The Vision and the Vow is an interesting book. One part of it is the Vision, which is a poem that gained some traction in the late 90s/early 2000s that has been given an artistic treatment. It starts on the side of the book that has "The Vision" in big letters. If you flip the book to the other side it is "The Vow" part which is where the majority of the book is found and this looks closer at the ideas in "The Vision" and gives some meat to it.
I had never really heard of the original poem until reading the book, so I can't say that the poem really impacted me that much. It was interesting, but I don't know that it was really new ideas for me. "The Vow" part is also interesting. Here he talks about commitment to Christ and moves into the idea of taking a vow to follow God a la The Order of the Mustard Seed a "secret" group who took a vow to follow Christ that was started by Count Nikolaus Ludwig von Zinzendorf.
While I'm not necessarily sold on the idea, mainly since Christ does warn against taking vows more than saying that it is okay as long as it is the right kind of vow. Even though I'm not sold on the idea, there are some good things said here. Also the book is very much invitational and not heavy handed as well. So you feel like this is being presented as a option, not the only option for our faith. It's a tool that may be able to help people be more committed to God, and I really appreciated this approach.
Even without the presentation of the formal vow aspects of stuff, there is still a lot to think about in terms of commitment to Christ and how that should impact our whole life. The presentation is definitely more towards a younger audience and is kind of outdated for that since it's now like 18 years old itself. So some topics may not hit where people who get a lot of the references are and those who do relate to some of the topics may not get some of the pop culture references very easily. It's definitely something that will be dependent on the reader.
Overall, I enjoyed The Vision and the Vow. I'm not quite going to go out and become a member of the Order of the Mustard Seed, but it was a book that allowed you to look at your commitment to Christ. It also did so in a way that focused more on grace and invited you to be a part of what Christ is doing than it did on hitting the areas of guilt or fear that can be a big temptation in books like this.