Far too little, and way too late.
I really wanted to like this book, and I found Brennan's humble attitude very refreshing - it's a rarity. I fully commend the author for having the guts to call out the IFB denomination on its gross failures. He deserves credit for being willing to drag the faults of the movement to which he is loyal out into the light. I respect him for it.
The first half of the book was extremely disappointing. It was spent lauding the supposed positives stubbornly clung to by IFB congregations and pastors. Many of these "badges of honor" are straight-up weaknesses, born out of poor exegesis of Scripture, and man-made tradition. (Brennan does acknowledge that many will disagree with him on these items he considers strengths.)
One of the biggest issues I find with the book is that absolutely everything is still filtered through so many IFB suppositions - the definitions of what church actually is and is for, what preaching is, the place of education, the revering of institutionalization etc., are assumed to mean something that I simply do not read in my Bible {King James or otherwise}. Instead of fulfilling the Great Commission, following patterns of church laid out in Acts, and building the entire body of Christ, not just a local church, the focus is on preservation of tradition, and the importance of the LABEL of independent, fundamental, Baptist.
When I stand before my God and King in Heaven, He will NOT say, "Well done, good and faithful independent, fundamental Baptist...I'm so proud of you for maintaining that label and the IBF standards your whole life." His stated goal for the life of every believer, of every denomination, in every nation the world over is this: "Go and make disciples, baptizing them, and teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you." And it's not found in Matthew 28 alone - it's stated from Genesis to Revelation. This is absolutely what should drive the believer, not membership in or furtherance of the "right" denomination. *exits soapbox*
There were some excellent chapters in the second half of the book. His discussion of the intolerably bad preaching rife within the IFB community deserved a standing ovation, as did the chapter "The Emperor Has No Clothes." Every IFB pastor should have a copy of that chapter in his possession.
In the chapter "We Cover Up Sin," Brennan soundly denounced those who have chosen to sweep the sin of IFB leaders under the rug - I wish he had followed his own advice in the chapter "A Lingering Taint of An Old Racism." The preacher he referenced who preached a pro-segregation message in 1960 was Bob Jones Sr., and although Jones is quoted, in a positive light in several other places in the book, Brennan did not call him out by name in the chapter on racism...even though he wrote an entire chapter on the folly of that practice. In the introduction to the book, he explained his reasoning for this: not wishing to alienate people from truth, and preventing the book from being dated. I would have preferred consistency.
In the final section of the book, the author's ideas on curing the sickness of the IFB community (it no longer deserves the name movement) were presented. The section found here on prayer was perhaps one of the best parts of the entire volume. Unfortunately, the chapter ended on a less-than-stellar note, with an article entitled "How To Make An Effective Preacher." Long on emotion, short on Scripture, and through a lens of elevated opinion regarding the role of a preacher, it left a poor taste in the mouth.
So many of the issues the majority of the IFBS care about, are such non-issues when life becomes about the Kingdom, the mission, and the Christ we follow. So much of what they try to force falls into place when the Main Thing stays the main thing. This book, although providing some excellent points of discussion for those who will never discard their loyalty for a church in favor of loyalty to Jesus, falls woefully short in showing forth a greater vision than the mere revival of a gasping denomination.