Se quisermos saber quem Deus é, a melhor coisa que podemos fazer é olhar para Cristo. Se desejarmos viver a vida para a qual Deus nos chamou, precisamos olhar para Cristo. Em Jesus contemplamos o verdadeiro significado do amor, poder, sabedoria, justiça, paz, cuidado e majestade de Deus.
Michael Reeves, autor de Deleitando-se na Trindade, descortina aos leitores a glória e a maravilha de Cristo, oferecendo um retrato maior e mais empolgante do que aquele concebido por muitos. Jesus não nos trouxe meramente boas novas. Ele é as boas novas. Reeves nos ajuda a celebrar quem Cristo é, sua obra na terra, sua morte e ressurreição, seu aguardado retorno e como partilhamos de sua vida.
O objetivo deste livro, portanto, é algo mais profundo que uma nova técnica ou um chamado à ação. Numa era que praticamente nos compele a olhar para nós mesmos, Michael Reeves nos conclama a olhar para Cristo. À medida que focamos nosso coração nele, constatamos como ele é a nossa vida, nossa justiça, nossa santidade e nossa esperança.
Michael Reeves (PhD, King's College, London) is President and Professor of Theology at Union School of Theology in the UK (www.ust.ac.uk). He is Director of the European Theologians Network, and speaks and teaches regularly worldwide. Previously he has been Head of Theology for the Universities and Colleges Christian Fellowship and an associate minister at All Souls Church, Langham Place, London.
Reeves writes with zest, and is very engaging. He is steeped in Scripture, and his exploration of the basics of Christian living is really good. On top of that, he has the classic Puritan writers at his fingertips and brings them in frequently to buttress or make a glorious point. This is a very good book.
Michael Reeves segue não decepcionando. Que deleite! Que leitura prazerosa! Reeves consegue tratar de assuntos que nós já conhecemos de uma maneira que amplia nossa visão e torna tudo mais nítido e brilhante.
Amazing! Reeves blends systematic, biblical, and historical theology like I’ve never seen before. Though short, this book is jammed full of rich theology to help us gaze on and enjoy the glory of Christ.
Read in preparation to teach on "Christ Alone" for youth at IBJM, November 2019.
Alllll the stars. This book is so saturated with the glory of Christ, and it gushes the declarative. Reeves doesn’t write in a straight line. It’s more like he envelopes you with an ocean of gospel goodness and you’re just there in its salty brine blinking dumbly in utter awe of God’s grace and wisdom, truly rejoicing in Christ, and feeling overwhelmed with gratitude for being called a Son.
Reeves also writes things like: “that spicy little verse” and “delicious flutter of cosmic excitement,” which I love, and I think shows that Reeves takes great delight in God’s Word.
Michael Reeves makes us see Christ more clearly, more beautifully, in many places of the Bible where, previously, our eyes would've just glazed over. And he does so in a very pastoral and warm style that I've come to love. What a wonderful gift to the church!
Favorite words and phrases from the book: “Saggy”, “luscious”, “salivate”, “gawking”, “piffling”, “goo”, “that spicy little verse”, “as factual as a unicorn”, “pinchable”, “odd bun”, “whiff of pomposity”, “me on cosmic steroids”, “a sorry emotional yo-yo”, “pie-eyed oaf”. In typical Michael Reeves fashion, this book is both entertaining and at the same time incredibly deep. I couldn’t help but rejoice in Christ with every chapter that I read. Up to this point, my favorite book has been “Delighting in the Trinity” (also by Reeves), but I can’t decide now between these 2 books… All that to say, I HIGHLY recommend this book. Read it and give it to someone else to read!
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My rating criteria ⭐️ : I absolutely did not like or totally disagreed with the book and would recommend that no one else read it ⭐️⭐️: the book was below average style or content, wouldn’t read it again, but wouldn’t beg people not to read it necessarily ⭐️⭐️⭐️: a fine book, some helpful information (or a decent story, for the handful of novels I read), didn’t disagree with too much, enjoyed it decently well ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️: a very good book, information was very helpful, mostly agreed with everything, was above-average enjoyable to read ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️: life-changing book, I enjoyed it more than most other books, I want to read it again in the future, I will be telling everyone to read it for the next few weeks
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Another banger. Michael Reeves has yet to disappoint. His delight in Christ is gushing out of every paragraph, and there is almost nothing more compelling than a saint’s love for their Savior.
