I happened to read this book during Lent, and it fits the season so well. Because it's quite short - fewer than 45,000 words, at a rough estimate, which is much shorter than the average novel - it can be read through quickly once and then again at a more leisurely pace with journal in hand. The study guide at the back prompts personal thinking and can also be used for discussion in small groups.
Summary:
Cunningham looks at the various "rights" that we are called to lay down, if we want to be more mature in the faith and more effective witnesses for God's kingdom. He uses personal experiences, testimonies, and Scriptural references to support his claims.
In the beginning two chapters, he introduces his subject. First he explains that nothing in our lives actually belongs to us: it is loaned to us by God for His glory. Then he briefly discusses the various rights that Jesus gave up for His mission, and explains that we must follow His example in order to demonstrate our love for God and win the world for His kingdom. In chapters three through six, he talks about the rights that God may call us to give up over the course of our lives: the right to be part of a family, to own material possessions, to be settled in a particular environment, to have a good reputation, to sleep, to eat, to be free, and even to be alive. In chapter seven he explains that one of the rights we often hold tightly, the right to be mad, is actually not our right and that Christians must forgive others. Finally, in the closing two chapters, he focuses on how laying down our rights helps us to achieve victory over Satan and win the world for Jesus Christ.