as meditations. Throughout the
book, reference is made to numerous scriptures, reminding us of the unity of
the history of redemption that exists from Old to New Testament and providing
that much needed pause to gaze upon the necessity of the Christ’s death, the
abandonment of God, the death of death, the resurrection and the way of knowing
how these things are really true for us personally.
I thought Pastor Anyabwile does a particularly good job in
chapter 2 of making relevant to today’s readers the acts and words of Jesus at
the time of his death and resurrection.
Using the part of the armed forces creed that says “Leave no man behind”,
he shows how we are taken home by God’s willingness to go to great lengths to bring
members of his family to heaven.
This book is not for the reader antagonistic to the
Christian faith. It does not attempt to convince, as much as provide good meat
to chew on and be nourished by. And much as a good meal brings refreshment and
new strength to a hungry body, these meditations will help bring solid hope and
clearer definition to what death is and what it is not.
Each chapter is followed by a set of questions I found quite
helpful for seeing if I understood the chapter and for practice in articulating
the contents. These questions would make good questions if using the book for
small group discussion.
I received this book for free from Reformation Heritage
Books via Cross Focused Reviews for this review. I was not required to write a
positive review
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