This book is part storytelling narrative, part honest teaching, and part untempered, spontaneous conversation between three friends on the basics of living in the kingdom of God. In May of 2009 Doug Roberts, Ben Pasley , and Tim F. Thornton took an old beat up RV into the mountains near Woodland Park, Colorado and for three days did little more than fish, eat, and record conversations on foundational truths. These beautiful pictures of kingdom life become even more potent when we witness them shared between three generations of spiritual lineage--from fathers to sons.
I'll give this one a 3.5 - if you can't tell by the blurb, this is sort of a narrative theology book...in the sense that it's these 3 friends sitting and talking about Jesus and what it means to follow him.
The good: The first chapter is fantastic, and the second, on practicing forgiveness, is even better. I was surprised that forgiveness was SO foundational to these men that they would put it second, but that was simply thought-provoking. The narrative is easy to read, the men are funny and engaging, and it is edited enough to not feel like you're just reading a bunch of guys blabbing. Most of the doctrine is pretty basic Christian belief...most being the operative word. That leads me to:
The not-so-good: I'm relatively charismatic. I believe that all the gifts of the Spirit are in operation today, I've spoken in tongues before (though I don't believe I have the gift of tongues), I'm certainly not a cessationist. But even I felt like the chapter on the Holy Spirit was too much...or really, simply focused on ONE aspect of the Spirit's work. In particular, Doug seemed to have the idea of the "baptism of the Holy Spirit" (a concept I am familiar with from growing up) and tongues as so central to his faith that he didn't talk about anything else. Even when Ben tried to give him outs - statements like "But Doug, you're not saying that tongues is REQUIRED, right?" - Doug still seemed to be stuck on this one particular manifestation of the Spirit. I love the Holy Spirit. I love Him. And it is sad to me that this chapter simply was obsessed with tongues when the guidance of the Spirit, the conviction of the Spirit, the revelation the Spirit brings are more central to the NT narrative and certainly more important in most people's lives. Not all will speak in tongues, a fact that seems to have been forgotten.
It's a shame, because this would be a great book to give to a new believer, but I just wouldn't want them to think that tongues = Christian maturity. If you can sift through that, it's an enjoyable read.
The body of Christ must understand biblical foundations. Otherwise, the structure which man is building is doomed. Doug Roberts shows a great understanding of these important foundations. He shares truths that are crucial to understanding how God is building his kingdom on the earth. The dialogue among the three men is a refreshing approach to these concepts. Ben Pasley and Tim Thornton draw out the great wealth of understanding in Doug Roberts and add their own insights to these important concepts. The revelation unfolded in the book, such as love is greater than knowledge, will touch the hearts of readers.
Well, I helped write this book and I am one of the authors so, yes, I am prejudiced. What I can say here without fear of being totally self oriented is that this book is really the outworking of the life and teaching work of my pastor, Doug Roberts. Doug, a good friend Tim Thornton, and myself took a three day camping retreat and recorded 8 conversations on the basics of kingdom living. These conversations were transcribed and become the materials used to build the book. It is conversational, practical, and not particularly teachy. See www.timwithdoug.com for more information.