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The Wood Between the Worlds: A Poetic Theology of the Cross by
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Tan
is 60% done
“A theology of peace does not exempt us from a willingness to suffer in the conflict. Christians, like Christ himself, must be willing to die for that which they are unwilling to kill.”
— May 03, 2026 07:59AM
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Tan
is 50% done
“If in our witness to the world we can set forth the incomparable beauty of Christ, and if we can learn to live beautiful lives in reflection of Christ, hearts can be won, even in a milieu of skepticism.”
This book is making me consider things about the cross that I never thought of. Thank you, Lord, for the gift of books in this side of eternity. 🤍
— May 01, 2026 11:52AM
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This book is making me consider things about the cross that I never thought of. Thank you, Lord, for the gift of books in this side of eternity. 🤍
Tan
is 32% done
The 6th chapter 'A Love Supreme' is a weak chapter. A beautiful prose about the love of God but does not dig deep on its complexities. As much as I don't want to say it, that chapter seems to me a strings of word with no direction, seeking only to inflame the emotions and not the redeemed heart of the believer.
— Apr 25, 2026 08:15AM
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Tan
is 22% done
Oh, what beautiful prose. I wish I could write like this. The story that Brian employed in Chapter 4 is so moving, and for a teenager, a good glimpse to the kind of suffering that the aged has went through, even today.
“God has been hung upon the gallows. God has drunk the bitter dregs of human depravity. God has died a degrading death at the hands of cruel oppressors. But God is not dead.”
— Apr 25, 2026 06:39AM
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“God has been hung upon the gallows. God has drunk the bitter dregs of human depravity. God has died a degrading death at the hands of cruel oppressors. But God is not dead.”
Tan
is 18% done
Despite the doctrinal issues that this book presents, I cannot deny that Brian loves Jesus. Reading for more.
“Where once in our distant pagan past we imagined there lurked monstrous intent threatening harm, we now discover there is only tender compassion. On the cross we encounter a God who would rather die than kill his enemies. ”
— Apr 25, 2026 06:15AM
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“Where once in our distant pagan past we imagined there lurked monstrous intent threatening harm, we now discover there is only tender compassion. On the cross we encounter a God who would rather die than kill his enemies. ”









