Is it possible that your view of God is too small? Too safe? Too tame? Too comfortable? Is it possible that you have settled for a low, uninspiring, limited view of God? Is it possible that your passion for God suffers because your vision of God suffers? In Untamable God, Stephen Altrogge brings us face to face with the magnificent, awe-inspiring, beautiful, terrifying, wonderful God of the Bible. In his personal, intimate, engaging, humorous style, Altrogge takes us on a journey through God's word, bringing us into close contact with the God of sharp edges and brilliant light. Altrogge introduces afresh to the untamable God of the Bible.-- commend this book to you because my heart burned as I read it. It did what the best books do; it drew me out of my sin-distorted, self-consumed, stiflingly miniscule world and showed me real, expansive, soul-nourishing glory. It helped me see God. It led me to worship and stirred my longing to worship deeper. Read it. And make sure you don’t stop till you’ve read through chapter four, which alone makes this book worth more than its weight in gold. - Jon Bloom, President of Desiring God MinistriesStephen Altrogge tackles an important subject in this Our penchant for creating God in our own safe, suburban, agreeable, do-nothing, offend-nobody image. Altrogge shreds that in the very first chapter, and it needed to be shredded. But then he points us to the greatness of a big, powerful, wrathful, just, dangerous, and loving God - exactly the kind of God I want and need to worship.- Ted Kluck, award-winning author of 'Why We Love the Church' and 'Robert Griffin Athlete, Leader, Believer.'Do you ever feel like it was a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away that you enjoyed the grandeur and sheer awe-fullness of God? Untameable God is a candid call to any who would be a jolly beggar of grace to worship the One who is thrice holy. I thoroughly enjoyed this book, and look forward to recommending it to others.- Gloria Furman, author of 'Glimpses of Grace' and 'Treasuring Christ When Your Hands Are Full'Have we tamed God? Put Him in a box? Stephen Altrogge thinks so and he is right. In Untamable God, Stephen Altrogge writes about the God who is relentless in His love, relentless in His wrath, and just how much we have minimized both. Untamable is a modern day book about the attributes of God, depravity of man, and Cross that reconciles us to our Creator. Altrogge beckons us to come and know God as He is, the great I Am, the untamable God, the God of the Bible. This is the God I want and desire to know. – Trillia Newbell, author of Captured by God’s Vision for DiversityHe is not safe, but he is good." C.S. Lewis' words permeate every page of Stephen Altrogge's new book, Untameable God, as he confronts and corrects our constant attempts to reimagine the God of the Bible into some damnably "safe" cheap substitute. Jesus isn't safe—but he is good, and that is such good news for weary sinners. Read this book and rejoice!- Aaron Armstrong, author of 'Contend' and 'Awaiting a Savior'; blogger at Blogging TheologicallyUntamable God is a raw, potent and timely look at the distinct "otherness" of God. Stephen reminds us of who God is, why He's not like us and what our response, as tamable, fallible creatures, should be. Never more needed. - Ronnie Martin - lead pastor of Substance Church and author of 'Finding God in the Dark'In Untamable God, Stephen Altrogge exposes the tidy, sanitized, impotent “god” of this age, showing him to be far less than the one true God of biblical Christianity.
Stephen Altrogge writes the kind of books I think I would write. Or that I would want to write. If I was an author. And if I could write better. What I mean is, his sarcastic wit, his cultural knowledge, and, most importantly, his awe at the majesty and glory of God – these are things I can definitely relate to. Actually, his previous book, The Greener Grass Conspiracy, is one of the things that led to seminary for my family and I. He’s a funny, persuasive, and entertaining writer.
In his latest book, Untamable God, Altrogge sets out to demonstrate, seemingly mostly for Millennials, the God who is “Bigger, Better, and More Dangerous Than You Could Possibly Imagine.” He sets his sights on the god who just wants to be friends and make you feel better and replaces it with the God who spoke the world into existence, who revealed himself gloriously through his son, Jesus Christ.
The first 6 chapters of the book each seek to debunk some way of thinking about God and replace it with the Biblical view of God as huge, sovereign, righteous, loving, gracious, etc. These chapters are littered with funny cultural quips, self-depreciating humor, and Biblical conclusions. I enjoyed these chapters, although there was really very little that hasn’t been said a bunch elsewhere. Altrogge just says it in his voice, which I enjoy.
Where the book really took off for me was in the last couple of chapters. Chapter 7, “The God Who Is Not Impressed,” succeeds mightily in tearing down the “me” generation’s view of itself. We are really not a big deal, despite what our parents and teachers may have told us. Altrogge trots out story after story where God shows his greatness in comparison to humanity and puts us rightly in our place. And best of all, he builds our worth back up in the right place, the gospel of Jesus Christ. Only because of Christ will God look at us and say, “Well done good and faithful servant.”
Finally, in Chapter 8, “The God Who Crushes Serpent Skulls,” Altrogge basically tells the whole story of the Bible, culminating in Jesus. He gets seriously poetic in the last few pages, his style reminding me of Russell Moore, one of my former professors and also one of my favorite authors. He makes the story of the Bible leap off the pages and left me wanting much more. That’s a pretty good author who can do that.
Untamable God is a great book for anyone in their teens, twenties, or thirties to read (the cultural references would likely be lost in large part on readers much older). This is the kind of book I want to give unbelieving friends to show them that much of what they think of as the gospel is actually a pathetic distortion of it. Altrogge writes like a culturally-informed, sarcastic, non-hipster and thinks like John Piper. That makes for a great combination.
This 100 page easy to read book by my friend, Stephen Altrogge, is one of those books that I am sure will be a great encouragement to some and a confrontation of some long-held beliefs of some people. I wouldn't say that this was my favorite book by Altrogge (see "Greener Grass Conspiracy" for that category), nor was it the best book written on the person and character of God (see books like, "Knowing God," by JI Packer; "The Knowledge of the Holy," by AW Tozer; and "Our Awesome God," by John MacArthur for that category), but it was very insightful on several key areas of examining the character, attributes, and work of God. I think the author used a few words/phrases that might be offensive to the older generation of readers and he might lose some of his audience because of that, but the younger generation would do well to take some time to read through this short, concise, and practical book.
I'm enjoyed the candid nature of this book and the occasional lines that made me chuckle. It's full of some weighty topics, none of which are particularly new, but I'm hearing them in a new way and that's what I liked most about this book. A very fresh perspective and also very honest and blunt!
I enjoyed this book immensely. I love Stephen's humor, beautiful creative writing, and the way he speaks powerful truth in incredibly simple but meaningful ways. I found myself highlighting every other paragraph and just meditating upon the beauty of our God in deeper ways. Plus it's a short read with lots of meat! That's my style.
This book will literally blow the top off any little box you have tried to stick God in. I highly recommend this book to anyone who thinks they already know what God is up to.