Life with God: Reading the Bible for Spiritual Transformation
by Richard J. Foster
On This Page
Description
"If you want to discover new ways of entering the Bible, and letting it enter you, you will find no better guide than Richard Foster." -- Lauren F. Winner, Duke Divinity School, author of Girl Meets God "Foster's work is not for those readers who are seeking quick answers or a behavioral checklist of what the Bible says they should do. Rather, it is a deep reflective guide to spiritual rumination and growth." -- Publishers Weekly Richard Foster, the beloved, bestselling author of show more Celebration of Discipline, Streams of Living Water, and Prayer, shows the intimate connection between Scripture and spirituality, revealing the secrets to living the "with-God life." show lessTags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
I expected a lot from this book. Foster’s Celebration of Discipline (along with Lewis’ Mere Christianity) are the two most important books I’ve ever read. I’ve followed Foster for years now, reading everything he’s written. I’ve attended a fantastic Renovaré conference, and have even used Celebration for a small group study.
Nevertheless, it pains me to express my disappointment in this book. I should be more precise. I was angry when I finished this work. I felt like I spent $16.00 and a few hours that I can never get back. Almost everything in this book is paraphrased from his earlier works (including an almost chapter-length summary of his Streams of Living Water).
The last straw for me came while reading page show more 197:
"Scripture identifies two kinds of life: bios, the physical, created life; and zoë, the spiritual, eternal life. Likewise, Scripture identifies two kinds of death: teleute, physical death; and thanatos, spiritual death. So it is entirely possible to be physically alive but spiritually dead."
The paragraph sounded familiar. Here it is from page ix of the “Word to the Reader”:
"Scripture identifies two types of life: bios, the physical, created life; and zoë, the spiritual, eternal life. Likewise, there are two types of death: teleute, physical death; and thanatos, spiritual death. Thus, it is entirely possible for a person to be physically alive (bios) while being spiritually dead (thanatos)."
I should be fair here. If you’ve never read anything by Richard Foster, this book is a solid introduction and summary of his thought. If you have read him before, save yourself some time and read the people he counts among his influences:
* Augustine
* Bonhoeffer
* Brother Lawrence
* Thomas Kelly
* Frank Laubach
* Tozer
* Wollman
They’ll take you further. For me, I’m eagerly awaiting Foster’s next book. Here’s hoping . . . show less
Nevertheless, it pains me to express my disappointment in this book. I should be more precise. I was angry when I finished this work. I felt like I spent $16.00 and a few hours that I can never get back. Almost everything in this book is paraphrased from his earlier works (including an almost chapter-length summary of his Streams of Living Water).
The last straw for me came while reading page show more 197:
"Scripture identifies two kinds of life: bios, the physical, created life; and zoë, the spiritual, eternal life. Likewise, Scripture identifies two kinds of death: teleute, physical death; and thanatos, spiritual death. So it is entirely possible to be physically alive but spiritually dead."
The paragraph sounded familiar. Here it is from page ix of the “Word to the Reader”:
"Scripture identifies two types of life: bios, the physical, created life; and zoë, the spiritual, eternal life. Likewise, there are two types of death: teleute, physical death; and thanatos, spiritual death. Thus, it is entirely possible for a person to be physically alive (bios) while being spiritually dead (thanatos)."
I should be fair here. If you’ve never read anything by Richard Foster, this book is a solid introduction and summary of his thought. If you have read him before, save yourself some time and read the people he counts among his influences:
* Augustine
* Bonhoeffer
* Brother Lawrence
* Thomas Kelly
* Frank Laubach
* Tozer
* Wollman
They’ll take you further. For me, I’m eagerly awaiting Foster’s next book. Here’s hoping . . . show less
Foster's book isn't any kind of revelation. It is more of a reminder, a clarification, another vision of what discipleship looks like for me. The rules and method are not the goal. They are the methods that are useful to the individual in their own daily walk to make their heart, mind, and soul available for the Holy Spirit to come in and do its work. I think this is a basic message that Foster is trying to get across.
Listen. Reflect. Pray. Obey. Good stuff that again is confirming my own my spiritual walk. I did get convicted of spending more time preparing myself for reading the Bible along with a little bit more depth of delving deeper into reflection on what the word is saying to me. In other words, don't just check off the box show more after reading your scripture, open your heart and mind to the word. Keep your focus. Let the word come into you and take hold. Listen. Reflect. Pray. Obey. show less
Listen. Reflect. Pray. Obey. Good stuff that again is confirming my own my spiritual walk. I did get convicted of spending more time preparing myself for reading the Bible along with a little bit more depth of delving deeper into reflection on what the word is saying to me. In other words, don't just check off the box show more after reading your scripture, open your heart and mind to the word. Keep your focus. Let the word come into you and take hold. Listen. Reflect. Pray. Obey. show less
In this book, Foster tries to tie together his various writings and ideas about spiritual growth and present a way of living a life with God. Because he tries to cover so much, he can't treat any ideas in depth, and that is the only real weakness in the book. You can still find everything we expect from Foster: enormous, deep learning in the spiritual classics; a profound spiritual life that he writes about eloquently; and a knack for picking stories out of the lives of Christians from the past to illustrate his points. If you are a Foster fan, you won't be disappointed, even if you won't find him covering much new ground in this book.
Richard Foster's astoundingly good "Celebration of Discipline," long a favorite of mine , was all the inspiration I needed to compel me to pick this one up as well. I was disappointed, because he had already covered much of this ground elsewhere, and I couldn't help but think it was a cross-marketing plan to rev up sales of the Renovare Study Bible. (A worthy edition, to be sure.)
I suspect that those unfamiliar with Foster will -- and should -- get great benefit from this, but for established fans of Foster, it's little more than a rehash.
I suspect that those unfamiliar with Foster will -- and should -- get great benefit from this, but for established fans of Foster, it's little more than a rehash.
Ratings
Members
- Recently Added By
Author Information

77+ Works 21,661 Members
Richard J. Foster is the author of several bestselling books, including Celebration of Discipline, Streams of Living Water, and Prayer, which in 1993 was Christianity Today's book of the year and the winner of the Gold Medallion Award from the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association. He is the founder of Renovar, an intrachurch movement show more committed to the renewal of the Church in all her multifaceted expressions, and the editor of The Life with God Bible. show less
Common Knowledge
- Original publication date
- 2008
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 470
- Popularity
- 64,487
- Reviews
- 4
- Rating
- (3.68)
- Languages
- English, German
- Media
- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 8
- ASINs
- 2



























































