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Don't Waste Your Life, Group Study Edition

door John Piper

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The author explains his belief that a wasted life is one in which people do not have a passion for God, but instead spend their lives living for comfort, pleasure, and avoiding sin.
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  gslykhuis | Dec 13, 2019 |
What constitutes a wasted life? It depends on what you value most. For many even in the church, we define the good life as a comfortable job, good kids, a happy marriage, and maybe early retirement. Few of us see the waste that even a good life like that can be, if there are no eternal priorities that shape it.

John Piper begins this book with his own story, his "search for a single passion to live by." He found it in Christ and the joy we can find only by pursuing it in God. The next chapters talk about boasting only in the cross, the "blazing center of the glory of God," how risk is right, how our goal in life should be to make others glad in God, how our use of our money reveals our god, how we can make much of Christ in our secular professions, and how many who will not waste their lives will spend them in frontier missions work. It's a heady mix.

Anyone familiar with Piper will know the famous core of all his biblical teaching: God is most glorified in us when we are most satisfied in Him. A self-proclaimed "Christian hedonist," Piper lives to help others experience the joy found in God alone.

What I found most convicting in this book was the chapter on money. Most of us, Piper argues, do our work with one purpose: to earn money to spend or save, for ourselves. And yes, we need to earn our bread and provide for our families. But there can and should be a higher motive for our work: we should work to give. Do I view my money as mine, or God's? Do I see that everything I have (including the ability to work) is a gracious gift of God? Am I using my money mostly for my own needs and pleasures, with a little siphoned off to the church because I have to — or am I actively looking for ways to invest financially in the great cause of Christ? Ouch. My giving should have much more of a savor of joy to it than it currently does.

Piper talks about the value of a wartime mindset in the life of a Christian who is bent on not wasting his life. During World War II, great sacrifices were made because each person, whether on the front lines or at home, was committed to a purpose bigger than himself. People willingly went without all the luxuries and comforts we consider so essential to happiness today, because there was something more important than those luxuries. This was hugely convicting to me, even down to little things like how much to spend on personal cosmetics — could I justify expensive products when there is so much need around me? Sadly, most of us are so self absorbed that possessing material pleasures and comforts has become critical, not optional.

I like how Piper distinguishes between a wartime lifestyle and a simple lifestyle. Simplicity can be inward focused, pursued for selfish purposes just as much as an excessively materialistic lifestyle. A wartime lifestyle will of necessity be simple, but not for simplicity's sake alone. It is outward focused on a great cause beyond itself, and that's the difference.

This is a short book, very easy to read. I enjoyed our adult Bible fellowship group's time in it this summer. I have been challenged to assess the way I live, and I pray that these lessons won't fade away in the press of everyday life and the temptations of material things. I'm sure I will reread. Recommended! ( )
1 stem atimco | Sep 7, 2013 |
Don't Waste Your Life
by John Piper
Crossway

This is an excellent book to help you re-align your perspective on life. Mr. Piper urges Christians to quit living the passive life. Being a Christian means bringing glory to God in every aspect of your life. At the beginning of the book Mr. Piper says, “You are not your own, for you were bought with a price. So glorify God in your body (I Cor. 6:19-20). I have written this book to help you taste those words as sweet instead of bitter or boring.”

We are only given one life to live for Christ, and the last thing we want to do is come before the Lord and suddenly realize we wasted so many years. As Christians Piper says we need to get to the point where we treasure God above our own lives, and that Christ is life and death is gain. Mr. Piper also shows us how we need to be showing others that joy in Christ frees us from the worldly passions of greed and fear.

This is an excellent book for anyone to read, but a great book to give as a graduation gift.
  lrlwreath | Sep 23, 2007 |
Reviewed on The Light Network
  coldwaterchurch | Sep 10, 2017 |
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