Eldredge says that since God created the world and since most of the world is dangerous and wild, then it obviously means that God prefers “adventure, danger, risk, and the element of surprise”. I am a little tepid to accept the adventure part though. I think the premise is quite clear that God definitely has a battle to fight (or better said battle that has been fought), and a beauty to win (his bride the church). I just would have chose somebody besides Mother Theresa to compare side by side with William Wallace.Įldredge goes on to state that God has a battle to fight, and adventure to have, and a beauty to win. I truly don’t picture Mother Theresa very mild. Mother Theresa was strong in her determination to rescue the poor in Calcutta. William Wallace was strong in his stance against the English. I would argue that both characters where strong in their own right. He makes the statement that he would rather be told to be like William Wallace from Braveheart. We are told to be nice, be swell, and be like Mother Theresa. Eldredge says that most people end with the vision of Jesus being “Mister Rogers with a beard”. People get their attitude of Jesus based on how their father was, the kind of pictures we always see of Jesus, and what the church tells us that Jesus was like. He believes that most men have a warped idea of who Jesus is and was. In Chapter 2, Eldredge makes that case that God is “wild at heart”.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |