Danny Lovett, a Professor at Term Paper

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Overall we are the vessels by which God does his work in this world, and this is ultimately the most important thing that we can do, therefore to interfere in his overall plan by asserting that our physical demands and ambitions are greater than God's grand plan is representative of false worship.

The goal of the author is obvious to write about how we have veered away from Christ through our pursuit of daily ambitions and to remind us that as faithful worshippers we have to understand and respect the message of God to the fullest. Furthermore, he wants us to understand that the Power of the Holy Spirit is eminent in all of us and that we can use this as a conduit to advance ourselves in both our spiritual and physical selves.

I think that overall the primary strength of this book is the conviction in which Lovett writes. He exhibits through this work his own strong connection with God and how he has used this faith to reinvigorate both believers and nonbelievers alike. He also creates a strong imagery and reminder of why we stand by the Holy Spirit and how it has helped us in our darkest hours. The most important lesson that I took from this book is that worship is a consistent presence in our lives, not a one time revelation or weekly refuge, in order to fully experience the spiritual rejuvenation of being God's channel into this world we have to have our spiritual presence felt at a consistent level throughout our lives.


At the same time I think the weakness of this book is that it depends too much on Lovett's faith and does not defend his assertions with enough biblical and logical dialogue to enable us to fully believe in his doctrine. Therefore, while he is extraordinarily persuasive he does not provide the firm grounding to establish his own credibility.

The comparison of this book can best be made to the famous book "Tell the Truth" by Bill Metzger. That book just like this one attempts to look at how we must preserve the entirety of the bible and the Scriptures within ourselves to understand and appreciate the Holy Spirit with the Whole Person. Lovett is like Metzger in that he believes our spiritual journey is one that must be consistent throughout our lives rather than in spurts and steps, and that we must devote our whole person to God rather than just aspects of our lives. However, "Tell the Truth" is much more of a book for witnessing and spreading of evangelism than dealing with the internal aspects of our worship, whereas Lovett clearly intended to write this book as an introspective examination our of faith......

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