Beautiful, thought-provoking, Jesus-exalting, and trust-building. This book was absolutely excellent. It is a pleasure to read how Bloom shows how wonderful Jesus is. He has a gift for this. What a great gift to have. It easily was top 3 books I have read all year.
I have owned it for a few years, and read a handful of the chapters, but never actually read the whole book. I decided to do so because Bloom is my favorite Desiring God author (besides Piper), as he always is thoughtful and intriguing. These 35 chapters are no different.
Many reviews say he is just retelling the stories, but this is far from true. He tells the stories with a lot of biblical foundation (I would say he doesn't go too far off from the biblical account), but I was most impress with his insight and application of the stories. Sometimes this was after the story, sometimes in the middle of telling it, and sometimes before. Nevertheless, Bloom always has something thought-provoking, Jesus-exalting, and trust-building to say. And many times, it simply is beautiful, almost tear-producing.
For example, he has a whole chapter about how an angel didn't come to rescue James from death. One came to rescue Peter, which is a famous story, but Acts tells us that James was killed. Bloom meditates on this and writes:
"The sword came down. No deliverance. Or was there? God allowed the sword to fall on James just as intentionally as he opened Peter;s prison door....There is the real key to understanding Acts 12:2: Jesus let James die because he had a better life to give him. James was not being neglected by Jesus. He was in fact the first of the Twelve to experience what Jesus prayed for in John 17:24: 'Father, I desire that they also, whom you have given me, may be with me where I am, to see my glory'".
Bloom then beautifully applies it, which almost brought me to tears:
"There will be a time when Jesus's prayer for us to be with him with overrule our prayer for prolongs earthly life. And when it does, we will experience a life so far better, richer, fuller, purer, and more joyful that we will shake our heads in wonder that we ever pleaded to stay" (66-67). Amen and amen.
This is just an example of his thoughts and meditations. In short, he takes story upon story from the Bible and really thinks about them. It is a joy to read, and it really builds one's faith in God.
I would wholeheartedly recommend this to anyone. In fact, this might be the most faith-producing book I have this whole year. Truly excellent.