Gileadi's reading of the scriptures remains an idiosyncratic one, especially in his eschatological readings of prophetic texts. Most of the essays in this book were not especially useful to me, because they represented only his way of reading the text (and he suggested if you disagreed, you were misreading the text). The fourth essay, "Priesthood, Patriarchy, and Proxy Salvation," had more substance to it, but even there, there is some sifting necessary to get to the nuggets.
This book was such a great study, one I'll use multiple times. It helped me not only understand Isaiah better, but also helped me understand the need to study and discern the writings of Isaiah. Helpful in understanding kinds of covenants.
I really liked the first chapter on modern day idolatry. Home run! After that there were a lot of strike outs. I just kept thinking about going beyond the mark, wresting the scriptures, etc. I disagreed with many things he said. But so what? I read it, I've discarded in my mind what I didn't like and I've taken what I did like and now I'm moving on.
So if you get this book take a whirl with the first chapter. It's great.
Excellent LDS based book with references from the Scriptures. Contains many fallacies of the latter day saints and gentiles such as nature cults, organized sports, etc.. Extremely interesting and written by an BYU scholar.
This book was a can-opener to the mind. He does his homework and backs stuff up with scriptural evidence enough, that while I don't always agree, I will listen and consider.
I have the Second edition, third printing, Feb 1992. I mainly use this as a reference work. There are some amazing interpretations in there you won't find in other books about the last days.