I Call it Heresy is a vibrant study of the Lordship controversy long before it became a major player on the theological stage. A.W. Tozer tackles the heresy of accepting Jesus Christ as Savior but... This description may be from another edition of this product.
Early in my Christian life I discovered the writings of A.W. Tozer. This work was a challenge to me and what I seemed to be hearing in Church so often. The "faith alone" extremism in many evangelical Protestant circles is rarely challenged so forcefully as this little volume. Mr. Tozer continually reminded us of the cost of being a true disciple. His work continually reminds us of the fallacy entailed in the common notion that we can claim faith without demonstrating obedience. Later becoming a Roman Catholic has not dampened my thankfulness for the work this great teacher did in drawing me into a closer and real relationship with my risen Lord. Few modern evangelical authors will challenge you as A. W. Tozer does again and again. This little book will set you on the right course to following Christ with an authentic, dynamic, and overcoming faith.
Landmark book on 20th century salvation heresy
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
Tozer's I Call It Heresy goes a long way toward explaining why over 60% of Americans call themselves "born again" while according to George Barna less than 10% could be considered Christian in the Biblical sense. Tozer if one of a few prophetic voices of the 20th century who saw the problem of "Sunday evangelism" before the heresy became mainstream. If you want to understand why "Jesus is my savior but not yet my lord" is an oxymoron, get this book! Patrick McIntyre, author of The Graham Formula
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