



The Cost of Discipleship [Dietrich Bonhoeffer] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. The Cost of Discipleship Review: I bought it twice - It is an excellent book! Review: Totally enlightening and inspirational!!! - Best book for me after the Bible for understanding Jesus call to discipleship and avoiding the pitfalls of 'cheap grace'. Bonhoeffer's life was truly an example of faith and love in action during one of the most confusing and dangerous periods in world history.
| Best Sellers Rank | #630,860 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #1,858 in Christian Discipleship (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (160) |
| Dimensions | 1 x 4.25 x 7 inches |
| Edition | Revised Edition |
| ISBN-10 | 0020838506 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0020838500 |
| Item Weight | 6.5 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 352 pages |
| Publication date | January 1, 1963 |
| Publisher | Scribner Paper Fiction |
C**L
I bought it twice
It is an excellent book!
A**R
Totally enlightening and inspirational!!!
Best book for me after the Bible for understanding Jesus call to discipleship and avoiding the pitfalls of 'cheap grace'. Bonhoeffer's life was truly an example of faith and love in action during one of the most confusing and dangerous periods in world history.
J**Z
This is an exceptional book. It is worth reading ...
This is an exceptional book. It is worth reading and re-reading. True faith in Jesus Christ means acting on that faith which will be costly. The apostle, Paul, said follow me as I follow Christ. Following Christ cost Paul's life. It may well cost my life as well. I cannot call my self a disciple without truly following Christ.
K**L
Timeless, excellent book on the "Cost of Discipleship"...Being conformed to the image of Christ daily and through all adversity!
This is a timeless book on the cost of discipleship. One of the quotes from Dietrich Bonhoeffer really shines the invasive light of God's Truth when he says: "Cheap grace, is the grace we bestow on ourselves...grace without discipleship...Costly grace is the gospel which must be sought again and again, the gift which must be asked for, the door at which a man must know...It is costly because it costs a man his life, and it is grace because it gives a man the only true life." To make the journey of following after Jesus Christ as your Savior and Lord, is a journey of being conformed to the image of Christ daily; to take up your cross and follow Him. Often we hear from the modern churches and TV evangelists that our expectation should be "easy grace"; expect money, power, and influence to be the result of following Christ. The Bible says that Jesus was "...a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief..." He "had no place to lay his head". Bonhoeffer knew from experience what it cost to follow Christ...His life. He is a man who lived out Hebrews 11 & 12. This book is a must read for any serious Christian Believer looking for a life of obedience and faith to The Savior.
A**E
Devotional but not Systematic
The soteriology of Bonhoeffer (1906-1945) is an honest reaction to the context of his world under Nazism. This reaction can be summarized as “Christ against culture” according to famous Christian worldview distinction (cf., H. Richard Niebuhr, Christ and Culture). As Bonhoeffer himself exemplified with his life and death, for him salvation is a process before the entrance into God’s eternity rather than one time event, and this salvation is inherently joined with ecclesiastical and social life of Christian. Salvation is, for Bonhoeffer, a calling for righteousness rather than an invitation for propitiation. It is a calling for sinners to die daily until they reach physical death, yet while living they are only “invited” to imitate sufferings of Christ—denying themselves daily and taking up His cross daily. On 9 April 1945 he gave his last words before execusion, “This is the end—for me the beginning of life,” but during his life Bonhoeffer also said, “Only he who believes is obedient and only he who is obedient believes” (69). He argues that since “the disciple is not above his master” suffering is a mandatory, if not actively voluntary (100). Thus his emphasis on voluntary suffering was an honorable duty for all Christians, and this makes his definition of salvation [redemption] almost a requirement for earthly missions before the heavenly union with Christ—namely, “costly grace” (45ff, 130f). He is a German theologian even though not quite a Lutheran. Instead, strong influence of Barth is visible from where he departs liberalism but adheres to neo-orthodox with an emphasis of living out faith. His focus on discipleship is a natural outcome of his anti-nominal—neo-orthodox—ecclesiastical—social-reforming—soteriology (61ff). Consequently for Bonhoeffer “faith” seems to lose its strong aspect of grace and gift because sinner have to choose to follow Christ through discipleship and faith becomes something other than given freely from God as gift, but strict choice of man (cf., 66f). As the church throughout its history struggled balancing between purity and unity Bonhoeffer seems to have trouble reconciling between his anthropology and soteriology; on the one hand he condemns sinners but on the other hand he calls for their active participation in salvation process. It seems the only possible way to succeed in this process is partaking with Christ, but Bonhoeffer almost sounds like a sacrametalist, if not ritualist, when he tells that is only possible through baptism and Lord’s Supper (267). Therefore, despite the fact that his theology is so practical reads like devotion, because he uses theological terms differently it troubles him to express their associated meanings. For example Bonhoeffer had little option but to use terms like “better law” and “better righteousness” in order to distinguish what he meant from what others usually meant (137). Because of his overemphasis on discipleship and dying for Christ his definition on redemption ended up meaning “dying man” rather than “living man” through Christ’s sacrifice, and because his definition of “calling” is ambiguous it ended up meaning “having union with Christ” which he also used for glorification (141). After all if all Christians are to suffer just like Christ and die just like Him to imitate Him where is the victory and joy of salvation that Christ bestowed us through His grace. Bonheoffer may answer this “in heaven” but it is something none should sell as reward.
M**B
Delivered quickly via USPS and as described.
Really glad we were able to find the exact same book to replace the one we have. It's an excellent book, and the old one is literally falling apart, lol. It came from the seller exactly as described, in good condition with no writing. I would buy from this seller again.
A**R
The Cost of Discipleship
An informative book about Dietrich Bonhoffer who died at the hands at the Nazi government in Germany during World War II for his outspoken beliefs against the persecution of the Jewish citizens of that country.
S**N
A Theology/Prophecy That Keeps Being Relevant!
Read this more than 35 years ago and never forgot it. Thought I was due to read it again and starting with the first Chapter on the topic of Cheap Grace that Bonhoeffer thought was killing the Church when he was alive, well, it seems that these words are once again as timely as they have ever been, first of all for ME!!! So while I refused to pay the new price in my current unemployed state, it is actually worth whatever price you have to pay to read these pearls of wisdom and character from the man who took his Lord seriously enough to live his life as if Jesus WAS Lord. GREAT BOOK!
G**E
essential for all serious Christians, I have read it twice, and am trying to obtain copies for my friends
A**E
Fantastic book. Truly shows what God's grace means and something truly lived out by the author. It shows the true importance and true cost of discipleship.
D**S
good value
D**E
Inspiring
L**D
Great book
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