• Rediscovering the Holy Spirit

  • God's Perfecting Presence in Creation, Redemption, and Everyday Life
  • By: Michael Horton
  • Narrated by: Tom Parks
  • Length: 13 hrs and 37 mins
  • 4.7 out of 5 stars (36 ratings)

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Rediscovering the Holy Spirit

By: Michael Horton
Narrated by: Tom Parks
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Publisher's summary

For the Spirit, being somewhat forgotten is an occupational hazard. The Holy Spirit is so actively involved in our lives that we can take his presence for granted. As they say, familiarity breeds contempt. Just as we take breathing for granted, we can take the Holy Spirit for granted simply because we constantly depend on him. Like the cane that soon feels like an extension of the blind man's own body, we too easily begin to think of the Holy Spirit as an extension of ourselves.

Yet the Spirit is at the center of the action in the divine drama, from Genesis 1:2 all the way to Revelation 22:17. The Spirit's work is as essential as the Father's and the Son's, yet the Spirit's work is always directed to the person and work of Christ. In fact the efficacy of the Holy Spirit's mission is measured by the extent to which we are focused on Christ. The Holy Spirit is the person of the Trinity who brings the work of the Father, in the Son, to completion. In everything that the Triune God performs, this perfecting work is characteristic of the Spirit.

In Rediscovering the Holy Spirit, author, pastor, and theologian Mike Horton introduces listeners to the neglected person of the Holy Spirit, showing that the work of God's Spirit is far more ordinary and common than we realize. Horton argues that we need to take a step back every now and again to focus on the Spirit himself - his person and work - in order to recognize him as someone other than Jesus or ourselves, much less something in creation. Through this contemplation we can gain a fresh dependence on the Holy Spirit in every area of our lives.

©2017 Zondervan (P)2017 Michael Horton

What listeners say about Rediscovering the Holy Spirit

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Great treatment of a vital subject

One of the best treatments on the person and work of the Holy Spirit from a reformed/confessional perspective.

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Another great book

This is book number three that I have read by Michael Horton and all are great.

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2 people found this helpful

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Brilliant Corrective For Christian Spirituality

This may be Horton’s greatest gift to the Church of the early 21st century. I was delighted to hear a reformed Protestant write so personally about the Holy Spirit, while challenged to correct some of my own views that needed biblical trinitarian pruning. This is a solid corrective for many of all flavors in the kingdom.

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Blue-ish but Hard to See?

Where does Rediscovering the Holy Spirit rank among all the audiobooks you’ve listened to so far?

While I wish I could hear the author read it himself, the narrator actually does a really great job and doesn't mess some some of the more technical terms, which didn't happen for Pilgrim Theology (the narrator on that one even mispronounced the name of biblical books). So this is one of the better ones I have heard where the narrator is not the author. The content, of course, is brilliant, but with audio books I am more concerned with the performance and ability to read at a natural pace with appropriate inflections and personality.

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The Holy Spirit is so often misunderstood. By that, I mean, even among many Christians, when they talk about the Holy Spirit, they either unknowingly say heretical, non-Trinitarian things about Him, they refer to the Holy Spirit as an "it" instead of as the Third Person of the Trinity, or they sound like new age pagans who use the Holy Spirit as a means for power and personal betterment than to refer to Him as the Lord and Giver of life. Michael Horton does a brilliant job at retracing how we got here and charts the course for approaching the Holy Spirit in light of the whole of Scripture (we first meet the Holy Spirit within the first few sentences of Genesis as Creator) instead of subjective feelings and experience. It's a more technical book and will require a little bit of "elbow grease" of the mind to wade through, but the reward far outweighs the cost.

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I guess I am not smart enough...

No... there is no "guess" about it. I am definitely not smart enough for this book. I believe this is probably more of a textbook for an upper seminary student than for such as I. And yet I kept listening, but truth be told, without any understanding. So after four hours, I raise the white flag and hope to find another book that explains the Holy Spirit in terms I am better able to understand. God's Holy Spirit help me, please!!!

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Over my head

I wanted so much to understand everything in this book. There are so few books written on the Holy Spirit. But the author writes way over my head. Not really a layman's book but a deep study book that would be better purchased in book form. That way you can move at your own pace and look up all the words he uses to understand what he is talking about.

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7 people found this helpful