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Hardcover Jesus - Safe, Tender, Extreme Book

ISBN: 0310257840

ISBN13: 9780310257844

Jesus - Safe, Tender, Extreme

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

This book presents evocative reflections on three facets in our relationship with Jesus. People long for reality in their walk with Christ. To know him better, we must understand the different sides... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Good Writing

Plass has a way with words. This book reads like a journal much of the time, with intimately personal spiritual insights. The transparency of Plass is one of the things that readers so appreciate about him. His doubts, questions, and epiphanies are very honest. He's not afraid to say (or write) the things that many Christians are thinking but are too proud to admit. The beautiful prose that is uniquely Plass is always poignant. This book is a treat for anyone wanting to cut through the facade of spirituality that pervades religion today.

Great Book!

I have totally enjoyed the book, and it came in great shape too! Thanks.

A honest and witty collection of essays on each of the three aspects of Jesus's nature

Ever since I reviewed Adrian Plass's novel, GHOSTS, for FaithfulReader.com, I've been hoping for an opportunity to review another of his books. That's because his is an honest, vulnerable, and witty voice that speaks to the heart of so many everyday matters that alternately delight us and plague us as followers of Christ. Drawing from his experiences as a well-known author, television personality, and all-around bumbling human being who lives in the English countryside, Plass exposes his quirks and annoyances and temptations to the light of Christ's teachings, and finds himself consistently wanting. Which, for him, begs the question: how on earth can he be of any use whatsoever in the kingdom of God? God answers that question quite pointedly: "Okay, you go off into a little corner and tell yourself how rotten and useless you are...Despise yourself if you want. Beat yourself up to within an inch of your life. But don't you ever, ever dare to despise what I do through you, because that is completely different." Excellent advice for all the self-deprecating ones among us, I'd say. In the three major sections of the book, Plass offers a number of essays and reflections on each of the three aspects of Jesus's nature referred to in the title. He finds the safe Jesus, for instance, in the story of his dying mother-in-law, who lives out her last days in a hospital bed that occupies what used to be the Plasses' dining room. The tender Jesus is "The God Who Defaults to Compassion" in a priceless chapter dealing with social issues, dogmatism, and one "sulky prophet" named Jonah. The section on the extreme Jesus opens with a chapter describing Plass's shameful and extreme behavior in a frustrating, everyday situation that ended in a wee bit of jail time for the "vicar on the telly," as one bloke called him. The book ends with several dozen prayers relating to these three aspects of who Jesus is. But instead of being the kind of sanitized prayers you expect to find in the typical Christian book, these are the kind of prayers you expect to find a guy like Plass praying in his intimate moments with God. Though he is atypically generous in revealing his inner and often doubting thoughts about faith and the Christian life, I tend to think those thoughts are far more typical than the majority of Christians admit to. His thoughts on healing, for instance, in a chapter titled "Freedom, Safety, and the Value of Truth" most likely resonate with many of us, though we'd be hesitant to give voice to those thoughts in any respectable Christian setting. Plass has succeeded in his goal of not writing "one of those unremittingly positive treatises that fails to deal with life as it is actually lived. The result is perhaps less clearly defined than I had planned --- but hopefully much more authentic...I am not a theologian. I am not a preacher; I can't preach to save my life. I am simply a man with a broom, sweeping away the rubbish that prevents others from passing furth
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