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Keep in Step with the Spirit
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The Holy Spirit is far from a one-dimensional figure. It is active in many ways throughout the Bible—molding creation, directing history, revealing God’s truth and will, and teaching God’s people. But the foremost—and often neglected—role of the Spirit is to make Christ known to God’s people.
Keep in Step with the Spirit is a helpful guide to the Holy Spirit that is both conversational in tone and comprehensive in scope, revealing who the Spirit is and how it is active in the lives of believers. In this book, J. I. Packer focuses on how the Spirit is presented in the Old and New Testaments before offering a comprehensive and contemporary analysis of the charismatic movement. Packer presents readers with an alternative position to the Charismatic movement that highlights the direct activity of the Holy Spirit yet tests all things by God’s word.
368 pages.
Table of Contents
A Preface to the Preface (2005)
Preface (1984)
Getting the Spirit in Focus
The Holy Spirit in the Bible
Mapping the Spirit’s Path: The Way of Holiness
Mapping the Spirit’s Path: Versions of Holiness
Mapping the Spirit’s Path: The Charismatic Life
Mapping the Spirit’s Path: Interpreting the Charismatic Life
Come, Holy Spirit
Heaven on Earth: A Pentecost Exposition
Appendix: The “Wretched Man” in Romans 7
Notes
Scripture Index
Topical Index
A measured, thoughtful and thorough treatment of the person and work of the Holy Spirit, communicated with the late, great J.I. Packer's characteristic clarity and common sense. Biblical exposition is rigorous yet accessible, and Packer's pneumatology is supported by several well-chosen excerpts from the Puritans, especially John Owen. However, Packer errs on the side of ecumenicalism in his assessment of the charismatic movement in England in the late 20th century. This book was first published in 1985, with this edition revised for 2005, and it shows its age. Packer's analysis of the 'modern' charismatic movement steers clear of anything remotely polemical, and his scope is limited to an English context, with an emphasis on John Wesley and the Keswick movement. A more up-to-date (and less timid) analysis of the more influential American charismatic movement can be found in John MacArthur's "Strange Fire: the danger of offending the Holy Spirit with counterfeit worship" (2013). Overall, Packer's book is a useful synthesis of the best Reformed thinking on the person and work of the Holy Spirit, but look elsewhere for a serious investigation of the modern Pentecostal and charismatic movements.
A measured, thoughtful and thorough treatment of the person and work of the Holy Spirit, communicated with the late, great J.I. Packer's characteristic clarity and common sense. Biblical exposition is rigorous yet accessible, and Packer's pneumatology is supported by several well-chosen excerpts from the Puritans, especially John Owen. However, Packer errs on the side of ecumenicalism in his assessment of the charismatic movement in England in the late 20th century. This book was first published in 1985, with this edition revised for 2005, and it shows its age. Packer's analysis of the 'modern' charismatic movement steers clear of anything remotely polemical, and his scope is limited to an English context, with an emphasis on John Wesley and the Keswick movement. A more up-to-date (and less timid) analysis of the more influential American charismatic movement can be found in John MacArthur's "Strange Fire: the danger of offending the Holy Spirit with counterfeit worship" (2013). Overall, Packer's book is a useful synthesis of the best Reformed thinking on the person and work of the Holy Spirit, but look elsewhere for a serious investigation of the modern Pentecostal and charismatic movements.
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