I like small books. To me they tend to say more than longer books. They pack a punch with out a lot of extraneous detail. In and out. They say what they have to say, and then they sit down. And this one did that for me. Michael Reeves kept his eye on the pitch, and got his reader on base. This was a great little primer on Christology. Reeves spoke like a theologian, framed it like an historian, and sold it like a preacher. He put a lot of heart into this. His writing style was fresh, and his ideas were riveting. It took awhile to come together, the beginning felt a bit scattered, but about mid way through he found his stride. I will read it again. It enhanced my appreciation for Jesus. And reading this made me hungry to get into his Delighting in the Trinity. I love theology that is accessible, yet deep with thought. A great book to pick up!
Reeves writes with swaz and an insanely contagious love for Jesus Christ. I couldn't help but feel giddy as he continually obliterated my puny two-dimensional versions of Christ.
We are living in the greatest love story ever told. Nothing even comes close. We just need the eyes to see it.
Fantastic book. Reeves has a passion for Christ that is incredibly contagious. We need to read more books that point us to Christ and Christ alone with such intensity as Reeves does.
-Here, then, is the revolution: for all our dreams, our dark and frightened imaginings of God, there is no God in heaven who is unlike Jesus.  For he is God. “Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father,” he says, for “I and the Father are one” (Jn 14: 9; 10: 30). God cannot be otherwise.
-Jesus is God. He does not merely unveil some truth for us, some other principle or system of thought. Like light going out from its source, this Word actually brings God to us. In him, a direct encounter with God happens. The difference is stark: the Word who is God reveals a God of innate grace, and he does not just hand down information that we might know about God; in him, God delights to meet with us and be with us.
-T. F. Torrance was drawn to be quite lyrical as he wrote: There is in fact no God behind the back of Jesus, no act of God other than the act of Jesus, no God but the God we see and meet in him. Jesus Christ is the open heart of God, the very love and life of God poured out to redeem humankind, the mighty hand and power of God stretched out to heal and save sinners. All things are in God’s hands, but the hands of God and the hands of Jesus, in life and in death, are the same.
-For his relationship with his Father shapes the rest, yoke and burden he has to offer. In fact, his relationship with his Father is the rest, yoke and burden he has to offer. To know the Father, to be humble before him and gentle like him: that is the rest we all seek, the only yoke that is easy, the only burden that is light. And as Samuel Rutherford put it, those who take it shall “find it such a burden as wings unto a bird, or sails to a ship.”
-Jesus is the one who makes known the triune God, who shows us the love of God and the life of God. To be truly trinitarian we must be constantly Christ-centered.
-And so, as God’s outgoing Word, as the Son filled to bursting with his Father’s love, he became the Logic behind the creation, “the beginning,” the foundation of it all—and the one it would all be for (Col 1: 17-18). Then, in the power of the Spirit who hovered over the waters, the Word went out. God spoke, and through that potent Word all things came into being. As the Father said of the Son, “In the beginning, Lord, you laid the foundations of the earth, and the heavens are the work of your hands” (Heb 1: 10; citing Ps 102: 25). The Son became in fact the firstborn over all creation (Col 1: 15).
-Most Christians take mealtimes as a chance to thank God and remember him as their provider, but Bradford saw every part of the day as a gospel reminder. When waking in the morning, he would “call to mind the great joy and blessedness of the everlasting resurrection . . . that most clear light and bright morning . . . after the long darkness.” Seeing the sun, he would praise the Light of the world. Rising, he would think on how Christ raises us up. Dressing, he would pray, “O Christ, clothe me with thine own self” and remember “how we are incorporated into Christ . . . how he clothes us.” Eating meat, he would compare it to feeding on the body of Christ. When returning to his home he would think “how joyful a return, it will be to come to our eternal, most quiet, and most happy home.” And when finally undressing and getting into bed at night, he would think of putting “off the old man, with his lusts” and readying himself for the sleep of death: “As you are not afraid to enter into your bed, and to dispose yourself to sleep; so be not afraid to die.” 17 For Bradford, this is Christ’s world, and we live most happily in it when we acknowledge that constantly
-The Rising Sun Will Come to Us from Heaven In the life of Jesus, then, we see two marvelous things: we see the Son of God revealing his Father’s compassionate heart and purposes; and we see the Son of Man living in sweet fellowship with God. No wonder “many prophets and righteous people longed to see” this great sight (Mt 13: 17)!
-Christians often use a negative, chilly word to describe Christ’s life: it was sinless. That tells us what he was not: he was not selfish, cruel, abusive, twisted, petty or proud. Now, when opened out like that, we can see that to be “sinless” is beautiful, dynamic and attractive. The trouble is, we often leave the word closed, and then it reinforces all our stereotypes of what “holy people” are like: bloodless, bland, dreamy, delicate and so spiritual it looks painful. But what was he like? Anything but boring and anemic! Here was a man with towering charisma, running over with life. Health and healing, loaves and fishes, all abounded in his presence. So compelling did people find him that crowds thronged round him. Men, women, children, sick and mad, rich and poor: they found him so magnetic some wanted just to touch his clothes. Kinder than summer, he befriended the rejects and gave hope to the hopeless. The dirty and despised found they mattered to him.
