Saturday, December 15, 2018

This Message, If Understood by the Common Man, Could Free Millions

Crossruption: The Journey of A Disrupted Life



Author: Jacob William
Publisher:Westbow Press, Bloomington, IN, 2017

The author, Jacob William, has experienced life – the good, the bad, and the ugly. He has been a successful businessperson. Yet he was being haunted by an inner emptiness that he calls the “cosmic vacuum”. Possessions and achievements, of which he had hordes, didn’t cut it.
William has done a great job of communicating what it really means to be a Christian, comparing it to what so many of us are actually practicing – a phenomenon he dubs “twenty-first century Christianity”. And as much as I wanted to argue with him, I found I could not.  I knew many of us had bought into what he describes as “outsourcing our salvation” in exchange for our actions. Our religious Christianity of today, he writes, “offered a product called God. I had outsourced its production to an enterprise network called the church where events were staged every week. . .. I was paying people to do my religion for me, because my time was too valuable, and my life was too busy for a real personal relationship with God.”
William challenges us to consider what it means, and what it takes, to be changed forever, like Joseph, Moses, and Saul of the Bible, to challenge the status quo, change the culture, and champion a new trail.
His purpose in writing Crossruption is to answer the question, “What separates the Christian whose life has been changed from the child of God whose life changes the world?”
Using his own life as an example, the author explains step by step, once we realize we no longer can go on just outsourcing our faith or buying a product called God, how to allow Jesus to do what He really came to do in our lives now, today, right here – and that was to disrupt livesand more particularly to disrupt ‘my life’.
After this well written introduction in Part I of his book, William goes on to address the Original Design applied to our creation (Part II), the Fallen Creation (Part III), the New Creation (Part IV) and the Future Creation (Part V).  Each part is a thorough investigation of Scripture relating to the titles.
In Part II, he writes, “To fill the cosmic vacuum inside me, I had to start by understanding that my identity is fundamentally spiritual.” And, “There is something left after the destruction of the body and mind of mankind, and that ‘something’ is where the identify of mankind is defined and experienced.”  He then explains that in detail.  There is a wonderful section in this part where he points out that “Science may be able to offer an alternate body and mind, but the spiritual dimension cannot be programmed.” Later adding, “Human beings cannot commune with fire, air, or water because there is a dimension difference. Humans are designed to have a relationship with God through Spirit-to-spirit communion, to experience communion in the mind and express that communion through the body.” And he shares the benefits of such uniqueness with respect to our confidence and self-worth.
Before bringing Part II to a conclusion, he writes, “If we were the result of the Big Bang or evolution, we might expect that the process of natural de-selection would have removed the stupidity of killing one another over religion by now.” I’ll let you discover what he does with that thought.
In Part III, Fallen Creation, the author goes on to explain sin. He writes, “The first murder was not the cause of sin, but sin was the cause of the first murder.” And then tells us why this is so important to grasp when he continues, “This sequence is not semantics but one that differentiates religion from relationship. . .. The disease is sin, while the symptoms are sinful actions.” As a result of our “fallen creation”, our changed spiritual state “creates a vacuum that causes us to long for something more.” William then goes on to outline thirteen Key Death Indicatorsof Christian behavior that line up “more with the fallen creation than with original design.”  If you’re like me, you’re bound to see yourself in more than one of these indicators.
In Part IV, the New Creation, Jacob William, shares some of his own story and then introduces us to the concept of the “Three M’s: Metric (the outcome), Methodology (the process used to achieve an outcome), and Measurement (that shows the progress of the methodology in achieving the metric)”. He applies these terms to how we can move from a twenty-first century Christianity to the Cross-disrupted Life that Christ died for us to have. It’s an amazing journey.
Here William shares several Key Life Indicatorswith us. These are the metrics, the outcomes, we can experience “as a consequence of the transformational relationship of communion, communication, and companionship with God. . .. Coming home to the Father for any reason other than a relationship with Him is religion.” 
Some key quotes from this section are: “We have a generation today that mimics expressions, thinking that is the evidence of God.” And there’s so much more here, I can’t begin to share it all.
In Part IV, Future Creation, his message is clear and, in some ways, comes as a gentle loving warning to his readers when he says, “Nothing will start in Heaven that had not already begun here. The eternal life of God is born in us on earth.” You’ll find his explanation of this quote in the book.
My favorite sentence sequence in the whole book?  These two: “God is relational. The Enemy is transactional.
In conclusion, I must say that as a reviewer, I have never been so torn, on the one hand, by the value of a great message (which this book has and is) and on the other, by the style of writing. To be perfectly honest, while I love the book, the author’s insight, and its message, I did not find his several diagrams as helpful as they might have been. I also feel Jacob William is a man of great intellect and as a result, on occasion writes in a way which may require his readers to read a sentence or paragraph three or four times to grasp what he is saying. (My wife who is an avid reader of C. S. Lewis, when shown some of William’s paragraphs commented, “He’s way more convoluted than even Lewis was in some of his non-fiction writing.”) But, like Lewis, when you do grasp his points, you say, “Yes, that’s exactly right.”
Highly recommended for those who seriously want to risk having their lives totally Cross-rupted.

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n Ken B. Godevenos, President, Accord Resolutions Services Inc., Toronto, Ontario, December 15, 2018, www.accordconsulting.com

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