Even Greater has some spectacular stories of the miracles that have occurred in Reinhard Bonnke's ministry. I had actually not heard of the evangelist Reinhard Bonnke before reading this book, and after some of the stories were referencing crusades of hundreds of thousands of people, I was shocked how I had not! But once I realized he was the head of Christ for All Nations, I realized I have heard of his work, just not him personally.
In regards to the stories he shares though, he has seen and experienced so many amazing miracles. It was neat to see how the stories of the people weave in and out of his life. He would make an impact on someone without even knowing it, and then he would not even learn of this impact or how changed a person's life until many years later when the person pops back up in his life. How many people have we impacted without knowing? A question like that should add to our reliance on God's plan for our life because it is complex and one that we can only see as making sense once we look back on our life and see all the connections, interconnections, and reasons why. Not until a person pops up 10 years later and shares a story from the past do we see why we had that interaction.
The first story Bonnke shares in the book almost put me off from the rest of the book. I believe in the power of God and his ability to perform miracles, but I think that Bonnke needs to clean up the details in the first story (and in some of the others). There was one specific instance in the first story that made me question if Bonnke was hyperbolizing his story and unfairly magnifying certain aspects of God's work. He relates how he healed a woman and she was thrown back 60 feet where she landed in a heap, unconscious. He then relates how she did not regain consciousness for multiple minutes, during which time he continue preaching. First, 60 feet is a large distance! And he was preaching in a normal sized church, not some mega church. Yet he says that she was thrown back 60 feet from the stage to the first row of chairs. You are not going to find a normal sized church where there is 60 feet between the stage and first row of chairs. So I think he exaggerated the distance there. Also, if a woman is thrown back and lands unconscious and unmoving, people are going to gather around her and help her, but Bonnke related it as if everything and everyone went on as normal. By starting out with this story, I almost closed the book as it seemed Bonnke was exaggerating his stories and I didn't know if I could trust his word. I know that the actions of God can be unbelievable, but the actions of man are often more predictable, and the first story did not show that.
However, the remaining stories did show some amazing examples of God's miracles and what a thing it would be too experience!