-He loved God and he loved people. You look at him and you have to say, “Here is a man truly alive, unwithered in any way, far more vital and vigorous, far more full and complete, far more human than any other.”
“We naturally gravitate, it seems, toward anything but Jesus—and Christians almost as much as anyone—whether it’s ‘the Christian worldview,’ ‘grace,’ ‘the Bible’ or ‘the gospel,’ as if they were things in themselves that could save us… Other things, wonderful things, vital concepts, beautiful discoveries so easily edge Jesus aside. Precious theological concepts meant to describe him and his work get treated as things in their own right. He becomes just another brick in the wall. But the center, the cornerstone, the jewel in the crown of Christianity is not an idea, a system or a thing; it is not even ‘the gospel’ as such. It is Jesus Christ.”
“He is the treasure of the Father, shared with us… If the Father can be infinitely and eternally satisfied in him, then he must be overwhelmingly all-sufficient for us. In every situation, for eternity.”
Some of the “Christ is the center of the trinity” stuff feels a little hard to understand sometimes if they’re equal in power and glory but I’m sure he’s studied it and knows what he’s talking about lol
I’m always surprised when a dignified British guy like Mike says something genuinely funny. “Without Christ, holiness tends to have all the charm of an ingrown toenail.” (86)
Absolutely stunning writing for anyone who proclaims to be a believer in Christ. Drawing from Scripture, early church fathers, Puritans, and others, the tone is gently convicting and inspiring with beautiful reminders of the truth that we must fix our gaze on Christ alone. Planning to buy a bunch of copies to gift.
I really enjoyed this, and it was a good follow-up to the Keller book I just read. Somehow, Jesus Christ is really the whole thing--friends, you might be laughing at me, but that was a truth I really needed to be reminded of. You don't start the Gospel with Jesus and move on from him to bigger and better and more intellectual things; the Christian walk is looking at his beauty again and again and again. That's really hard. Thanks Mikey, and Joe Palekas for giving me this book.
Outro livro maravilhoso de Reeves. Conexões muito importantes e que quase não se ouve. Como sempre, firmeza teológica e aplicabilidade devocional. Particularmente, gostei da conexão de Jó é Adão (p. 136- ). Recomendo.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
finally got around to reading the last chapter and I’m glad I did! This book is full of profound truths and wonderful insights into scripture/ the beauty of Christ. I can’t quote them all here so you’ll just have to read it for yourself!!
Pretty good! A convicting reminder of how upside down the gospel is compared to how I naturally think about myself and God! There’s so much beauty and freedom in Jesus!
Such a solid treatment of the work and person of Christ. Reeves writes densely, but if you dive deep with him, you're in for a treat. He not only instructs the mind but ignites the heart as well. Highly recommended.
If anyone enjoyed Dane Ortlund's Gentle and Lowly and wants more in the same vein--a book that makes you feel Christ's love and blessing more fully, even as you rub your eyes and blink incredulously at the idea the hope can be THAT good--this should be your next read.
Michael Reeves takes us on a satisfyingly academic, yet utterly delightful and charming "tour" of what the Bible says about Christ. In so doing, he teaches readers how the implications of Christ's birth, life, death, resurrection, and ascension fill the Christian life, Christian preaching, and Christian hope. I basically felt like I got a primer on the whole of Christianity--and feel and know more than ever that true Christianity really is all about Him.
Add to that Reeves' wit, his gentleness, his obvious and unabashed delight in church history, and his excellent and illuminating exegesis, and you have a book I will reread and recommend with great enthusiasm. About halfway through, I got to the point where I had to fight myself on whether to devour the rest because I loved it so much or make myself take it slowly to savor each morsel.
If you want to be surprised and amazed again at the Good News, you should read this book.
Potent, clear, simple, enjoyable, biblical, and absolutely breathtaking! Reeves is able to provide so much in such a small book while not lacking in anything. I was pleasantly surprised at the density and yet easily digestible way Christ, in all his glory, is described. This is one of those books to reread every year and it is certainly a learning and joy provoking book for any reader.
Reeves main theme appears to be this: in order to rejoice in Christ we must ponder on who he is, specifically the fact that he is God. This was especially helpful for me because I fall into the mistake of thinking God the father is God, the Holy Spirit is his messenger, and Christ is his son who sacrificed everything. Though true, the problem I have is believing this is all they are and I rarely think Christ is God (and likewise the Holy Spirit is God - though the book is not on him). A foolish mistake indeed. However, Reeves is gentle and yet powerful in bringing our attention to Christ as God, Immanuel - God with us.
