Yong writes an excellent book that opens the way for Pentecostals (and other more conservative Christians) to relate more positively with people from other faiths. He uses the Biblical concept of hospitality and shows how we are both guests and hosts at different times and in different ways. In theological terms we are God's guests of grace in receiving God's hospitality of salvation. In turn the manner in which we are called upon to relate to others (no matter their religion) is that of hospitality, where we again relate both as hosts and as guests. We often prefer to be hosts, because it allows us a measure of control, but we must learn to be good guests and receive hospitality from those of other religions, which may mean listening and learning from others.
I find Yong's vision more compelling than those of pluralist theologians that homogenize all religions into one non-descript (and frequently uninteresting) entity. His vision is also more compelling that those of exclusivists, who seem to prefer judging others and imagining ways to defeat the other in debate, more than ways to be spiritually hospitable.