Ten Questions to Diagnose Your Spiritual Health
How do I know if I’m growing spiritually? In the distractions of daily life, it can be hard to evaluate how we are doing spiritually. But monitoring the pulse of your spiritual health is just as important as monitoring your mental and physical health. No matter where you are in your walk with Christ, bestselling author Don Whitney makes it easy to do a self-check on your spiritual wellbeing. Quickly evaluate your spiritual state by asking yourself these 10 convicting diagnostic questions:
• Do I thirst for God?
• Do I still grieve over sin?
• Am I a quicker forgiver?
• Am I more loving?
• Am I sensitive to God’s presence?
• Am I concerned for others?
• Am I governed by God’s Word?
• Do I delight in the church?
• Are the spiritual disciplines important to me?
• Do I yearn for heaven and to be with Jesus?
By bringing the lofty idea of “sanctification” into a helpful and convicting spotlight, this concise and insightful book will transform your spiritual life. Now with a new discussion guide for group or personal use to help you dive deeper into each question.
Publisher: Navpress
Type: Paperback
ISBN: 9781641583305
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Donald S. Whitney is founder and president of The Center for Biblical Spirituality and has served as professor of biblical spirituality and associate dean at The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky, since 2005. He is also a forme
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‘Don Whitney's "Ten Questions to Diagnose Your Spiritual Health" is at once one of the best and most irritating books on Christian living I have ever read. It is among the best because it is so pinpoint powerful in its questions. For the same reason, it is irritating, because it is so convicting. I, like most people, love to think I'm a pretty good person and am doing pretty well in the whole Christian life thing. But Whitney's book turns those presumptions inside out and soon I am looking away from myself again and calling on mercy again at the cross. In other words, this book is humbling. This is a good thing, but it is not an easy thing.’ Joy S. Frady