Every Christian believer struggles with the tensions between his new nature as a son in the Father's family, and the old natures of slavery and orphanhood. This book is about learning to both identify and overcome these old mindsets of slavery and orphanhood in order to walk in the joy and freedom of sonship.
Ben Pasley is a published author, song writer, music producer, performer, public speaker, creative coach, pastor, leadership equipper, and fly fisherman. He might be best known for the worship music series Enter The Worship Circle, which has sold hundreds of thousands of albums since its debut release in 1998. As an author he has focused on themes like: living in the Kingdom, receiving the spirit of sonship, and re-imagining the family of faith.
Clearly illustrates three ways in which we can relate to God--as orphans, slaves, or sons. Mature insight into these relationships.
I would have loved if the book included more ways to pursue and cultivate sonship. I was constantly made aware of the ways I walk in each of these identities, and my desire to walk more as a son grew, but I just don't know how to pursue that identity.
This book will force you beyond your comfort zone and excepting and embracing what it really means to be a Christian man. A men’s group of which I am a part of used this book as a foundation for a very compelling study.
Third read: Man, I really appreciate this book. It stands up and I have loosened my tight grip on my views of the Holy Spirit - not that I agree with him completely, but it seems less important to care. :) I am giving this to a friend so I decided to re-read it and it it made me realize I probably need to find my copy and do a deep re-read.
Second read: Still so good, in some ways even more so. I still disagree on his view of the Holy Spirit, but I needed to read this again.
I found that this book was a great complement to Tim Keller's "Prodigal God" - both discuss the parable in Luke 15 and the idea of receiving God's love in Christ - "Orphan Slave Son" has a more personal and practical feel. I felt as if the author here was taking all the theological knowledge I've learned about adoption, grace, and sonship and graciously pouring it from my head to my heart. I really liked this book but probably wouldn't recommend it to every believer in my life. I was pleasantly surprised at how biblically compatible the book was; there were only a few parts at the end of the book that the average biblical Christian would disagree with [on the "baptism" of the Holy Spirit in particular]. Specifically I enjoyed how much the author emphasized the role of the church in the life of spiritual sons. I didn't give it a 5 only because there seemed to be a lack of consistency throughout. The first two sections of the book are very general and broad [not in a bad way, just in a 30,000ft overview way] while the last section "Son" is very specific and detailed. It is all helpful, but the lack of consistency is a little jarring. If your desire is for your theological knowledge to sink down deep into your heart, read this book.
A novel and even great idea, to get at the roots of the faith via Hebrews 6: 1-3. Pasley does that and it is helpful, but the book was not an even read. He says at the end that he took out the personal examples and left straight doctrine. I can handle that with ease, but here the paragraphs felt long and while some chapters sang, others were more mundane. The book is also heavily laden with Scripture, but block quotes do not interpret themselves. A bit more Hebrews context would have helped orient the book more completely.
I thoroughly enjoyed Elementary: Following Jesus Strong and Simple. The book is easy reading and flows quite well. I read about 2/3rds in the first sitting. I would recommend this book to anyone seeking a better footing and foundation in their walk with Jesus. Christ kept his words relatively simple when he spoke to people. I love that Ben has written a book in similar fashion. Inspiring and beatiful. Great read.
We all need men in our lives to remind us to continue to build strong foundations of Christian living and to help us become masters of the Kingdom basics. Ben Pasley outlines important fundamentals and unpacks them in a way for us to easily grab ahold of so we can begin to live out of them. You'll probably end up reading this book regularly and sharing it with your friends.
This book was really helpful to me. Had some great points and thoughts that changed my perspective a lot.. I would recommend. I gave it a 3 though because I really do not like his writing style at all. It was hard for me to get past that.