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"In Paul, the Spirit, and the People of God , Pentecostal scholar Gordon Fee has redefined the terms of the discussion about the Holy Spirit in a way that transcends today's paradigm of 'charismatic' or 'noncharismatic' orientation. His words are a strong reminder of what God, through his Holy Spirit, intends the church to be. . . . His work is an attempt to point us back to the Bible and reinvigorate our own vision of how the Spirit mobilizes the community of believers in the local church."--Wendy Murray, author; former senior writer, Christianity Today "Gordon Fee, one of our truly master exegetes, has put steel and sinew into the words Spirit, spirit, and spiritual--words that have become flabby through subjectivizing indulgence and lack of exegetical exercise. His accurate, fresh, and passionate recovery of the place and meaning of Spirit in Paul and for us Christians is a provocative stimulus and reliable guide to the recovery of the experienced presence of God in our lives. For those of us who want to live in continuity with all that has been revealed in Jesus and given in the Spirit, this is an eminently practical book."--Eugene H. Peterson, professor emeritus of spiritual theology, Regent College "Gordon Fee is one of the finest Bible expositors I have known. Whenever he speaks and writes, I listen, and recommend you do the same."--Chuck Colson, founder, Prison Fellowship Ministries Review: A Must Read! - The most informative, well-written, thorough, and helpful overview of the role of the Holy Spirit in the life of the church that Iโve ever read. Dr. Fee recaptures a balanced, complete view of the Holy Spirit by โwalking in the radical middleโ without catering to the excesses of Pentecostal culture or the denials of mainstream Evangelical culture. Dr. Fee clearly loves God and the church, and has a deep understanding of the wider context of the New Testament that really makes the concepts rich and the explanation trustworthy. A must-read for every Christian! Note: As a friend pointed out, this is a theology book with a lot of big words and may not be approachable for some audiences or reading levels. But definitely worth the effort if youโre willing to use the dictionary or are already familiar with the more common theological terms. Review: Outstanding Work! - Gordon Fee has written an easy to read version of his larger work "God's Empowering Presence: The Holy Spirit in the Letters of Paul." Recently, I read and reviewed Frank Macchia's book "Baptized in the Spirit: A Global Pentecostal Theology" and as much as I liked Macchia's work, this book by Fee is in some ways at least, better. I like Macchia's work on tongues and their meaning, but Fee really does an excellent job of showing the continuity and discontinuity of the Church who is the Israel of God and the nation of Israel in the OT. On page 50, Fee has a great chart that shows how that we are living in an already/not yet eschatalogical framework. Fee takes great care to show that the most important thing for the Church to get hold of is that we are the eshatalogical people of God and the Holy Spirit is the down payment on and fortaste of that future which is the come. He deals with Paul and is an excellent interprter of Pauline theology. Fee does not dismiss the importance of the Spirit in Paul, but shows how that, although, Jesus is the center of Paul's thought, it is the Holy Spirit that is driving this life in the Messiah and that give energy and freshness to the revelation of Jesus. This is an excellent work. I recommend this for everyone Pentecostal or not. I believe that a popular audience could probably read this book and benefit from Fee's great and scholarly insight.
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,348,266 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #175 in Paul's Letters (Books) #233 in New Testament Criticism & Interpretation #427 in Christian Pneumatology |
| Customer Reviews | 4.7 out of 5 stars 296 Reviews |
A**R
A Must Read!
The most informative, well-written, thorough, and helpful overview of the role of the Holy Spirit in the life of the church that Iโve ever read. Dr. Fee recaptures a balanced, complete view of the Holy Spirit by โwalking in the radical middleโ without catering to the excesses of Pentecostal culture or the denials of mainstream Evangelical culture. Dr. Fee clearly loves God and the church, and has a deep understanding of the wider context of the New Testament that really makes the concepts rich and the explanation trustworthy. A must-read for every Christian! Note: As a friend pointed out, this is a theology book with a lot of big words and may not be approachable for some audiences or reading levels. But definitely worth the effort if youโre willing to use the dictionary or are already familiar with the more common theological terms.
E**J
Outstanding Work!
