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23 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An excellent book on being fully human, June 29, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Leap Over a Wall : Earthy Spirituality for Everyday Christians (Paperback)
This book, detailing and probing the life of King David, has provided many valuable insights into the matter of living in communion with God even as being fully human. Although I was skeptical, I am glad to note that the biblical text was handled with integrity. The author researched the texts that he commented on, and admitted to speculation when doing so. This book is a must-read for anyone who struggles with the matter of living with God even as he or she struggles with being human. Peterson's narrative style also pulls the Davidic story right off the pages! The perspective is refreshing and challenging at the same time.
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19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Leap over a wall, November 1, 2001
By 
Tim Rittenhouse (Flemington, New Jersey United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Leap Over a Wall : Earthy Spirituality for Everyday Christians (Paperback)
Peterson brings a breath of fresh air to a stagnant atmosphere of worn out spiritual cliches. He makes the Bible come alive again,and gives flesh and blood to the names and places that we have heard and read about all of our lives. He forces you out of one dimensional thinking to three dimensional reality. His words get to the real heart of the matter. He words call out to my heart and challenges me to to seek and know God, God who knows me better than I know myself.
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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Treasure in the attic..., March 13, 2004
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This review is from: Leap Over a Wall : Earthy Spirituality for Everyday Christians (Paperback)
I found a copy of this book in my in-law's attic. I looked through the contents and decided to read the chapter on Friendship - David and Jonathan. Peterson is profound in this chapter. His comments on friendship as an expression of spirituality were so insightful that I am viewing my relationships with others in a new way already. I was even convicted that my friendship with my wife was not sufficient by God's standard. Wow, what a difference one chapter can make. I can hardly wait to buy this book and read the all of Peterson's reflections on the life of David. I like this "earthy spirituality." Give it a try, you might like it too.
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Petersen gives a 3-D look at David!, November 11, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Leap Over a Wall : Earthy Spirituality for Everyday Christians (Paperback)
I don't know about you, but I have really become tired of reading books about Biblical characters that make them all sound like super saints. In Leap Over a Wall, Eugene Petersen turns biography on its head and gives his readers a look at King David that comes much closer to presenting a Biblical look at Old Testament person. David becomes three dimensional in the pages of this book. We see his failings and his victories and we can relate. Petersen's amazing insights into the stories of David's life gives the reader a real sense of hope and encouragement. I wish that every believer would read this!
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fantastic, April 6, 2002
By 
Bonnie Poon (Boston, MA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Leap Over a Wall : Earthy Spirituality for Everyday Christians (Paperback)
It's easy to mistake good biblical characters for saints - and Eugene Peterson shows, in this book, that we all a lot more that is identifiable with David than we think. It's not impossible to follow God the way David did - and this book shows us how. Fantastic reading and lots to learn from.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Thank You, Lord, For This Book!, October 26, 2004
By 
Beth Botsis (Northern Virginia) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Leap Over a Wall : Earthy Spirituality for Everyday Christians (Paperback)
If you have ever felt discouraged by your own imperfections in your Christian walk, read this book! David is about as earthy and real as a person gets. As another reviewer wrote, the chapter on the friendship between David and Jonathan is also insightful and valuable. Eugene Petersen explores the reality of David's life situations and choices, and how his relationship with God was affected by them. In so doing, he highlights how God grows us and walks beside us throughout all of the trials of life, even those we bring upon ourselves. Ultimately, despite everything, David remained "A man after God's own heart" proving the existence and endurance of God's grace and acceptance, and that there's hope for us all!
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Aptly Titled Classic, October 11, 2003
By 
Trey Sklar (Southern California) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Leap Over a Wall : Earthy Spirituality for Everyday Christians (Paperback)
A fantastic life-giving work in the middle of an insipid age. This book about David is a book about real and bold living. A great encouragement and a call to live the Kingdom life now... today. One of the most significant books I have ever read, this belongs alongside the Narnia Chronicles and Robinson Crusoe as a standard bearer book for living bold and free in God's realm.
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great reflections on an authentic Christian life, November 1, 2005
This review is from: Leap Over a Wall : Earthy Spirituality for Everyday Christians (Paperback)
What does it mean to be a Christian? Is the Bible passe, or is it still relevant for today? Does Christianity mean the triumphalstic life? What is the end goal of being a Christian? How can I live an authentic Christian life?

