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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Imbach will put you right in the boat with the Triune God, July 8, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The River Within: Loving God, Living Passionately (Paperback)
Last year a close friend of mine told me, "You've just got to read this book about God's passion." Having a visual scanning disability, I don't read very much. I pick and choose rather carefully before I invest my time in a book. But I respected the source of this recommendation; so, I read the book. Wow, what I discovered was a spiritual kaleidoscope! Every now and again you read something that becomes a crossroads experience. THE RIVER WITHIN was that for me. I love word pictures. I love them to teach me, and I love to use them to teach others. Imbach's "River Within" is a multifaceted picture of the Triune God and our relationship with Him. Other than the Bible itself, I probably gained more insight into how God loves me and where to take my love for Him than in any other book I have ever read. Passion is a concept that Christians treat like a hot-potato. They don't know how to handle it. Jeff Imbach made me realize that "passion" need not be a slithering serpent that we avoid as Christians. He showed me that I can be passionate in my life and not necessarily be afraid that I'm being selfish or sinful. He made me realize that passion comes from the expression of a relational Triune God who wants to lavish passion on me and show me how to relate it to others, including those whom I love so dearly. Imbach's last few chapters will blow you away! He has one Chapter (12) entitled Living Passionately in Creation. The Author is from Canada, and his passion for nature is so lovingly transparent. I'm not an environmentalist. After reading Chapter 12, I still am not. But reading it did make me acutely aware of one tangible way God communes with us, demonstrating His love for us through His creation. I am much more tuned into creation than I ever have been because of Imbach's word pictures of God's passion being painted in nature. I challenge you to read Chapter 12 and not love God more when you see a pair of doves cuddling together or see the colors of a sunset when you're walking down a beach with someone you love. This neat Albertan from Calgary will get inside you and cause you to recognize elements in your soul that you may have feared but need not. He'll take you on a trip down the river of life and show you how to shore up your banks and keep the love of God flowing more steadily as you let the Trinity flow through you. It's a sterling experience, THE RIVER WITHIN, and I hope you will take the trip as I did. But beware, you may come out at the other end of the river loving God more and being much more vulnerable than you ever have before. No travel down this river can be taken without risk. There will be bumpy waters; but you'll ride the tide knowing that you're in the boat with Christ, and that He's taking you on the ride of your life.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This bok inpacted my life more than any other, July 14, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The River Within: Loving God, Living Passionately (Paperback)
I strongly recommend this book for anyone who wants to deepen their relationship with God. I found my self struggeling with a fragmented relationship. God seemed only relivent to certian parts of my life and threatening to other parts. This book changed my whole perspective on relating to God. Imbach uses the Trinity to show us that God wants to know all of us and not to be afraid of our passions as they are an expression of the loving trinity. Imbach says that our passion or feelings of longing are "an unquenchable thirst within us that is the sign of God. We may not handle it well. We may distort it into lust and greed, but it is the flowing of the Trinity in our lives. It opens us up and drives us to find union beyond ourselves. What we want most deeply is to be consumed with God, to lose ourselves in Gods fullness." Now insted of pretending that certian feelings or parts of myself don't exist I find myself bringing them into my relationship with God. What a wonderfull new freedom I have felt!
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars If you feel life has short-changed you, read this!, December 13, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: The River Within: Loving God, Living Passionately (Paperback)
Jeff Imbach is an author who pushes limits. Most of us long to live with passion, to experience all life has to offer. Yet, in fear of being hurt or of hurting others, we hold back, suppress ourselves.

"The River Within: Loving God, Living Passionately" reveals how to follow our passions while holding a balance in our lives. It is an intimate exploration of how to walk paths which keep us true to ourselves, while holding those around us in a loving embrace. Jeff Imbach writes in a self-revealing, vulnerable style designed to show readers how to live with courage in following the calls and demands and whispers of life.

Carl Jung wrote that the second half of life is devoted to integration of all we've experienced, all the parts of our selves. Imbach shows how to accomplish this integration through God while opening up for more experiences, more fullness of life, more passion. In reading this book one believes it is possible to flow totally down the river of life, holding nothing back. One believes, as Imbach quotes, "You could be all Fire!"

