In case you didn’t see it, I posted earlier about trying to read The Divine Conspiracy for the third time. I’m over half way through now, and loving it (third time’s a charm I guess).
His scholarly style does take some getting used to. The more I read the better I understand his approach to mapping out his subject matter. I’m also getting better at reading his unique sentence constructions. Though it’s getting easier, I can’t read too much at a time because it requires digestion. Here’s a snippet:
The eternal life that begins with confidence in Jesus is a life in his present kingdom, now on earth and available to all. So the message of and about him is specifically a gospel for our life now, not just for dying. It is about living now as his apprentice in kingdom living, not just as a consumer of his merits. Our future, however far we look, is a natural extension of the faith by which we live now and the life in which we now participate.
But besides the mechanics of reading comprehension, how’s the book itself? Very insightful, thoughtful and intellectually inspiring. I love his approach of starting with the assertion that Jesus was (is) the most intelligent person ever, so we should take seriously his teaching. So often when we read Jesus’ words we skim over them out of familiarity, without really studying his teaching for application to our everyday life. Willard methodically breaks down the central teachings of Jesus into readily applicable chunks of kingdom truth.


you know what ? I have been thinking about that this week because of the book i am reading: The Jesus I never knew. I found myself wondering day by day what it means to follow Christ and so far I realize that we are simply agents of God’s love and power to this world. We may wear different masks, get busy with different purposes, but we still need to keep Christ at the core of everything and that is my daily challenge, not how much i can get out of this world but how much Christ can use me in this world. Just so you know, i think it is an never ending conversation…
Wow, I started reading “The Jesus I Never Knew” at my parents’ house over Thanksgiving. Guess I’ll have to get a copy. Or can I borrow yours?