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About The Book
Description
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Our days are filled with a variety of known and lurking fears. Christians who name Jesus as Lord on Sundays are inundated with stories (real and imagined) inducing fear and caution throughout the week: random violence health concerns the perceived threat of people different from us and economic worries to name a few. News sources and national political leaders manipulate these fears in a fashion that threatens (and sometimes usurps) the churchs ultimate trust in Christ.A pastoral assumption: at the core of this national anxiety is the looming fear of death spawning various supplemental protections that have little to do with the promises of Christ. This fear of death (and the false promises claiming to shield us from such) may prompt us to nudge the One we call Lord to the margins of daily life or even solely to the afterlife--a savior well all meet in heaven one day but whose quaint teachings have little to do with problems were now facing.In this book gifted storyteller Frank G. Honeycutt calls on his many years of pastoral experience to examine one of the most stunning (and overlooked) theological claims of the New Testament: how baptism radically unites followers of Christ in his death and resurrection. In baptism we have already died (Romans 6). Disciples commence life in the kingdom on this side of the grave. Believing this with theological rigor and trust relieves personal (and corporate) anxiety about any day in the future when a believer stops breathing.