The cosmos was birthed with wind and fire. The Nation of Israel was birthed when a flaming torch passes through the covenant sacrifice of Abraham and in the fiery bush of Moses. And finally, the New Testament church was birthed in the rushing might wind and the cloven tongues of fire at Pentecost. Just like He did for the Children of Israel in the wilderness, the Wind and Fire directs every detail in the life of the Church, and He does this through seven unique works expounded in this book. Welcome to Wind and Fire.
This book presents sound teaching on the works of the Holy Spirit. Being Pentecostal, I differ with couple of the ideas put forth, but overall there is a lot to be gleaned from it.
It is not an inspirational book, but more of an educational, teaching book. I enjoyed reading it & pondering its contents.
I agree with other reviewers that the book has numerous grammatical errors. It is a shame the electronic version was not well-edited.
I would still recommend it as a good source of informational regarding the work of the Holy Spirit.
This did a good job of covering the works of the Holy Spirit. However, I didn't feel the wind and fire--this is more explanatory than inspirational. Grammar, spelling, and punctuation errors kept it from being academic. Also, there was a lot of alliteration that just seemed to be trying to be cutesy rather than effective, and there was a lot of repetition.
This is an excellent source for the understanding of the Holy Spirit. However, the electronic version of the book is a very poor example of English usage with little or no attention paid to the use of proper punctuation. Obviously, the final version was not edited.