Knowing God
by J. I. PackerA lifelong pursuit of
knowing God should embody the Christian's existence. According to
eminent theologian J. I. Packer, however, Christians have become
enchanted by modern skepticism and have joined the "gigantic conspiracy
of misdirection" by failing to put first things first. Knowing God
aims to redirect our attention to the simple, deep truth that to know
God is to love His Word. What began as a number of consecutive articles
angled for "honest, no-nonsense readers who were fed up with facile
Christian verbiage" in 1973, Knowing God has become a
contemporary classic by creating "small studies out of great subjects." Each chapter is so specific in focus (covering topics such as the
trinity, election, God's wrath, and God's sovereignty), that each
succeeding chapter's theology seems to rival the next, until one's mind
is so expanded that one's entire view of God has changed.
Author Elizabeth Eliot wrote that amid
the loft content Packer "puts the hay where the sheep can reach
it--plainly shows us ordinary folks what it means to know God."
Having rescued us from the individual hunches of our ultra-tolerant
theological age, Packer points the reader to the true character of God
with his theological competence and compassionate heart. The lazy
and faint-hearted should be warned about this timeless work--God is
magnified, the sinner is humbled, and the saint encouraged. |