Publisher Description
Find power to do what Jesus did. You can do the work of Jesus Christ by relaying on the Holy Spirit, while closing the door to the counterfeit, the demonic and the merely human. This book will help you: move beyone powerless Christianity, understand the balance between "the Spirit within" and "the Spirit upon" and pray for the empowerment of God's Spirit.
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About the Authors
Douglas Murray is an associate editor of The Spectator (London). His The Madness of Crowds, was a bestseller and a book of the year for The Times and Sunday Times. His previous book, The Strange Death of Europe: Immigration, Identity, Islam, spent almost twenty weeks on the Sunday Times bestseller list and was a number one bestseller in nonfiction.
About the Narrators
Jonathan
Wilson-Hartgrove
is a celebrated spiritual author and sought-after speaker. A native of North
Carolina, he is a graduate of Eastern University and Duke Divinity School. In 2003
he and his wife founded the Rutba House, a house of hospitality where the
homeless are welcomed into a community that eats, prays, and shares life
together. He is also an associate minister at the historically black St. Johns
Missionary Baptist Church. An evangelical Christian who connects with the broad
spiritual tradition and its monastic witnesses, he is a leader in the New
Monasticism movement. He speaks often about emerging Christianity to churches
and conferences across the denominational spectrum, and he has given lectures
at dozens of universities. He is a complier of the celebrated Common Prayer: A Liturgy for Ordinary
Radicals and is the author of several books on Christian spirituality,
including The Awakening of Hope, The Wisdom of Stability, and The New Monasticism.
Jonathan Peterson, a director of executive communications at AARP, is a longtime journalist who specializes in making complex issues easy to understand. His interest in Social Security began when he covered the political debate in Washington that led to major reforms in 1983. During his twenty-three year career with the Los Angeles Times, he explored the aging of America, domestic policy, and the US economy. He has won numerous awards for journalism and speechwriting. He was on the Los Angeles Times team that won a Pulitzer Prize for coverage of the LA riots and was awarded the Malcolm Forbes Prize by the Overseas Press Club for in-depth stories about the collapsing Soviet Union.