![]() The chapter entitled "The Blessedness of Possesing Nothing" should be required reading for anyone confessing Christ as their Lord. Sometimes with weeping and confessing and always compelled to deep times of prayer and renewel in God's presence. I found myself challenged to look at my own faith in Christ and what I should be doing with that faith in every chapter. ![]() From begining to end each page is an impassioned plea for the reader to abandon "comfortable Christianity" in order to truly know God as He desires to be known. You can not help but hear the voice of God calling you to a deeper relationship with Him as you read this amazing classic. This book is probably the most spirit filled and guided work I've read in a long time. Although written in such a remarkably short period of time, the depth, clarity and completeness of Tozer's message has made The Pursuit of God an enduring favorite. When the train pulled into McAllen, the rough draft was done. He wrote all night, the words coming to him as fast as he could put them down. During a trip from Chicago to Texas in the late 1940s, A.W. ![]()
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