Hearing God by Nathan Finochio

Hearing God

by Nathan Finochio

Identify and deconstruct the most common myths about how God communicates—and then learn to utilize clear tools to accurately decipher and follow the voice of God in your life.

So many people wish that God would audibly weigh in on life's greatest questions of calling, meaning, and purpose. What's crazy is that God is weighing in on those questions. We just haven't learned to listen. Nathan Finochio believes that God is constantly communicating with this world he's created. We simply aren't following the right advice when it comes to hearing what he has to say. Through biblical teaching and true life stories, Hearing God empowers and enables readers to separate fact from fiction, myth from meaning, and truly understand what God is saying to them about big decisions and daily living.

Reviewed by Jeff Sexton on

3 of 5 stars

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Awesome Premise. Flawed Execution. In this book, Finochio makes several excellent points, and it is a book genuinely worthy of reading. But yet again we get a book from a Christian pastor that decries the practice of "proof texting" - citing an out of context verse from the Bible in support of whatever claim the person is making at the time - ... while doing it in seemingly nearly every paragraph of the 200 pages of text of this book. We see, yet again, the modern Christian phenomenon of worshiping the Bible as God's Word, despite the very book itself (in John 1:1) declaring that *Jesus Christ* is God's Word. And indeed, Finochio uses some genuinely impressive mental gymnastics somewhat frequently to claim that both the Bible and Jesus Christ are God's Word at the same time. For the Christian mainstream in America, this book will probably go over quite well and hell, he does make good points throughout the book even in his flawed execution, so I'll recommend it to that crowd at least. It simply could have been so much more and so much stronger, and is disappointing in not being so.

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Reading updates

  • Started reading
  • 11 June, 2019: Finished reading
  • 11 June, 2019: Reviewed