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R. T. Kendall

Author of Total Forgiveness

135+ Works 4,799 Members 46 Reviews 3 Favorited

About the Author

R.T. Kendall was the pastor of Westminster Chapel in London for twenty-five years. Born in Ashland, Kentucky, he was educated at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary (MDiv) and Oxford University (DPhil). Kendall is the author of more than sixty books, including Total Forgiveness; Popular in show more Heaven, Famous in Hell; and his most recent, More of God. show less
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Series

Works by R. T. Kendall

Total Forgiveness (2001) 714 copies, 7 reviews
Tithing (1982) 195 copies, 1 review
The Anointing: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow (1998) 190 copies, 2 reviews
Once Saved, Always Saved (1983) 135 copies, 2 reviews
Understanding Theology: Volume 1 (2014) 100 copies, 1 review
How to Forgive Ourselves Totally (2007) 98 copies, 1 review
Understanding Theology: Volume 2 (2000) 75 copies, 2 reviews
In Pursuit Of His Glory (2002) 74 copies
The Sermon on the Mount (2011) 69 copies, 1 review
Understanding Theology: Volume 3 (2001) 67 copies, 1 review
Grace (2006) 49 copies
Worshipping God (1989) 45 copies, 1 review
Pure Joy (2004) 39 copies
Totally Forgiving Ourselves (2007) 29 copies
When God Says Well Done (1993) 24 copies
Vision of Jesus (1999) 23 copies
By Love Transformed (2006) 20 copies
Does Jesus Care? (1986) 19 copies
Thanking God (2003) 16 copies
In Pursuit of His Wisdom (2014) 15 copies
WORD OF THE LORD (1988) 14 copies
Higher Ground (2001) 14 copies
Who by Faith (Hodder Christian paperbacks) (1981) 13 copies, 1 review
The God of the Bible (1990) 13 copies
Great Christian Prayers (2000) 12 copies
The Lord's Prayer (2010) 11 copies
He Saves (1988) 9 copies
Understanding Theology (1996) 8 copies
Just Grace (2000) 8 copies
God Meant it for Good (1993) 6 copies
Scandal of Christianity (2011) 6 copies
The Parables of Jesus (2011) 3 copies
The Holy Nudge 2 copies, 2 reviews
Fuego santo (2014) 2 copies
Emma's Gift 1 copy
El Don De Ofrendar (1992) 1 copy

Associated Works

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Kendall, Robert Tillman
Birthdate
1935-07-13
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

47 reviews
R. T. Kendall, former senior minister of Westminster Chapel is a Charismatic-friendly old school Evangelical from Kentucky. On all counts he’s felt the public stigma for being who he is, living out his faith, and holding the convictions he has. Being a Christian does not win favor in business, in academia or in the wider-culture (but it could get you elected). Kendall wrote this book to get Christians to embrace the stigma that comes from living lives faithful to the Gospel. To this end, I show more commend much of what he says here.

I think most people reading this would find points of disagreement with Kendall. I name two. I think his summary of the gospel is reduces the truth, and I think he is too instrumental in his discussion of suffering for the sake the of gospel.

Kendall defines gospel as “the good news that Jesus died and that His death turned God’s wrath away from our sins and satisfied His justice. (43).” Beyond overemphasizing penal elements of the atonement, this summary of gospel reduces it to Christ’s death with no mention of his incarnation, his fulfillment of Israel’s story, his resurrection, the political implications that Jesus was King and Caesar is not, etc. While I certainly agree with Kendall that Christ died to affect our salvation (and personally trust in that fact), reducing the gospel to questions of eternal destination obscures the implications of the gospel for our earthly life. The good news is that Jesus is King and has a kingdom and this calls into question all other powers, principalities and dominions. By embracing a richer and fuller view of the gospel, the stigma of following Christ actually increases. People are not as upset by my assurance of salvation as they are by my contention that America is not, nor ever was, a Christian nation (Canadian readers substitute province for nation and Alberta for America).