Eugene Peterson (the author of The Message) reflects on the life of David in this book and looks at what we can learn. Every chapter contains important lessons to being a Christian, and areas that we are to reflect on, and how we interact with God in our relationship with Him. The life of David becomes a platform for us to learn about our spirituality and relationship with God.

The following are some facts about David:
- The David story is the most extensively narrated single story in the Bible. We know more about David than any other person in the Bible.
- The life of David showed the humanity of this man after God's heart, and there are many themes that run through the life of David, e.g. parents, relationships, danger, murder, temptation, adultery, pride, humiliation, children, wives, rejection, sickness, justice, fear, peace, death...
- David did not perform any miracles.
- David sinned more than Saul, yet he was known as a person after God's own heart.
- David was known as a man served God's purposes in his generation (Acts 13:36).

The story of David is simultaneously earthy and godly. It shows us that we are never more alive than when we are dealing with God. David was an unfortunate parent, an unfaithful husband, and if we look at him from a purely historical perspective, he was a barbaric chieftain with a talent for poetry. But David's importance isn't in his morality or his military prowess but in his experience and witness to God. Every event in David's life was a confrontation with God.

Spirituality and humanity cannot be separated. We can't grow spiritually without understanding our humanness. We can't grow humanly without understanding our spirituality. David shows us that we can't be human without God. Understanding all this gives hope to many Christians that God looks at the heart, and it is about having a relationship with God. There are many lessons to learn, one of the most impactful to me was David's years in the wilderness.

It seems that all of God's leaders will at sometime go through a wilderness experience at least once. The wilderness experience is not something that any flesh likes, but it is an experience that can sanctify and consecrate the flesh. "Wilderness is the place of testing, the place of tempting" (pp. 75). In David's wilderness experience, he was being set apart, made holy, for God's use. The more he dealt with God, the more human he became (pp. 75). The wilderness was an attack on the flesh and a thrust towards dependence on God. In fact, David seemed most "spiritual" in his days in the wilderness.

Wilderness spirituality also includes being with the company of people we would not ordinarily choose to be with, and who would not ordinarily choose to be with us. (pp. 96). God uses others to point us to Him. If we see that the wilderness is filled with people we do not want to be with, we would have missed God. But if we see the wilderness being filled with God, we would not miss the people in it. "The wilderness taught David to see beauty everywhere. The wilderness was David's school in the preciousness of life; through wilderness testing David learned to see God in places and things he would never have thought to look previously. The wilderness immersed David in beauties so profound that a cheap revenge was unthinkable. The wilderness trained David in loyalties so binding that a broken oath was impossible. The wilderness exposed David to the presence of God in the most barren piece of rock so that no thing, and certainly no man, could ever be treated with scorn or contempt." (pp. 77-8) We cannot be naïve about the wilderness; it is a dangerous place. But we must never avoid the wilderness; for it is a wonderful place (pp. 80). "Hardship brings out the best in David. Suffering can, if we let it, make us better instead of worse" (pp. 198).
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Finally a human David, December 3, 1998
By 
This review is from: Leap Over a Wall : Earthy Spirituality for Everyday Christians (Paperback)
For the first time (in a long time) I have seen a character of the Bible, not only like a Bible character (or history participant). I don't know how Peterson's neurons deal with his poetic soul, but I have met and was pleased to meet a human David. So human that "seems to be real". His problems and joys were brought to the atmosphere of "real life" and not treated as a table of lessons or a list of do's and dont's.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely one of my favorites., November 17, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Leap Over a Wall : Earthy Spirituality for Everyday Christians (Paperback)
In this book, Peterson has freed me to find God in an "earthy" way. Like many in my generation, inside the four walls of the sanctuary is not always the place where I most deeply experience God. Peterson's retelling of the David stories, with a beautiful edge that is vintage Peterson, has given us all permission to be like David - profoundly human and earthy, yet "after God's own heart."
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Leap Over a Wall : Earthy Spirituality for Everyday Christians
Leap Over a Wall : Earthy Spirituality for Everyday Christians by Eugene H. Peterson (Paperback - May 6, 1998)
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