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A nice little book full of common sense. Author says to live in faith but does not say in what. Sadly cites some new age claptrap.
Informative but humorous treatment of strategic scools of thought. Use of Saxe's poem of the blind men (sic) and the elephant to show that "we need them all".
An excellent strategy reader. Entirely possible that one would never need another text, but would have developed a hunger for more!
The "Rapture" is a term used as if it were an event. Instead, in my view, it is a state. It commences for the church, Jesus Christ's believing followers who own Him as Lord, at His call for them, the event meant by the title of the book. The Grace of God is, at the time of writing, holding open the opportunity to come to Him by Christ, "the way, the truth and the life" until that moment. Given the author's belief in this, it seems a pity that he allows his name to be attached to a series of fictional work that implies unscriptural hope thereafter. Whatever God's intended dealings with people thereafter, it is false to hold out an alternative to the Gospel here and now. These things apart, the author is faithful to scripture in this work.
A nice story, but unbelievably contrived to support principles that are at best bog-obvious and at worst misleading platitudes.