Grace In Practice – Reviewed! (Happy Birthday)

In honor of his birthday, which is tomorrow, I thought I’d post some excerpts of […]

David Zahl / 5.23.08

In honor of his birthday, which is tomorrow, I thought I’d post some excerpts of the glowing review that appeared in this month’s issue of Modern Reformation magazine of my father’s latest book, Grace In Practice. If you haven’t read the book, you really should. And if you’re not familiar with the magazine, do yourself a favor! It begins:

“It has been a long time since I have read a book that has portrayed such an important topic in such a progressive manor. I found myself stopping numerous times through the first 50 pages wondering if I had understood what the author was saying-not because this is a hard book to read, but because it was so refreshing. I found myself reflecting on the truthful yet raw way Paul Zahl articulates his points on the law, grace, and practical living. With edgy and un-conventional terminology, Zahl’s straightforward approach to explaining the origin and application of the law and grace are both informative and invigorating.”

The reviewer continues:

Zahl reminds us that there is nothing inherently wrong with the law; it is our sinful inability to adhere to the law that drives us toward something more. ‘Jesus recognized the inability of the law, which shows us exactly who we ought to be, to provide its own fulfillment. Christ did not say the law is bad. He said instead the law is wholly good. But most importantly, he said that the law is no skilled mechanic. It cannot fix what is broken’. In our brokenness we innately desire to be comforted and loved. In our desire for love we find insufficiency. In our insufficiency we find a deep need. Zahl stirs up these reminders as he sets forth the healing to our brokenness, the one who is sufficient, and the love we long for.”

Next:

“Comparing and expounding on the law and society, motivation of loss, everyday life, and its curse, [Zahl] demonstrates the very depth and presence of the law… After unleashing the law that ‘reduces its object, the human spirit, to despair’, Zahl subtly begins to introduce the transforming concept of grace. Carrying the reader through the traditional definitions of grace and then in his practical undertones resting on the foundational truth that grace is one-way love (1 John 4:9), he notes that grace is independent of its response but often begets it.”

Then:

[Zahl] goes on to explore four rich theological pillars of grace: anthropology, soteriology, Christology, and the Holy Spirit and the Holy Trinity. With each pillar, Zahl pulls both the theological and practical implications of grace to the forefront. He emphasizes the necessity of Christ’s substitutionary atonement and our total depravity. He also promotes the unpopular view of man having an un-free will. He defends his position stating that ‘a theology of everyday life depends on the un-free will. If the will is free, then we do not need someone to save us. We may need a helper, but we do not need a savior’.”

Finally:

“Chapters 3 through 6 are filled with exposition on grace in families, society, the church, and the culmination of grace in everything. Whether it is a political philosophy, the family structure, or the church universal, we can ask the question ‘Where does grace fit in?’… It does not take long to understand that embracing a grace-filled life is something that scares both the church and the world. Zahl wraps up by pointing out that ‘neither environment (church or the world) is safe. This is why I wish to stand in only one specific place, even if it continually moves. This is the place of God’s one-way love and its imputing accuracy, which rescues the human situation in every case where it is given play. It witnesses no sector of human affairs immune to the disease, but also none immune to the cure’. This book is rich, practical, challenging, and encouraging. It breathes new life into the timeless truth of grace.”

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COMMENTS


One response to “Grace In Practice – Reviewed! (Happy Birthday)”

  1. Joshua Corrigan says:

    What a fantastic review of a truly amazing book!

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