Gordon Fee has written an easy to read version of his larger work "God's Empowering Presence: The Holy Spirit in the Letters of Paul." Recently, I read and reviewed Frank Macchia's book "Baptized in the Spirit: A Global Pentecostal Theology" and as much as I liked Macchia's work, this book by Fee is in some ways at least, better. I like Macchia's work on tongues and their meaning, but Fee really does an excellent job of showing the continuity and discontinuity of the Church who is the Israel of God and the nation of Israel in the OT. On page 50, Fee has a great chart that shows how that we are living in an already/not yet eschatalogical framework. Fee takes great care to show that the most important thing for the Church to get hold of is that we are the eshatalogical people of God and the Holy Spirit is the down payment on and fortaste of that future which is the come. He deals with Paul and is an excellent interprter of Pauline theology. Fee does not dismiss the importance of the Spirit in Paul, but shows how that, although, Jesus is the center of Paul's thought, it is the Holy Spirit that is driving this life in the Messiah and that give energy and freshness to the revelation of Jesus. This is an excellent work. I recommend this for everyone Pentecostal or not. I believe that a popular audience could probably read this book and benefit from Fee's great and scholarly insight.
J**R
Clearest and best
Clearest and most well written exploration of Pauline Theology. Gordon Fee is the expert on Paul and his letters. Read this if you want to better understand how the early church saw Christianity and the Holy Spirit, and the implications for today.
E**Z
The Spirit of God within the New People of God
After reading the book "Paul & the Law", I have come to the conclusion that I should have read the book "Paul, the Spirit, and the People of God" first. At the beginning of the book, the author, Gordon Fee, bored me to tears. Once I realized who the author was I understood that perhaps he was writing at a higher level that I could understand. After a few chapters I started to pick up the author's intention. Based on my personal experience as a Christian, there is no doubt that, in many churches, the Holy Spirit, just as in the Jehovah's Witnesses movement, has become a thing. The Spirit used to be treated and identified as a person but now it seems that in many churches He is identified with the fruit and/or gifts of the Spirit; the Spirit has become the force or influence in everything local churches try, or strive, to do. Even within the Assemblies of God churches, the Spirit has taken the back seat as He is much more identified with speaking in tongues, interpretation of tongues, dancing, and prophetic utterances. Though those are manifestations of the Spirit, they have taken centered stage. In other words, He is much more identified with the things of God instead of as the Spirit of the living God who makes His dwelling with the Church of Jesus Christ. Though many are the ones who acknowledge the Spirit as the One who convicts a person of his sinful nature/state and as the One who sanctifies and transforms the people of God into the image of His Son, Jesus the Christ that is as far as the Spirit of God seems to go in many churches. Churches need to give the Spirit of God His rightful place since "we are dealing with none other than the personal presence of God." The author stated on page 37 the following: "I believe in God the Father; I believe in Jesus Christ, God's Son; but I wonder about the Holy Ghost." Though he is in no way demeaning the work and importance of the Spirit of God in salvation history in Christ, he is nonetheless expressing the view that, in my opinion and his, is traditional or prevalent among some Christian churches. This is evident between some Baptist and Pentecostal churches, for example. While one group concentrates much more on the Word and less on the Spirit, the other group's emphasis is on the Spirit and less on the Word. One group can see heresy 20 miles away while missing the Spirit by an inch while the other can detect the Spirit 20 miles away but missing doctrinal error by an inch. This is just a general observation, though. What Gordon Fee is trying to do, and I think he achieved it, is to present Paul's view on the Spirit of God as the One who is able to unite, for the first time in the history of humanity, both Jews and Gentiles and bring out of these two people the new people of God; the Israel of God, if you will. Paul understands and believes that the Spirit is important in achieving unity within the Body of Christ. He sees the Spirit as the long-awaited-for fulfillment of the promise that God made in the Old Testament that one day His presence would return to His people, that one day He would make a new covenant with His people, and that one day He will put His Law in the minds, and write it in the hearts, of His people. Paul, according to Fee, sees the giving of the Spirit of God as the true mark, unlike the Torah and its circumcision, of belonging to the family of God. Once Christ ascended into heaven and once the Spirit was sent from heaven, Paul viewed the Spirit as the One who makes the Christian life possible because, what the Law demanded in the Old Testament to do as obedience to God's commandments is now doable by the empowerment of the Spirit to those who believe in Christ for their salvation. I believe the author drove home the view that Paul had concerning the promised outpouring, or God's returning presence, of His Spirit. The apostle Paul understood the importance of the Spirit of God in the lives of the believers that they may be renewed, sanctified, transformed, and empowered to live a life worthy of their calling and to attain salvation which will be consummated sometime in the future. For Paul, and according to Fee, a person that is saved is a person that has the Spirit of God, not just residing in him or her, but living out the life of the same Spirit. In other words, "A Spirit-filled person is a Spirit-fruit bearer." I greatly agree with the author's view of Paul's view on the Spirit of God as the much needed presence of the living God.