Along with providing a multitude of application in accordance with a proper understanding of Christ as God, Reeves is not quiet on the many ways this understanding fulfills the gospel. Not only that, he constantly explains the divinity of Christ and the gospel throughout so much of Jesus's life and death.
A small and yet special piece to this work is that Reeves is comes from a background of history and theology. Thus, much of this work has wonderful historical explanations which really present a fuller view of the gospel, church history, and knowledge of Christ.
A wonderful and helpful read, that would no doubt be one of the first books I would recommend to anyone.
Get your copy today About half way through in the margins of my copy of Rejoicing in Christ, I write “punchy, down to earth, and full of merriment.” That’s my review. Reeves surprises (meant in the most positive fashion) with equal parts verve and gladness. He’s not afraid to turn a phrase or punch you in the nose with an arresting metaphor. I found myself lost many times in worship as I read. That is rare and to be praised. Reeves has done it again.
What’s odd about Rejoicing in Christ is that Reeves admits it’s run-of-the-mill:
Once upon a time a book like this would have utterly run-of-the-mill. Among the old Puritans, for example, you can scarcely find a writer who did not write—or a preacher who did not preach—something called The Searchable Riches of Christ, Christ Set Forth, The Glory of Christ or the like. Yet today, what sells? What puts the smile on the booksellers face? The book that is about the reader. (9)
He’s right on both accounts. The Puritans pluck the cord he’s playing a lot, and very few today play that same cord. That alone should encourage you to read this book with a heart ready for worship. Rejoicing in Christ is a return to another time when books were less about us and more about Christ.
Quando digo que compro os livros Michael Reeves de olhos fechados, não é exagero. Reeves consegue cativar nossa atenção entregando obras que são como se entregasse uma lente de aumento. A ideia não é apenas mostrar aquilo que você viu e sabe a respeito do Jesus, mas lhe fazer perceber a riqueza de Sua Grandeza em detalhes presentes nos textos bíblicos, em sua vida, e que, muitas vezes, passam alheios aos nossos olhos. E Deleitando-se em Cristo não é diferente, só que é muito mais que isso: Não é apenas um livro para se "saber mais sobre Cristo"; é um livro que te convida a "maravilhar-se com a própria pessoa de Cristo". Compreender isso é incrível e faz toda a diferença. Tenho certeza de que ao ler esse livro, não haverá outra coisa que você deseje mais senão contemplar mais e mais o Verbo de Deus, Aquele "por meio de quem vieram todas as coisas".
"We see that our whole salvation and all its parts are comprehended in Christ [Acts 4:12]. We should therefore take care not to derive the least portion of it from anywhere else. If we seek salvation, we are taught by the very name of Jesus that it is “of him” [1 Cor 1:30]. If we seek any other gifts of the Spirit, they will be found in his anointing. If we seek strength, it lies in his dominion; if purity, in his conception; if gentleness, it appears in his birth. For by his birth he was made like us in all respects [Heb 2:17] that he might learn to feel our pain [cf. Heb 5:2]. If we seek redemption, it lies in his passion; if acquittal, in his condemnation; if remission of the curse, in his cross [Gal 3:13]; if satisfaction, in his sacrifice; if purification, in his blood; if reconciliation, in his descent into hell; if mortification of the flesh, in his tomb; if newness of life, in his resurrection; if immortality, in the same; if inheritance of the Heavenly Kingdom, in his entrance into heaven; if protection, if security, if abundant supply of all blessings, in his Kingdom; if untroubled expectation of judgement, in the power given to him to judge. In short, since rich store of every kind of good abounds in him, let us drink our fill from this fountain, and from no other." - John Calvin
A beautiful book that had me in awe of Jesus from creation, to his life on earth, death, resurrection, and the anticipation of his return. It is a perfect read for this time of year to reflect on as Easter approaches. It will be a reread for me. Read if you enjoyed Gentle and Lowly by Dane Ortland. “God uses even suffering for our ultimate blessing. He did just that at the cross: it was through that darkest day, that deepest pit of suffering, that he definitively overturned and defeated the very root of darkness and suffering. Through that death he defeated death; through our comparatively light sufferings he is able to defeat our selfish independence and our foolish wandering and make us more like his free and victorious Son.”
"This book...aims for something deeper than a new technique or a call to action: to consider Christ, that he might become more central for you, that you might know him better, treasure him more, and enter into his joy."
This book elevated my definition of the word "Christlike". Reeves beautifully explains the aspects of Jesus' character on display in the pages of Scripture, and invites us to feast our eyes on Him who sums up what it means to be a perfect human who loves our Creator and Father with our whole being.