Concerning Kendall’s instrumental view of suffering, Kendall says, “The greater the suffering the greater the anointing; the greater the anointing, the greater the suffering. By this I simply mean the promise of a greater anointing is on offer when you suffer for the shame of Jesus’ Name (78).” In the Bible anointing indicates a setting a part for special office, such as priest or King; in charismatic circles anointing is short-hand for some combination of spiritual power, authority, blessing or giftedness. While I think it is certainly true that God blesses those who willingly suffer to remain faithful to him, I am wary of pointing to suffering for the gospel as a means of gaining ‘anointing.’ Certainly I like the way Kendall exhorts us to suffer for Christ and not chase the comfort of the prosperity gospel, but I am skeptical of suffering to get God’s blessing.

But perhaps Kendall mediates against the wrong appropriation of his message, by insisting that we should suffer ‘for the gospel’ and not for our idiosyncrasies. At one point he says:

If I offend anybody I pray it will only be because of the sheer word of God in an atmosphere of love–the Gospel, the person and work of Jesus Christ and all that encourages us to true godliness. I do not like to offend at all, but if I do cause offense I do not want it to be because of my weird personality, my eccentric habits, my foolish points of view that have nothing to do with sound theology, my unguarded comments in the pulpit, my political opinions, the color of my shirt, my insensitive comments to you about your lifestyle or my being nosy regarding your personal life. (99)

He exhorts us to let the Gospel and our convictions regarding the Word of God offend and not our own abrasiveness.

I appreciate Kendall’s pastoral and practical insights and appreciate the thoughtfulness he brings to his writing (sometimes missing among fellow charismatics). I have friends that would enjoy and find this book challenging and helpful, and other friends who would find this book quaint and reductionist. I think it’s a little of both.

Thank you to Chosen books for providing me a copy of this book in exchange for this review.
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In this book R.T. Kendall puts together a convincing case for the biblical doctrine of the perseverence of the saints. There is also a remarkable personal testimony as to why he - originally from a very different theological background - came to believe this doctrine is true.

But the book is not just about intellectual assent to doctrine. It is a practical book, and the practical thrust of what he writes is assurance. For Kendall, belief in this doctrine is exactly what it says on the tin. If show more we are saved, we know that we are saved in eternity, and this doctrine is tremendously reassuring, liberating - to some it is scandalous, but for Kendall that is the point. It is grace in action.

Regardless of your position on the issue, this is a book to read.
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Jealousy. We all have to deal with it--both in ourselves and in others. Jealousy is rooted in our natural fears and insecurities. It has damaged relationships since the time of Cain and Abel, and still does today if we let it. In this wise and compassionate book, R.T. Kendall tackles, head-on, the sin that no one likes to admit to. He shows that it is only when we grasp that it is God we should aim to please that we will be able to recognize and overcome jealousy and, like Jesus, be jealous show more only for the glory of God. show less
Unashamed - I wonder if we truly contemplate this in our Christianity today. With a passion and fervor R.T. Kendall attacks this point - to boldly embrace the scandal that comes with following Christ.

This book serves as encouragement to the Christian seeking a life that is filled with fire for God in a world filled with complacent, luke-warm Christians who easily blend into the world. It encourages you to embrace the very thing that will most certainly set you apart from the world around show more you. The very thing that will cause others to be on the defense.

R.T. Kendall has done an excellent job in showing that being passionate about Christ brings courage to bear His name without shame. I read this book while reading 'The Crucified Life' by A.W. Tozer and was amazed at how similar these two men viewed their walk with the Lord.

Thanks to Chosen Books/Bethany House Publishers for this review copy.
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Awards

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Statistics

Works
135
Also by
1
Members
4,799
Popularity
#5,232
Rating
3.8
Reviews
46
ISBNs
281
Languages
6
Favorited
3

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