S**T
Experiential Christianity is still what the world needs today, in & through the power of the Holy Spirit of God
Gordon Fee, professor & writer, writes a very helpful book on understanding God's Holy Spirit. The more we understand of God's Spirit, the more we can move from a simply rational understanding of the Holy Spirit into an experiential one. As the Western mind is informed & can "relax" regarding that which is spiritual in general, the easier it is for that informed mind to enter into valid Biblical Spiritual experiences. The Bible is full of people having Spiritual experiences: dreams, visions, senses, intuitive understandings & perceptions, feeling guided or led to do something in particular, etc. The more we know & understand of how God wants to work in our lives, the easier it is to not interfere with His attempt to do so, but instead open the door & let God work in our lives & circumstances. A very helpful book. Western rational forms of Christianity have almost killed the Holy Spirit's activities in the church, and many church leaders are content to let that be the case most of the time. But as the modern seems to be directionless in its 'lost' state, this is a great reminder that the same Spirit who shook the early disciples & the Roman Empire, can shake our modern world today as well.
A**T
Well-written, concise, and direct. Better with each re-reading.
I love this book. Gordon Fee has done excellent work in compiling and explaining a profound Biblical truth; the Spirit of God indwells the believer in Christ. I've used this book "as is" and as reference for Sunday School classes, home Bible studies, and the basic framework for a discipleship curriculum. I highly recommend it for anyone seeking practical, livable insight for a deeper walk with God
E**Y
Brilliant!!!
Gordon Fee compresses his 900 page tome "God's Empowering Presence" into an appr 210 page book for mere mortals like me, and I must say it is the best treatment of the subject of the Holy Spirt via a vis the Christian life and the church. Every church tradition will get its fair share of correction, from Penteco-charismatics to evangelical to Anabaptist. If your theology is driven by the more recent rediscovery of the kingdom of God as breaking forth into the present, you will find this book helps you appreciate the need for the Holy Spirit even more. If you relegate everything about the kingdom of God to a future heaven, get ready for your world to be rocked. And if you're are waking up to the devastating impact of individualism in Christendom, you will learn much to encourage you from Fee. This is now my go-to book on the Holy Spirit. I cannot recommend it more.
P**L
Excellent treatises on the subject
This book is a must-read for the church at large. Very sound teaching on the role of the Holy Spirit in the life of believer and the gathered comfy city of faith. Correction is needed in a powerless church which has adopted a marketing form of success for the church. Time ask the Spirit to co.e in power to change us all again!
R**A
Fee at his best!
This is a great study book. Worth taking the time to read. The author who has since died was probably one of the finest Biblical scholars within the Charismatic views of the Holy Spirit.
N**M
Gordon D FEE
Brilliant writer brilliant commentator
A**N
Great a must read for every christian
A thoroughly good read. It is short but pithy and challenging. Please buy this book. It will change you
J**.
I have never used a device like this before
I have never used a device like this before. Cool invention. I like how you can highlight and save notes. Since I am using this online book for study the bibliography component is great. Thanks for your hard work in putting such an idea together inventors. J
J**S
Really good book
I would thoroughly recommend this book. It is good to see someone working hard to be biblically accurate. Gordon Fee's style is very readable, practical and helpful.
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