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The Jesus You Can't Ignore: What You Must Learn from the Bold Confrontations of Christ
The Jesus You Can't Ignore What You Must Learn from the Bold Confrontations of Christ
Author: John MacArthur
Best-selling author John MacArthur gives readers a fresh look at how Jesus addressed attacks against the truth. Meek and mild. Politically correct. A great teacher. These are the popular depictions of Jesus. But they aren't the complete picture. Maybe because it's uncomfortable, or maybe because it's inconvenient, Christians and non-Chri...  more »
ISBN-13: 9781400202065
ISBN-10: 140020206X
Publication Date: 7/28/2009
Pages: 256
Rating:
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
 6

3.5 stars, based on 6 ratings
Publisher: Thomas Nelson
Book Type: Hardcover
Other Versions: Paperback, Audio CD
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

reviewed The Jesus You Can't Ignore: What You Must Learn from the Bold Confrontations of Christ on
Helpful Score: 1
In The Jesus You Cant Ignore: What You Must Learn From the Bold Confrontations of Christ, John MacArthur attempted to argue that Jesus was not strictly a meek, perpetually friendly, sentimental messiah reaching out to other religious leaders and engaging in scholarly dialogue with them instead of challenging them (pg.45). That there were times when Jesus used harsh, chastising, embarrassing language with no place for dialogue. MacArthur discussed several Gospel cases (e.g. cleansing the temple in ch. 3, the woe proclamations in ch. 8) for the end that being nice was not always the example Jesus left for us.

The title of this book review was in now way misleading. John MacArthur, while a very easy to read author, created a book I would like to ignore. Overall, there is very little (if any) meat, the case he tried to make was neither effective nor revolutionary (an outspoken, in your face, non-docile Jesus toward the powers that be/oppressors/Pharisees/etc. has been presented successfully in works prior to this), there seems to be more filler in this book than necessary (would have been a lot shorter of a text had the author not included so much content and description). This was a difficult book to read because the reader is not invited to engage with the text, and it comes off as seemingly pieced together from various sermons.(Review also published at http://schleitheim.com/2010/07/13/ignore-the-jesus-you-cant-ignore-a-book-review/)
Read All 1 Book Reviews of "The Jesus You Cant Ignore What You Must Learn from the Bold Confrontations of Christ"


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