TGOTT challenged me far more than the Philippians commentary I had started (a good one, too). First, he challenges our view of God and insists that we expand all that we thought of Him: God loves, God is Holy, God Forgives; but these qualities and others extend far above all that we might be able to ask or think.
Throughout, McGuiggan challenges us forcefully with, "So, now that you know, what will you do about it?" No, that statement is not in the book, but it expresses the challenge to comfortable churchgoing, respectable Christianity that we all need to step up to meet.
Chapter headings instruct us that our lives begin and breathe God:
The God Who Loves Humans
The God Who Died
The God Who Majors in Forgiveness
The God Who is Holy
The God Who Loves the Weak
The God Who Acquits Criminals
The God Who Wore a Towel
The God Who Made Yokes
The God Who Permits Suffering
The God Who Came Talking.
TGOTT is packed with scripture, and filled with lessons for everyday attitudes and actions.
It has changed some of my ways and will change more and has given me new expressions to teach old truths.
I wish I had read it sooner. It is still second best to his "Celebrating the Wrath of God," but challenges us on a broader scope.
Keith Ward