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Rating: Summary: Life changing. Review: From my experiences growing up Christian, Missions was never talked about. I heard about Christ's love through the gospel, but this book really puts into perspective the bigger picture. The larger perspective penetrates all of history and culminates at the end of time where people from "every" ethnic group are giving glory to God. The books makes its case by extensively citing the Bible. It opened my eyes to verses and passages that I never quite understood before. It changed my perspective from seeing missions as one part of the Christian life as to driving motivation for all ministries. As I pondered the concepts more and wrote papers on the subject, I realized that fullness of God's love for me to a greater depth. Read it for yourself.
Rating: Summary: Life changing. Review: From my experiences growing up Christian, Missions was never talked about. I heard about Christ's love through the gospel, but this book really puts into perspective the bigger picture. The larger perspective penetrates all of history and culminates at the end of time where people from "every" ethnic group are giving glory to God. The books makes its case by extensively citing the Bible. It opened my eyes to verses and passages that I never quite understood before. It changed my perspective from seeing missions as one part of the Christian life as to driving motivation for all ministries. As I pondered the concepts more and wrote papers on the subject, I realized that fullness of God's love for me to a greater depth. Read it for yourself.
Rating: Summary: Illustrates God's plan for world evangelism from creation. Review: The "Great Commission" of the gospels was a review of the Old Testament mandate found in Genesis 12. I [God] will bless you [Isreael], and you are to bless the nations. Bob Sjogren explains familiar Old and New Testament passages using the "top line" and "bottom line" blessing formula. For example, after David kills Goliath, in I Samuel 17, the purpose is not just that Israel will be saved from the Philistines (top line) but that the whole world will know that there is a God in Israel (bottom line). The question of why Israel did not lead a truly active missionary role in the Old Testament is also addressed. The book reveals God's plan of salvation and challenges Christians today to put their blessings to work to bless the nations with the Gospel of Jesus Christ. I highly recommend this book to all who wonder at the unity between the Old and New Testaments, and who have any level of interest in missions. We are blessed to bless the nations!
Rating: Summary: Good to read, but problematic Review: The basic premise of the "Be blessed and pass those blessings to others" is good, and very insightful, but that only goes for about 5 chapters, and then he changes the whole premise for the book to "missionaries are only those who go to unreached people groups", which is a common theology of missions today. It seemed like he wanted to use the first to prove the latter, and that seemed like a stretch. I wished he would have kept to the original subject, as he could have gone a lot deeper into it. Still, the first half of the book is really good, worthwhile reading. (It's a required text for mission majors at Liberty University, and everyone gets it online because the book supplier for the school is awful, so that's why Lynchburg is #1 for buying this book... :)
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