4/10
This isn’t even a spirit formed book. The spirit is conspicuously absent from it; therefore, by the criteria the author himself sets up, this book is unfortunately a failure.
All feeling no thought, that sums up this book in my opinion.
I often find myself asking why a particular book was written, and in this case I suppose it was for the encouragement of Christians, but I doubt even that would be satisfied unless you had legitimately never heard any of the trite wisdom Hayford dispenses. I'm sorry if that's harsh, but I can't imagine his heart was in this book, and if it is his heart is to light.
The content is light on theology, and replaces it with a heavy leaning on experience and feeling.
“No discipline will ever substitute for his presence.” I may agree with that, but the issue is never that discipline is bad thing, it's that we can be dependent on discipline alone. It's impossible to come into the presence of God without some degree of discipline, this is something I believe Hayford and I would not see eye to eye on.
I appreciate what I think Hayford is trying, but he doesn't get close.