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Writing That Flows, December 8, 2001
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This review is from: The River Within: Loving God, Living Passionately (Paperback)
Not only is Imbach an excellent writer, but he gently clasps readers hands as he freely admits his own weaknesses and fears. Imbach challenged me to think and to grow. I loved this book.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best books I've ever read, August 6, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: The River Within: Loving God, Living Passionately (Paperback)
I've read many books on this topic and this is one of the best I've ever read. Mr. Imbach is theologically sound and intimate with the deeper things of God. The book is well written, balanced and thoughtfully comprehensive. A must for anyone pressing in to the heart of God.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An explanation for mid-life crisis!, September 30, 2006
By 
Holly S. Vigesaa (Cooperstown, ND USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The River Within: Loving God, Living Passionately (Paperback)
For a few years I've been experiencing strange desires to do all these new & creative things, intensely appreciating & almost craving color, shape, texture, deep relationships, meaning... I thought it was just a 40s thing, and what a shame that we have to live half a lifetime before we have a clue what to do with it! "The River Within" has put a name on my feelings and I'm so grateful to have stumbled upon a refreshing concept that has been so buried in the typical legalistic faith that many of us grew up in.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Incredibly awesome!, September 5, 2005
This review is from: The River Within: Loving God, Living Passionately (Paperback)
This is one of the best books I've ever read dealing with experiencing God in all of life and not just Sunday morning. The author does a great job of showing that God flows from within us to effect all of our life. Our desire for union and uniqueness is evidence of the Trinitarian three in one God living inside of us. The author says we should recognize and celebrate these desires as being straight from God. We just have to concentrate on the appropriate outworking of those desires. I can't say enough good about this book!
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Passion of the Trinity is Expressed in Our Hearts, December 2, 2001
This review is from: The River Within: Loving God, Living Passionately (Paperback)
A good friend recommended this book to me. I bought it and read it slowly over 4 months. It is an insightful and compassionate description of spiritual formation rooted in the character of the Triune God. It has profound applications to how we relate to God and to one another.

There are several significant themes and messages woven throughout the book, which could not be expressed sufficiently in a short review, except to give a short description of a few of them. The theological foundation which Jeff Imbach continues to build on throughout the book is that the passion which is expressed among the persons of the Trinity is the source of our own passion. This becomes the thematic center for the rest of the book as Imbach tries to 'rescue' passion from the chopping block of traditional discipleship. Passion is not all bad, argues Imbach. In fact, passion is an essential element in our spiritual formation as we seek to be connected to and formed by a Passionate God.

Imbach describes the "Union and Uniqueness" of the Persons of the Trinity and effectively argues that this characteristic of the Godhead expresses itself deeply in our own hearts and lives. For example, as people we have a longing for "Union"; we desire to be connected to a larger whole, to belong to a body of intimately relating friends. However, we also have the sometimes competing desire for "Uniqueness"; we long to be recognized as valuable individuals. For myself, this was the most significant theme of "The River Within". I connected well with his description of God here and with his many examples from real life experiences (both his own and others').

The image of the "River Within" becomes an important one in the book as Imbach describes the flowing of godly passion in our lives as a river with its source in God. The "river banks", then become an important symbol of the necessary boundaries of passion which, if distorted or completely unhindered, can become dissipated or destructive to our spirital lives. Imbach explains that it is up to us to carefully discern the banks for passion on our own lives.

Sometimes the examples and stories became slightly repetitive, which made the book drag a little. This is especially true while Imbach is pounding on the point that our passions are God-given and God can redeem them as an integral part of our spiritual formation.

When I first began to read chapter 12, which describes the role of Creation in our spiritual lives, I was a little uneasy about such an emphasis on nature and our role as stewards, etc. After finishing the chapter I was still not completely at home with all of the ideas, but I was able to truly appreciate some of his observations about the intimacy and presence of God which are made evident in Creation, and also about our connectedness to the earth. In fact as my wife and I were celebrating our first anniversary in rural New Hampshire, I took the book along with us during an outdoor hike and we read a section of this chapter together.

Imbach brilliantly concludes the book with chapters describing what it looks like to live passionately in community, in relationships, and with God. It is in these chapters that his wisdom and experience in listening to people becomes most evident.

There were times when this book became somewhat of a chore to persevere in, but it was worth the effort. "The River Within" was definitely good for my soul and I don't doubt that many lives would be transformed and many personal burdens lightened if believers could spend time with Imbach's ideas in this book.

After reading "The Sacred Romance" and other books describing the role of passion and "the heart" in Christian Spirituality, this book fit well into this "conversation" (as my friend would call it). Thanks Rob.

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5.0 out of 5 stars How to Live Your Faith with Passion, September 13, 2007
This review is from: The River Within: Loving God, Living Passionately (Paperback)
This is a book written by a man from my own town, which is kinda cool. Jeff Imbach is a spiritual director here, and is just so practical and down to earth.

At the same time, however, he understands the importance of "having wings" in our faith. Let's face it. Most of us are bored silly in our "religious duties" and can't figure out how to bring in the passion without losing control. Jeff explains the theology of passion (cool enough in itself!) and then gives some very practical doable things to bring our faith to life.

This is a wonderfully inspiring, encouraging, practical book, and I highly recommend it to anyone who is experiencing a "bored faith".

Darlene
http://www.mom-defrazzler.com
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The River Within: Loving God, Living Passionately
The River Within: Loving God, Living Passionately by Jeffrey D. Imbach (Paperback - May 1998)
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